Daily hansan
JACK ROBINSON
In announcing the move, Warner said racial discrimination in several local taverns will receive immediate consideration.
Don Warner, Civil Rights Council Chairman
CRC, City Group To Act Together
Thursday, Nov. 1, 1962
The KU Civil Rights Council will work with the Lawrence Human Rights Commission to solve racial discrimination problems, Don Warner, Toneka senior and CRC chairman, said yesterday.
WARNER, speaking at the regular CRC meeting last night in the Kansas Union, said that a decision has been made by his group to discuss the tavern issue in executive session.
"This is an extremely sensitive area," Warner said, "and we want to be careful not to injure the business of anyone through an accidental remark which might be made in a preliminary discussion."
Warner said that the CRC is concerned with protecting the privacy and rights of all citizens regardless of their civil rights views.
The CRC members at the meeting were to have heard the report of a committee which has been investigating discriminating taverns. Members will hear the report in closed session.
THE POINT was repeated by William A. Binns, clinical psychologist at Watkins Hospital and member of the Lawrence commission. "We are obligated by law to protect the complainant and the individual complained about." Binns said.
The LHRC is one year old and its nine members are appointed to staggered three-year terms. An arm of the Lawrence city government, the LHRC was established by city ordinance.
Biins, who will meet with Warner next Monday, said that in the future a broad range of human relations problems will be discussed and worked at in cooperation with the CRC.
WARNER SAID he thinks the Monday meeting will be the start of an effective working arrangement between the two groups.
"We are very concerned that the problem of discrimination be resolved," Warner said, adding that by working with the LHRC this goal might more quickly be reached.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
60th Year, No. 35
U.S. Sends Aid to India
WASHINGTON — (UFT) — The United States will begin flying rifles, mortars, radios and trucks to India this week to help that country fight "premeditated Chinese aggression."
State Department press officer Lincoln White, said. "We expect the first priority items to be airlifted to India this week."
U. S. officials said that for the present, at least, the aid is not expected to require training and instruction.
The aid is being sent at the request of Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru. White refused to discuss financing of the arms, and said he did not know whether Nehru
Communist China's possession of Tibet is the key to possible aggression on the plains of India, Albert Ravenholt, American University field representative and journalist, said yesterday.
Ravenholt said the Himalayas ano Tibet through history have shielded India from attack. With the Red Chinese move into Tibet that line was breached, he said.
"Nehru made a fundamental miscalculation about the importance of the Red Chinese take-over in Tibet. Ravenholt said. "He did not recognize the historical role Tibet played in shielding India."
See related story page 10
also had requested planes. He also declined to discuss coordination of aid efforts by the United States, Britain and Canada.
In other comment, he said that Red Chinese leaders have largely abandoned their great leap forward effort as they have abandoned the commune program.
NEHRU ALSO asked Britain and Canada for arms aid, and diplomatic officials said these two countries were coordinating efforts with the United States in providing the weapons.
Asian Expert Says Tibet Is Key Area
(Continued on page 12)
CORE Leader Says Policy Is Changed
A civil rights leader said here yesterday that his organization had changed to the socio-economic approach to racial equality.
This approach, he said, educates the public about discriminatory practices and then asks them to apply pressure to the offending party.
The speaker was Eugene Tourner, regional director of the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) in the Midwest. He spoke at the year's first Minority Opinions Forum.
Tourner said CORE operated by grass-roots movement.
He said CORE approached discriminatory problems in their entire social complexity, including employment, decent housing and self respect.
"Until any action can be achieved." Tourner said, "we need public support, the real solution. We attempt to assault the conscience of the American community."
"If you deal with many levels of problems," the civil rights leader said, "the solution is self-evident."
Core has 80 chapters in the nation. It operates through various nonviolent actions for all minority groups. Tourner has worked mainly in the North and Midwest.
"Sit-ins are the popularized image of CORE," Tourner said. "But what it is accomplishing today is in the more fundamental areas of Negro employment and housing."
He described an employment boycott of a grocery store in the Midwest as an example of how CORE operates. He said that this store had jobs open to Negroes only in the menial service categories despite the fact that 20 per cent of the store's income came from Negro customers.
"Our typical way to handle this," Tourner said, "is to send in a Negro applicant with over-qualifications for a job. If he doesn't get it, we send in a white applicant with under-qualifications.
"If the White applicant is given the job, we negotiate with the offending party. When negotiation fails, we try to get community support, organize sympathizers to bring pressure on those refusing to cooperate."
In the area of housing in the North, Tourner said that Negroes might find homes but no attempt is made for sanitation there.
Another problem CORE fights, Tourner said is the "whisper campaign." provoked by realtors to prey on the Negro.
In this whisper campaign, he said, the realtor moves a Negro family into a white district, then begins the rumor that other families are moving out because of this. Finally the whole white community leaves and the realtor can sell the homes to Negroes for four times the amount of their value.
"The best way to handle this case," Tourner said, "is to go to the white families, explain what is taking place, and ask for their help in fighting it."
Wiggins Will Address Convocation Tomorrow
Warren W. Wiggins, acting director of the Peace Corps, will speak at an all-university convocation tomorrow in Hoch auditorium.
All 10:30 a.m. classes are cancelled.
WIGGINS SPEECH. "The Peace Corps — Past and Future," will climax the KU Peace Corps Week activities.
Robert Swan, Topeka junior and chairman of the KU Peace Corps committee said he will meet Wiggins, who is flying from Washington D.C., to Kansas City, Mo., tonight and accompany him to KU.
African Tribe Exhibition Opens This Sunday
Bakongo Artifact
By Joanne Prim
It takes only seconds to go back in time 100 years. It takes but steps to journey 5,000 miles.
The Ibo tribe is as close as the KU Museum of Art.
The Nigerian tribe will be featured in a special exhibition titled "Africa: Faces and Figures" which opens this weekend.
During a funeral service a member of the tribe wears the mask, actually impersonating the dead companion.
Another mask comes from the Dan tribe on the Ivory Coast. It is a mask of the ancestor cult based on the concept that the mask becomes the abode of the deceased ancestor, who may have been the ancestor of a tribesman or a parent of one of its members.
ONE OF THE ARTICLES on display will be a mask used in the Ibo burial ceremony.
The public is invited to a 3 to 5 p.m. reception Sunday at the museum.
OFFERINGS and sacrifices are made to the spirit of the dead so that his wrath will be diverted and his goodwill or benediction gained for any action which might be undertaken. Often sickness is attributed to the malevolence of the ancestor's spirit.
Most of the masks are made of wood, the native artists' favorite material.
Visitors to the art museum will also see African headrest pillows used by women to protect elaborate hairdos. Similar headrests were also known in China and Egypt.
Little is known about several chairs from the Bajokwe tribe except that they were given to the University 60 years ago.
Cultural representations of 15 tribes will be on display. Articles exhibited will include weapons, implements, musical instruments, and furniture.
THE BAKUBA TRIBE in the Congo is famous for its ceremonial cups. The "head cup," used at ceremonial libations, represents a human head. This is probably the survival of an old custom when the severed skull of a slain enemy was used as a ceremonial cup for the purpose of acquiring the spiritual power of the enemy.
THE CHAIRS are of two types. The stool-like structures are primitive examples. Later chairs, showing European influence, were designed with a back, seat, and four legs.
Although each tribe develops its own stylistic approach, the human figure is almost universally used as subject matter. Animals are probably the second most common representation.
The Corps committee invited Wiggins to KU after they learned Sargent Shriver, Corps director, was unable to come.
WIGGINS, CORPS DIRECTOR for program development and operations, is acting director of the Corps, while Shriver is in Africa.
Another feature of the exhibit will be a collection of 20 photographs, "Faces of the Congo," from the department of anthropology at the University of California.
BLACK AND WHITE enlargements show "Mulenda . . . a true alcoholic . . . kind and gentle when sober . . . an industrious farmer . . loved by children and respected in the village . . . a political dignitary
The department of anthropology is joining the Museum of Art in presenting the show.
Underneath is a picture of "Ngovi wife of Mukume .midwife and authority on women's ills."
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."
Articles have been loaned to the exhibition by the KU Museum of Natural History, private collectors, and a traveling collection.
GERALD BERNSTEIN, curator of the art museum, said the African show had been in planning since February, 1961.
Wiggins said later he wrote "The Towering Task," credited as the basis for the Corps, strictly on his own initiative and "out of a quickly aroused enthusiasm" for the proposed agency.
WIGGINS 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 helped coordinate U.S. economic programs in Western European nations.
The 1962 KU Homecoming queen will be announced immediately after the Peace Corps Convocation (approximately 11:20) in front of Strong Hall.
Wiggins was sent to the Philippine Islands in 1954 as senior U.S. economic advisor to the island government. He was transferred to Bolivia as acting director of the U.S. aid program there.
Four years ago, he returned to Washington and the Agency for International Development (AID) where he was named deputy director of Far East operations.
Weather
Partly cloudy weather is forecast for this afternoon and tonight, with possible light showers. The weather will be colder tonight and generally fair and colder Friday. Friday's high will be near 50.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Nov. 1, 1962
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
Corps Interest Lags
When the Peace Corps was proposed, it was derisively termed the "Kiddie Korps" by many people. There was skepticism about what could possibly be accomplished to further world peace by a group of idealistic young people.
Nearly two years later, nearly all the skepticism is gone. The Peace Corps has become one of America's most effective agencies of foreign policy. Its effectiveness and acceptance is shown by the fact that every nation which now has volunteers has requested more.
IT HAS PROVEN itself so successful that its continuance was approved this summer without a dissenting vote in the U.S. Senate and by a lopsided 361 to 70 vote in the House of Representatives.
The Peace Corps, designed to share American skills and know-how with underdeveloped nations, has received many of its volunteers from American colleges and universities. In addition, it has attracted interest in colleges among many students who do not plan to serve but who wish to learn more about this personalized U.S. "aid program."
LAST FALL, a field representative who visited KU was surprised when only eight students showed up to discuss the Peace Corps with him. He told a Daily Kansan reporter that the reception at other colleges was much greater than at KU, and pointed to St. Louis University where 400 students talked to him about the Peace Corps.
But not at KU.
That was last year, when the first Peace Corps volunteers had just arrived in the Philippines. A successful year, however, hasn't increased KU's interest by an appreciable amount.
Attendance at the Peace Corps week activities so far has been disappointing, to say the least. A talk on the Peace Corps Tuesday night was attended by only 30 students, and discussion by a group of the trainees in the KU-Costa Rica project attracted only 16 students Wednesday night.
THE ONLY EVENT which attracted a reasonably large crowd was primarily a social affair—the reception Sunday for the trainees in the Costa Rica project.
Two weeks ago, we criticized the KU committee on convocations when it turned down a request by the KU Peace Corps committee for a convocation featuring Warren Wiggins, acting Peace Corps director. We said that the committee had pre-judged KU students, and we implied that students were interested enough to take an hour to hear a top Peace Corps official speak.
The KU Peace Corps committee circulated a petition which was signed by 2,500 students, and the convocations committee reversed its decision and scheduled tomorrow's convocation.
IF THE CONVOCATION does not draw a crowd, the blame cannot be placed on the KU Peace Corps committee. After its successful campaign to get the convocation scheduled, it has blanketed the campus with posters and other information regarding the convocation and other Peace Corps week activities.
The convocations committee scheduled the convocation—probably against its better judgment—despite the earlier feeling that the attendance would be embarrassingly small.
We hope KU students won't cause the convocations committee to regret its decision.
—Clayton Keller
Needed: One Brainy Child
Once again it seems safe to draw a deep breath. A crisis in some far-away place has abated at least temporarily.
Here, in this quiet little town, children still play along the streets and on vacant lots, as they do in Moscow, Havana, Peiping, London, Paris ad infinitum.
In most countries the peoples are too civilized to sell their children, or offer them up as sacrifices, or eat them. Nothing that crude now. Instead the nations now hold each other's children as hostages—liable at any hour to be turned into very small cinders or very ragged and hungry orphans of war. This is not necessarily because men hate children—it is just the way things are. Somehow it just happened—a weird by-product of progress.
Affixing the blame for this predicament is becoming an art. Some begin with God, others work it down to a matter of politics, science and society, and others blame themselves—"themselves" being a personification of the human race in general. Others blame the "enemy." They all accomplish essentially the same thing—nothing.
And so "peace" has become an obsolete word, and disarmament theories are little more than idealistic blather.
Yet, in spite of this, and as hopeless as it may look at times, it hasn't happened yet. We have managed to maintain a bastard version of peace. And though we have the means to end it all, we haven't done it yet—tomorrow perhaps, but not today.
Someone has said that "hope springs eternal." "Hell springs eternal" may become a more fitting slogan. Yet, so long as the children are still here there is some basis for optimism.
Meanwhile, while a united world seems the least likely event to anticipate, children still play along the streets and on the vacant lots of this peaceful little town, and in Moscow, Havana, Peiping, London, Paris—ad infinitum.
It is possible that from among them may come a man with the wisdom and the insight—perhaps a single idea—which will lead to a rational use of the progress on which their fathers and grandfathers have built a great sickness.
—Bob Hoyt
Trivialities in Nebraska Race
(This is the tenth in a series of
situated contests in the 1962 election,
situated contests in the 1962 election,
By Jim Alsbrook
The race for the governorship of Nebraska is between Frank Morrison, 66-year-old Democratic incumbent, and Fred A. Seaton, 52-year-old secretary of the Interior in the Eisenhower cabinet.
Except for the party labels they wear and the personalities they radiate, few differences between the two men can be pointed out to the Nebraska voter. The campaign has been one of trivialities and personalities.
Both are regarded as moderately conservative in fiscal and philosophical views, both favor strong support for the University of Nebraska, and both are opposed to a state sales tax.
THE CONTEST GOT under way when Morrison accused Seaton of being a Republican. Seaton, in reply, loudly exclaimed that Morrison was a Democrat. Seaton added that Morrison was a conservative by day and a New Frontiersman by night, and Morrison contended that Seaton's likeness on a billboard resembled an advertisement for Hart, Schaffner & Marx.
The wrangle went into high gear over the issue of whether the governor should name visiting dignitaries to be admirals in the non-existent Nebraska Navy and whether yodelers from Wisconsin should be preferred at a corn-picking contest.
SURELY ALL OF Nebraska's problems are not solved. And with local, state, national and international problems as staggering as they are, surely two candidates for the governorship of a state can find more significant issues for public discussion.
It's all right for the contestants to "kiss and make up" after the battle is over, but the voter cannot determine which contestant
Both candidates, it seems, are strongly in favor of motherhood, Independence Day and Christmas.
should be awarded the decision if neither will put on the gloves and exchange a few significant blows before the final gong sounds.
Founded 1889, became bweekly 1904,
triviewly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
University of Kansas student newspaper
Daily Hansan
Telephone 711, news room Extension 376, business office
Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service. $8 a year. Mail subscription to NY, New York 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. Subscription fee includes amination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Scott Payne Managing Editor
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Cooler Maller and Co-Editorial Editors
Bill Sheldon
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Charles Martinache .. Business Manager
3,000,000 CANDLE POWER LIGHTS TURN CAMPUS 'NITE SPOTS' INTO REGULAR DAYLITE BUT
TAKE A LOOK AT THE LIBRARY—A 5-WATTER!
THANK YOU: CLAKENCE RHOKER
Fort Ansees, Wash.
GOP Gains Seen In Hoosier Race
(This is the eleventh in a series of
six contests, and the sixth in a
rational contest in the 1962 election.)
Indiana appears to be going to the polls next week strongly Republican. There is even a fair chance of some GOP gain to be made in the Hoosier state, as 11 House seats and one chair in the Senate are being contested.
By Bill Sheldon
The principal figure in the Indiana political circles in this election is third term hopeful Republican Sen. Homer Capehart. Sen. Capehart and his stablemate, Rep. Charles Halleck, also a Republican, have long held tight reins over the Hoosier state, and this power situation does not appear to be facing any danger of alteration.
CAPEHART is opposed by Birch Evan Bayh, minority leader of the House of Delegates, the lower chamber of the legislature. This vibrant Democrat is much younger, 34 years old to the 65 years of Sen. Capehart.
The long and strong Republican tradition in Indiana appears to be the factor which will carry the incumbent back to the nation's capital.
President Kennedy made a strong plea for candidate Bayh in an Indianapolis speech last week. The President called Sen. Capehart's opposition to the Peace Corps, the United Nations and the trade bill "ineteenth century voting" and asked Indiana voters to elect the more progressive Democrat.
SEN. CAPEHART and the President locked horns before that
speech on their respective stands on the Cuban situation. The senator, who called for strong action to wipe out the Communist threat, even considered the possibility of war.
To define the issues would be difficult, since there has not appeared, from this distance, any great doctrinal quarrel. It looks as though most of the campaigning has been centered on national questions. Here Sen. Capehart has a great advantage because he is well known for the legislation which has passed the Senate for the benefit of Indiana.
A recent poll conducted by the Prairie Farmer showed Sen. Capehart well ahead in the race among farm voters. The poll gave a 48.4 to 28.1 per cent advantage to him. This is somewhat indicative of the outcome of the race, since Indiana is considered to be in the Corn Belt and a great parcel of the population can be considered to fall in the category of farm population.
AT PRESENT the Republicans also have a solid margin in the House situation. In the last session of Congress, seven Republicans and four Democrats represented Indiana in the House. A gain of one seat is foreseen for the GOP.
The Prairie Farmer poll revealed that, in the House contests, the farm vote advantage again went to the Republicans, 49 to 32 per cent.
Thus, at least the status quo will be maintained in Indiana for the next term in Washington. Any backsliding by the Republicans will come as a total surprise, and a possible gain is in the offing.
the took world
YOUNG MAN WITH A HORN, by Dorothy Baker (Sentry, $1.45).
It would be better if older readers would not return to the cherished books of their high school and college days. "Young Man with a Horn" has been a beautiful memory these many years; now it has been re-read, and the realization is that the novel is for the young only.
The book hits one best when one is first overwhelmed by jazz as a unique American force. This is the story of Rick Martin, though really it's the story of Bix Beiderbecke, the great trumpeter of the Paul Whiteman orchestra. Rick grows up in Los Angeles, gets mixed up with Negroes, learns first the piano and then the horn, and becomes the greatest in the land.
His downfall is pretty Hollywood (the movies in fact, despoiled this novel about 12 years ago)—he marries a dame who doesn't understand him. And Rick dies, young and already a legend.—CMP.
Page 3
Hospital Experiences
Editor:
As I am a freshman this year, perhaps I am not yet fully acclimated to the University. However, my confidence that I am correct in saying that Watkins Memorial Hospital is one of the biggest fares on this campus is assured more every day as I talk to others who have been patients at the hospital.
I should like to relate my own experiences here shortly. I was scrimmaging on the intramural field with some fellows from my fraternity house in preparation for a game and accidentally received a very hard block which did something (I still don't know what) to my right arm. I could not move it and the soreness extended clear down the arm.
SOME OF the fellows brought me to Watkins where I was promptly told to sit down and wait. Approximately 30 minutes later I was told the doctor would see me. "Got this playing football, didn't you," the doctor asked with dismay. "Darned kids never learn, do you." Thereupon he proceeded to dig his thumb deep into the very sorst part of my arm—to my painful surprise.
He next grabbed my wrist and my elbow, swung my arm up and held it momentarily at shoulder length, and then shook it. Everything happened so fast and the pain was so great that by the time I had my breath he had let the arm flop back down at my side.
"GOT NO SYMPATHY for kids like you. Serves you right," he said. He then directed me to a nurse who was to put the arm in a sling. After a quick search, she found she had no slings. Indeed, there was no sling to be found in the hospital. And so she tore up a sheet and improvised.
I left the hospital in considerably more pain than when I had come and a vow never to return.
I, of course, thought that such an experience was an isolated case until I talked with another person. He related to me how, after he had accidently plunged his arm through a door of Summerfield Hall, he was rushed up to Watkins with a bleeding arm. After some waiting (the arm was still bleeding) a doctor finally came, washed out the wound, and sewed it up.
But it seems the sewing job was not too well done, as it began bleeding during the night. The sewing had become loosened. So back up to the hospital he went where they placed another bandage on the wound and sewed it up again. A week later, feeling a lump and a spot of blood under his arm, he reached beneath his shirt and extracted a piece of glass $1 \frac{1}{2}$ inches long, a half-inch wide, and a quarter-inch thick.
I SHOULD seriously suggest that we think about setting up a well-staffed veterinary hospital here, replacing the outdated Watkins. Perhaps this can be more suitable to the causes of health.
And perhaps it would help if others (and there surely are more) who have received similar treatment at the hospital would write similar letters.
But this injustice must be corrected immediately.
Rick Solum
Prairie Village freshman
* * *
Disgusted by Article
Laughter was my first reaction to the item "Crisis Spreads Strange Hush in Local Tavern," in the Oct. 24 Daily Kansan. Laughter was followed shortly by disgust. How could such melodramatic garbage have found its way into the Daily Kansan? The article made a mockery of the seriousness of the present Cuban situation.
This is all I have to say, but it had to be said.
Thursday, Nov. 1, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Martha Stout
* * *
Abortion Debate Continues Editor:
I find it difficult to understand how someone of Mr. Franklin Shobe's ability could argue so poorly. I am, of course, referring to Mr. Shobe's reply to Mr. Larry Page's condemnation of legalized abortion. Since I am not entirely sympathetic with Mr. Page's position with respect to the issue, I do not pretend to be defending him. I do intend, however, to criticize Mr. Shobe's argumentation on several points.
... Letters ...
FIRST OF ALL. Mr. Shobe may be correct in his content that the
human being is a "unified (integrated) organism which decomposes in its entirety soon after death" — although I am not at all sure I understand what is being asserted. Although this remark needs considerable clarification, to say that this assertion is the theologically sound and orthodox Christian view seems to me to be absurd. In what sense the view is "theologically sound," as Mr. Shobe puts it, I am not sure. However, I am not strictly a theologian, and so I shall leave Mr. Shobe to his theology.
Mr. Shobe may, of course, have some odd notion of orthodoxy in mind. Consequently, I may have missed his point. Nevertheless, it is encumbent on him to clarify his meaning of words if he wishes to use them in peculiar ways. I prefer to pass on to Mr. Shobe's interesting use of logic. Mr. Shobe was interested in defending the proposition that the soul does not exist. To prove this proposition, Mr. Shobe cited the orthodox and theologically sound Christian doctrine; at least he claims as much.
On the other hand, Mr. Shobe's belief does not seem to be an "orthodox" Christian view in any ordinary sense of the word. Indeed, his belief seems to be highly unorthodox if he is putting it forth as a Christian view. For, during at least sixteen centuries, the Christian believed that he could be saved and that despite his manifold sins he might lead a life everlasting. I do not want to refine this viewpoint — I only present a doctrine more deserving of the term "orthodox."
HE CONTINUES his argument in a curious way. The soul, he urges, cannot give existence to the fetus. For if it did, then the fetus could not exist. But the fetus does exist. Therefore, by the counterpositive, the soul cannot give existence to the fetus.
The structure of the argument given in Lukasiewicz's notation is Cpq, CNQNp, Nq, Np, which Mr. Shobe will recognize. This argument is clearly valid, provided p=the soul gives existence to the fetus and q=the fetus does not exist. There is nothing especially enlightening in the conclusion, for the question was begged. If Mr. Shobe is interested in establishing the moral equivalence of an appendectomy and an abortion, he will have to produce an argument with more persuasive power than one which is a mere tautology, where his conclusion is explicitly assumed.
Paul Schaich Topeka senior
The Daily Kansan, in recent weeks, has published a number of lengthy letters. Our policy was stated in the first issue this semester: we will not cut letters we receive, and we do not place a word limit on letters because we do not want to discourage opinion in any manner.
However, contributors should keep two factors in mind when composing letters. First, shorter letters are more likely to be printed soon after they are received. Long letters often must be held until enough space is available on the editorial page.
The Daily Kansan will not place a limit on letters. However, writers are urged to make sure everything they say is pertinent to the issue and is said in the least possible space.
Second, shorter letters are more likely to be read. A long letter will discourage many readers from starting the letter in the first place, and shorter letters are more likely to be read in their entirety.
—The Editors
Dixiecrats Attempt To Discredit Kennedy
Now that the Dixiecrat element has been so soundly upbraided and denounced in the University of Mississippi controversy, some of its apologies are attempting to discredit the national administration by claiming that Kennedy, Kennedy & Company were unfair to Dixie in their reaction to the recent disturbances at Albany, Ga.
THESE APOLOGISTS purport to believe that since the national government used force to quell the disturbances at "Ole Miss," it should have used force also to quell "disturbances" allegedly created by a group of Negroes who held prayer meetings on the courthouse lawn at Albany.
- The laws allegedly violated by them are laws against "parading in public," hastily revised ordinances of questionable vintage.
- In order to see this claim in its true character, let us consider the following facts:
- Those people carried no weapons, spoke to no one except the police and made no hostile movements of any kind.
- Since these ordinances were local and not national, the United States government was not involved. Law enforcement is the responsibility of whatever political entity creates the transgressed
- The so-called "disturbances" at Albany were peaceful gatherings of dedicated pacifists who assembled to hold prayer meetings in public view, soliciting divine aid in the solving of their problems.
law, and since no threat to national authority existed, the federal government could have intervened only at the invitation of legally constituted local authority.
- The reason for these prayer demonstrations is that these Negroes had despaired of getting relief from local authorities. They were tired of being penalized because their skin is dark, and they wanted the rights guaranteed to them by the Constitution but forcibly withheld from them by the state of Georgia and the city of Albany.
In many ways, those people were seeking the same things George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, Nathan Hale, John Hancock and others sought in 1776. Among other grievances — some of which are mentioned in the Declaration of Independence — these Georgia citizens were compelled to pay taxes while being systematically excluded from the franchise.
"THIS IS THE same "taxation without representation" that was one of the principal causes of the Revolutionary War, and it seems that the disfranchised Negroes in Georgia agree with Franklin, Jefferson and other Founding Fathers that "taxation without representation is tyranny."
It is deplorable that such protests are still necessary almost 200 years after the rights of man were so eloquently stated in a cornerstone of our political philosophy.
— Jim Alsbrook
Allen's 'Cram-A-Rama'
Last Call: Enter Now
WIN $50
To make arrangements for your "cramming" time by
PHONING VI 3-5000
By Thursday Night, Nov. 1 — 10:30 p.m.
ALLEN'S DRIVE-IN
1404 W. 23rd
Page 4 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Nov. 1, 1962
De Gaulle's Power May Be Slipping
By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst
Since May, 1958, when President Charles de Gaulle took over French leadership with dictatorial powers to settle the Algerian conflict, the French people have been dutifully following his lead
This week the President won another of the popularity contests to which he has resorted frequently over the last four years as he has gone about changing the political and physical structure of France.
But it was won by a narrower margin than hoped and accompanied by many a cry of foul by a united parliamentary opposition to his demand that future French presidents be elected by direct vote of the people. orderly, there must able
RESPONDING TO De Gaulle's threat that he would quit "at once and without return" if he failed to receive a substantial vote of confidence. French voters gave him a healthy 62 per cent of the votes cast.
But it was the slimmest margin of any since June, 1958, and growing opposition was signified not only by those who voted against him but by the substantial number who staved at home.
In 1958, French voters endorse his constitutional changes by a margin of four to one. This week, his support came from actually less than half of France's registered voters.
Victory was won, however, over formidable opposition.
Returns from the April 8, 1962, referendum approving the Algerian peace settlement showed a growing number of Frenchmen opposed to increased powers for De Gaulle.
SUNDAY'S referendum taking the presidential election out of the hands of about 50,000 privileged politicians, found every political party aligned against him with the exception of his own.
With considerable reason, De Gaulle's opposition accused him of obscuring the real issue, the constitutional change, and making it one of his own prestige. There also were bitter complaints that the government was monopolizing radio and television air time.
In any event, it seemed apparent that the honeymoon was all but over.
A NEW NATIONAL assembly will be elected next month and there seems little reason to believe that De Gaulle can win anything like a majority.
The new assembly cannot topple De Gaulle but it can withhold approval of his budget or speedily overthrow any premier he might name.
If government processes are to be
Castro Talks On Blockade To Cubans
HAVANA—(UPI)—Premier Fidel Castro will report to the Cuban nation in a radio-television address tonight on his talks with United Nations Acting Secretary General U Thant on the question of the dismantling of Russian missiles.
A broadcast by Havana Radio said Castro's views will be disclosed in a panel discussion with newsmen and commentators, with the Editor of the newspaper El Mundo, Luis Gomez Van Wanguermert, acting as moderator.
The broadcast also reported that Soviet First Deputy Premier Anastas Mikoyan will arrive in Havana late today "to discuss matters connected with the new trade treaties and also matters related to the present Cuban crisis."
This was the first mention on Havana Radio of Mikovan's trip. It also was the first official disclosure that his trip was related to the Soviet agreement to dismantle the missiles and ship them back to Russia.
The radio report also said that "conversations over Cuba will resume this morning at the United Nations," but did not clarify the statement.
orderly, there must be a considerable change in De Gaulle's tactics which heretofore have been to run roughshod over the assembly in matters both domestic and foreign.
OPPOSITION to De Gaulle springs from sources which are both political and economic.
All parties are demanding a greater voice in foreign affairs.
Socialist Party leader Guy Mollet, a former premier, has accused De Gaulle of ignoring the "legitimate demands of the workers."
Strikes and threats of strikes reflect pressing demands for increased wages in nationalized industries and public services.
Cuba Returns Pilot's Body
NEW YORK — (UPI)—The body of Air Force Major Rudolph Anderson Jr., whose reconnaissance plane was lost over Cuba Saturday, will be shipped home by the Cuban government for "humanitarian reasons."
This was announced yesterday by acting UN Secretary General U Thant following his return from two days of talks with Cuban officials in Havana.
The Cuban regime announced Saturday that its anti-aircraft guns had fired on an unidentified plane. Shortly thereafter, the Defense Department disclosed in Washington that Anderson's plane was missing after a flight over Cuba.
Anderson's father, a retired nurseryman from Greenville, S.C., would not give any information about his son's most recent military assignment.
It was not revealed whether the craft had been shot down. The Air Force declined to identify the type of plane Anderson had been piloting.
He said the pilot was a Clemson College graduate with 11 years service in the Air Force. The son, a 1948 graduate of Clemson College with a textile engineering degree, was married and the father of two young sons.
Before joining the Air Force in 1951, Anderson worked briefly in a Greenville textile mill. He served as a fighter pilot in Korea.
MOSCOW — (UPI) — Moscow Radio attacked the U.S. naval blockade around Cuba today, claiming its resumption "aroused alarm among millions of people in America."
Moscow Radio Attacks Blockade Resumption
Even before the arms quarantine went into effect at dawn, the radio proclaimed:
In an English language broadcast to North America, Moscow Radio said Cuban Premier Fidel Castro had "suggested measures" to ensure his country against attack. It said the measures "would provide a good basis for a lasting peace in the Caribbean."
"War hysteria brought about by the recent U.S. threat of aggression against Cuba has hardly died down when the ominous word "blockade" again appears on the pages of papers."
The broadcast did not mention Guantanamo by name. But Castro's recent statements of conditions for a settlement of the Cuban crisis made a Guantanamo pull-out a prime requisite.
AT THE SAME TIME, the Soviet press and radio stepped up its campaign to get the United States to abandon Guantanamo Naval Base in Cuba.
(The Soviet Union's major Asian ally, Red China, called Castro's stand 'absolutely just, absolutely
necessary and entirely correct." Today's edition of Red Flag, the Chinese Communist Party's leading theoretical magazine, urged Castro to stick to his Guantanamo demands and other conditions.)
The Soviet Army newspaper Red Star published an article headlined "Guantanamo: Springboard of Aggressions and Provocations." It called the naval base "a tick which has bitten into Cuba's soil."
THE RADIO ALSO renewed its attack on Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz.), calling him a "fomentor of ultra actions who sneers at other nations as inferior."
Quality Watch Repairr
Lowest Prices
DANIELS
See You At ANTIQUE SHOW Fri.-Sat.-Sun—11 to 10
Book Nook-Cobweb
Hungry
for flavor?
Tareyton's
got it!
"Tareyton's Dual Filter in duas partes divisa est!"
says Sulla (Skipper) Augustus, famed leader of the Roman fleet. "When you're out on the aqua," says Skipper, "there's nothing like a Tareyton! The flavor is the maximus. In fact, inter nos, here's de gustibus you never thought you'd get from any filter cigarette!"
Dual Filter makes the difference
---
DUAL FILTER Tareyton
Product of The American Kelco Company - Kelco is our name
1
Missiles To Go— But What Now?
By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst
A common danger had brought nations of the American hemisphere together. But as the immediate danger receded, the durability of that unity would be tested all over again.
Dramatic as has been the Soviet rollback in Cuba, there still remains another important question: the course now to be followed toward the Communist Cuban regime of Fidel Castro itself.
President Kennedy's firm action had done much to establish and gain sympathy for U.S. leadership.
Chile, previously one of the bigthree Latin American holdouts against any punitive action against Cuba, made a complete switch and gave full support to the U.S. action both in the Organization of American States and in the United Nations.
University Party and Vox Populi will meet tonight in the Kansas Union to discuss election plans.
Campus Parties Will Meet to Make Plans
Candidates running in the primary Nov. 6 and 7 will be introduced to the Vox general assembly meeting at 7:30 in the Pine Room. The UP campus committee will meet with UP candidates at 7 p.m. in the Activities Lounge to discuss the platform.
Music Series Starts At 8 Tomorrow Night
The Vegh Quartet will open the KU Chamber Music Series at 8 p.m. tomorrow in Swarthout Recital Hall.
The members since its founding in 1940 have been Sandon Vegh, first violin; Sandon Zoldy, second violin; Georges Janzer, viola; and Paul Szabo, cello.
Tickets are available at the Murphy Hall box office, Union Ticket Center, and the Bell Music Co.
MEXICO ALSO was showing a marked change of sentiment.
Brazil endorsed the initial U.S. action but served notice it would not support "measures implying an intervention on Cuban territory."
In the dispute, Brazil sought a mediator's role.
CASTRO, HE said, had "emerged as a discredited pawn of Soviet foreign policy."
In Mexico City, where OAS finance ministers have been studying the past and future of the Alliance For Progress program, UPI correspondent Henry Raymont reported a growing sense of shock at Castro's bad faith in secretly accepting Soviet offensive weapons and thus endangering the hemisphere's peace and security.
IT WAS POSSIBLE, too, that the President had new sympathy for even tougher sanctions against the Castro government. Especially would this be true should mounting anti-Castro sentiment in Cuba lead to a new wave of arrests and firing-squade executions.
It also was felt that the past week had damaged Castro's and Moscow's position in Cuba as well as throughout Latin America.
But even as Khrushchev promised to pull back his missiles, he also made clear he had no intention of loosening his grip on Cuba. There was no move to pull out the thousands of Soviet technicians who have taken over every phase of Cuban life nor was there any prospect of free Cuban election.
TO PROMISE to pull back his missiles meant a certain amount of humiliation for Khrushchev. But he still had his Communist bridgehead in the American hemisphere.
That is the question which the United States and its fellow-members of the OAS must ponder now.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel
Official Bulletin
Der Deutsche Vercin trifft sich Donnerstag den 1 November, um 5 Uhr in 502 Fraser. Es gibt ein Puppenspiel, ein Naturbild, ein StudentenNatürlich gibt auch Erinnerung. Also kammen Sie zu 502, "die Bühne von Fraser." Vergessen sie nicht!
TODAY
Thursday, Nov. 1, 1962 University Daily Kansan
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses, 7:00 a.m., 11:40 a.m.
St. Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Strat-
ward
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship.
210 n.m. 528 Madison St. Wm. Somerset
Borough, NJ 07963.
SHEFFIELD, England — (UPI)— Four Sheffield University students who posted newspaper bills reading "war declared" in the downtown area at the height of the Cuban crisis were suspended from the student union last night.
It Wasn't That Funny
Woman Plans Big Diet
LOS ANGELES — (UPI) — During yesterday's "run" on canned foods a supermarket manager observed one woman who bought:
"A load of food which included two cases of Metrecal for her bomb shelter."
Shows at 7 and 9:30
FRIDAY FLICKS
FRASER THEATER
A Town...Stripped Down
To Its Raw
Human Hungers!
WILLIAM HOLDEN
Picnic
KIM NOVAK
ROSALIND RUSSELL
CINEMASCOPE
TECHNICOLOR
35c admission — tickets for both shows on sale at Union on Friday till 6 p.m. and then at the door.
KU SPORTS
on
DIAL KLWN 1320
7:30 a.m. Daily Sports Shorts
5:00 Today Jayhawk Locker Room
5:20 Tom Hedrick Sports
Jay Bowl
KANSAS UNION
LET'S GO BOWLING
at
Jay Bowl
Always Open for Your Convenience
Daily -------------- 8 .a.m. - 11 p.m.
Sun. -------------- 1 p.m. - 11 p.m.
Get Your Homecoming Decorations Supplies Early
24 Colors Crepe Paper
9 Colors Dry Tempera
All Colors Pre-Mixed Tempera
19 Colors Poster Board
Paper
Brushes, Glue
Everything for Homecoming Decorations Except Pledges
Order Now
Kansas
Union
Book Store
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Nov. 1, 196
Kansas Ignores Issues, Titus Says
By Joanne Prim
"Do you realize how dead politics is in Kansas?" James E. Titus, assistant professor of political science, spoke at the informal forum sponsored by the Young Republicans and Young Democrats. Prof. Titus is faculty adviser of the latter group.
"Issues should be brought up and dramatized by the party out of power." he said.
"Population growth and industrial development are not what they should be. The tax system is antiquated.
"There is too much reliance on property and sales tax. No severance tax is paid on the oil and natural gas which leave our state," he said later.
Earl A. Nehring, assistant professor of political science and adviser of the Young Republicans, said:
"If there are no issues, it is because the people are satisfied.
"Kansas is a conservative state. If problems are approached cautiously, it is essentially the reflection of the people.
"What they want, the government and political leaders will reflect. People seem to be satisfied with the performance of the Republicans," he said.
Prof. Titus said that it is difficult to gain a voice in party politics—meaning that people are discouraged from disturbing the status quo in the state.
"We go from campaign to campaign," he said, commenting on the Democratic party's lack of continuity between election years.
Prof. Nehring spoke of the effect which the Cuban developments would have on elections on a nation-wide basis.
"No one is willing to spell out the consequences," he remarked. "The incumbents are most likely to be helped.
"The Democrats thought it (Cuba) would have an effect, or they obviously wouldn't have used it.
"Of course, the Republicans must approve, since they've been urging action," he said.
Student representatives on the political forum were Peter G. Aylward, Ellsworth senior and president of the Young Democrats, and Reuben R. McCornack, Abilene junior and president of the Young Republicans.
Aylward made references to a magazine article which said that the Republican party is losing ground on college campuses. One out of six students of Republican family background were reported to be switching to the Democratic party compared to one out of 10 students from Democratic families switching to the Republican party, he said.
"The Democrats are thought of as the party of action. Republicans usually don't want change," he commented.
He gave the voting records of the Republicans against and Democrats for legislation defeated in the 87th Congress.
McCornack defended the defeat of the Urban Affairs bill on the basis of states' rights.
"A Department of Urban Affairs would provide certain relief measures, but urban affairs are handled now by the state governments," he said.
"Medicare was limited solely to hospital care," he continued. "Older people should have assistance, but it is unreasonable to tie the program to social security. They have no chance to decide for themselves. There are too many holes in the bill." he said.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers—They Are Loyal Supporters.
1.
2.
Well, back to the rolling pin again
Try Our Quality Pizza and Tasty Submarine Sandwiches
Pizza Hut
Free Delivery in Campus Area
VI 3-0563
HONOLULU — (UPI) — The United States detonated a sub-megaton nuclear device between 20 and 30 miles over Johnston Island early today, creating such a fantastic display in Hawaii that even members of Joint Task Force 8 were taken by surprise.
14th & Tenn.
U.S. Blast Creates Weird Visual Effects
JT8'7, which usually provides a prompt official announcement on the tests, took 40 minutes to prepare an explanation. It said the fireball was not visible in Hawaii at detonation, but boiled upward over Johnston after the blast.
Metal Made Like Ice
FARMINGDALE, N. Y.-(UPI) One solution to the problem of shaping hard-to-form aerospace metals and alloys may turn out to be "almost as simple as making a batch of ice cubes," according to engineers here.
The shot created a weird Halloween effect over the 50th state, 800 miles to the northeast. Witnesses said it was brighter than the 250-mile-high megaton blast of July 8.
Manufacturing researchers at Republic Aviation Corporation report they have successfully applied the principle of using the force produced when water is changed into ice to shape metal parts. This freezing technique, they say, has accomplished the shaping job at a lower cost than afforded by the use of conventional forming machines and tools.
Astronauts Will Draw $17.500
HOUSTON—(UPI)—Neil A, Armstrong and Elliot M. See, the nation's first two civilian astronauts, will be paid $17,500 a year.
Before going to work for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, both men were making $16,000 a year as civilian test pilots.
Lerner and Loewe Musical Opens One-Week Run Sunday
Phil Harris, Lawrence graduate student, plays the lead in the saga of a California miner, a '49er, and his daughter. Jennifer.
Lerner and Loewe's "Paint Your Wagon," a former Broadway musical hit, will open a week's run Sunday at the University Theatre.
Sylvia Anderson, Chicago, Ill.
senior, portrays the daughter.
"Paint Your Wagon" is directed by William Kuhlke, KU speech and drama instructor.
The show's last performance will be given next Saturday on Homecoming night. Gordon Beck, KU speech and drama instructor and theater assistant, said tickets for Saturday were running low.
Cast members are:
David Holloway, Gas City junior; Richard Taylor, Leawood junior; Roger Brown, Topeka graduate student; Jesse Shaker, Heights, Ohio; Edgar E. Dittmore, McLouth graduate student; Elizabeth Getz, Schenectady, N. Y., sophomore; Jeffrey Mason, Howard East, Howard Estes, Prairie Village, junior; C. Eugene Mason, Lenexa freshman.
Michael Spoon, Overland Park sophomore; Dan Kocher, Topeka senior; Robert Ash, Lawrence senior; Don Grant, Kansas City junior; E. John Taddiken.
Having a Party?
Going to serve a meal?
Let us help you!
BIG BUY
V1 3-8225
State Farm Insurance
Paul E. Hodgson Local Agent
Off. Ph. VI 3-5666
Res. Ph. VI 3-5994
530 W 23rd.
Lawrence, Kan.
Independence junior; Michael Fisher;
Burgwinter; Gail Webb; McCune
burg freshman; Gall Webb, McCune
sophomore; Galen Irwin, Joplin, M.
senior; Anthony Bengel, Independence
John B. Pierce, Fairmount, Minn., senator; Michael Foost, Goodland, sophomore; Bonnie Butler, Merriam freshman; Mini Frink, Lawrence freshman; Tori Wohlfrey, Lawrence freshman; Scheldt, Wichita sophomore; Mary Lynn Speer, Merriam sophomore; Kay Liam Speer, Merriam junior; Mihai Neine Law, Lawrence junior and Mary Godrey, Lawrence freshman.
CO/AD CLASSIFIED
Serving 700,000 readers of college newspapers For rates, write CO/AD 396 Park Ave. San Jose, Calif.
TRAVEL
HUMOR
EUROPE - Discover this bargain. Writer
Europe, 255-Cioua, Pasadena, Calif.
TRAVEL FILMS, 16 mm. Free list, Lobett
Co. 2002 Taraval, San Francisco.
30,000 COMEDY Lines. Free catalog.
3536a Msida Crescent, Baldwin,
N.Y.
OPPORTUNITIES
SAVE 15%; Reporter Magazine, $5.10 yr;
REPRINT; Reader Service Center, c/o
COLAID;
BICYCLE MOTORIZING Plans—Send $1J converts bicycle to motorized Go-Biky for mini-Mall Go-bike
HEALTH-Reducing, Gaining Muscles, Longevity. Mail 25c for all 4 courses. Buy Now. Health Course, $1. Agents Kit, $2. Big Deal, $3. Guaranteed Sls System, 8421-C Evergreen, Southgate, Calif.
EDUCATIONAL
SUPER LEARNING power overnight! Success guaranteed! Write 'Guide', Box 124708, FAX (516) 329-3222.
EXPERIMENT WITH sleep-learning Fascinating, educational, details Free. Research Association, Box 24-CP, Olympia, Wash. L'EXPRESS—Controversial French Weekly. Howard Publications, 1475 Broadway, New York.
DELUXE FEATURES
Built-In Speaker
Erase Automatically
Two-Track Recorder
Reusable Tape
Modern Style
Sturdy Plastic Case
Volume Control
MULTI-PURPOSE PORTABLE 4 TRANSISTOR
SIMPLIFIED AUTOMATIC TAPE RECORDER
FOR OFFICE, HOME, SCHOOL, TRAVEL
LOWEST PRICE EVER!
$19.87
NO MONEY DOWN
NOTHING ELSE TO BUY
COMES COMPLETE WITH:
OASE TAPE
MIBROPHONE
ZAR PHONE
DARRYING STRAP
BATTERIES
WITHIN TAPE MOOVEMENT
THRU TRANSFACER
PLASTIC WINDOW
IN OVER
YOU GET EVERYTHING!
5 BATTERIES
7 VOLT BATTERY
BAR PHONE
50 FOOT TAPE
MICROPHONE
Complete OPERATING INSTRUCTIONS
WEIGHS ONLY 2LBS. MEASURES 7英寸×5英寸×2英寸
A TRUE MIRACLE OF THE MODERN AGE
Now you can record for business or pleasure; for work or for play.
Record your own voice or the voices of your precious children.
Completely silent operation. Record conversations with friends secretly, do it anywhere, any time. Full portable operation.
Use it at this office or in your car or home or in your backyard. It will always play back clearly exactly what is said.
OPEN AN ORDER BY
FOR OFFICE, HOME,
SCHOOL, TRAVEL
LOWEST PRICE EVER!
$1987
NO MONEY DOWN
NOTHING ELSE TO BUY
COMES COMPLETE WITH:
CASE • APE • TAKE-UP WEEL
MIDNOPROBE • BAR PHONE
BARRY TINKER STRAP • BATTERY
WE
BRIMAN'S
leasing jewelers
电话
OPEN AN ACCOUNT BY PHONE
VI 3-4366
Ralph Wolfson, Mgr.
Vernie Wilson, Asst. Mgr.
Back on the Portable Troubleshoot Time Reporter for sale $12.99 complete.
Each month of the year requires a week or a 5-day charge plus a monthly service and delivery charges.
ADDRESSES
HOME PHONE
EMAIL PHONE
EMPLOYER'S ADDRESS
Name on behalf of the employer, whose office address is
(please enter a number written on white ink if available) charged.
Thursday, Nov. 1, 1962
University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Yemen's Salla Vows to Install Democracy
(Editor's Note: UPI correspondent Ray Maloney has entered Sanaa, the capital of Yemen, where a revolt brought down the town last week. The first interviews with the new premier is recorded in the following dispatch.)
By Ray Maloney United Press International
Premier Abdullah Sallal has pledged to install democracy in Yemen through parliamentary elections.
In an exclusive interview with UPI, Sallal declared the introduction of Communism into his tiny Red Sea country "completely impossible (because of) the present state of Yemen social life."
THE SOLDIER-premier hotly denied that he is a Communist and asked repeatedly for recognition for his month-old revolutionary regime from Britain and the United States. Soviet Russia and its satellites were among the first countries to recognize his government.
Sallal seized control here on Sept. 26, toppling a 1,100-year old monarchy beheaded by Imam Mohammed Al-Badr.
(Royalist factions based in Saudi Arabia and Jordan have disputed revolutionary claims of control in Yemen. In Amman, Jordan, Saudi Arabia's Mecca Radio was heard saying that monarchist Yemeni forces were still battling at Zeeben, 24 miles outside Sanaa.
(THE RADIO said 180 Egyptian soldiers were killed during four days of fighting at Serwah and Maarib, 80 miles east of Sanaa. It said monarchist forces had blocked the highway to the capital and surrounded an Egyptian garrison at Zeeben.)
Sitting in a fourth-floor reception room of a palace that once belonged to the Imam, Sallal did not
elaborate on his stated plans for a democracy in Yemen. But he made the following points;
- The United Arab Republic (UAR) would supply "all the necessary troops" to repel any attempt by Jordan and Saudi Arabia to help restore the monarchy.
- Yemen wants friendship with all nations.
- There is no prospect of an early union between Yemen and the UAR.
- British-controlled Aden is a problem for "the Adeni people. We don't intend to interfere."
Sallal talked easily, frequently rubbing the stubble of a beard on his chin.
The only sound to drift up to the palace rooms through early morning mists was the steady drone of aircraft taking off, apparently toward the East where Royalist opposition is said to be centered around the town of Marib.
Egyptian soldiers filled the streets and alleys of the city. Sallal said there were "only about 1,000 Egyptians inside Yemen and these are mostly technicians."
WESTERN diplomats said they believed the number was between 5,000 and 10,000.
Sallal said the promise of full Egyptian troop support had been given to him by Field Marshall Abdel Hakim Amer, President Nasser's right-hand man and a member of the Presidency Council in Cairo. Amer left for Cairo after a secret 48-hour visit here.
Sallal said he had only to request help and the Egyptians would send it. He stopped to look at the exquisite Persian carpets covering the cheap yellow limoleum on the floor and said, yes, they would come — but "only if I request them."
ASKED IF he intended to make the request, he said, "I doubt if it will be necessary. Yemeni soldiers are better than Egyptians in any case."
Sallah praised Britain for being a monarchy "with which Republicans can live with — not like Saudi Arabia and Jordan who attack Yemen merely because it has declared itself a republic."
All attempts to reach the airfield after the interview to examine the planes taking off were prevented by a guard — an angry Yemeni armed with a Russian-made sub-machine-gun.
FROM A distance, the fighter planes that took off appeared to be
single-engine Russian Yaks. The bombers appeared to be Russian copies of the American DC3.
Sallah had said the country was "all quiet" and that fighting around Maarib had ceased. But bombs could be seen hanging from beneath the fuselage of the planes as they took off.
Government officials refused all requests to visit Maarib, a town on the edge of the desert 80 miles to the east. "Living conditions there are too bad," was the reason given.
(At Taiz airport on Tuesday morning, a Russian-built twin-engine bomber with Yemeni markings landed with toggles made to hold bombs twisting emptily.)
MexicanChristmas Tour Offered Club Members
International club members may sign up for a Christmas tour of Mexico at the club meeting tonight in the Kansas Union.
Fritz Gysin, Swiss graduate student, said the group will leave Lawrence Dec. 20 for Monterey, Mex, where they will spend three days.
AT MONTEYE they will have an opportunity to watch a bull fight.
The group will then split, one busload traveling to Oaxaca to see the Indian ruins, the other going to the beach at Acapulco to swim in the Pacific or lounge in the sun.
Both groups will meet in the old Spanish town of San Miguel to bathe in the hot springs and tour the lead works.
BUSES WILL LEAVE San Miguel for Lawrence Dec 31.
CAREERS IN ENERGY with HUMBLE
AMERICA'S LEADING ENERGY COMPANY
MONDAY & TUESDAY, NOV. 5th & 6th
REPRESENTATIVE OF HUMBLE PRODUCTION DEPARTMENT WILL BE ON CAMPUS TO INTERVIEW:
Chemical Civil Electrical
Mechanical Petroleum Industrial
- ENGINEERS -
INTERESTED IN DISCUSSING PROFESSIONAL CAREER OPPORTUNITIES IN OIL AND GAS PRODUCTION AND NATURAL GAS PROCESSING
CONTACT COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING PLACEMENT OFFICE FOR APPOINTMENT
"HUMBLE IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER"
Gysin said that if 60 persons sign up Friday, the price of the trip would be $115 instead of $125.
KU students making the trip must have smallpox and typhoid shots, he said.
The club has received no authorization for the foreign students from 46 countries, who were previously denied permission to cross the border. Gysin wrote the Mexican Minister of Immigration last week to request permission.
CLASSIC BEAUTY
... handsomely supple
... fashionably simple
... built-in arch support for heavenly
Black Suede or Black Leather
$8.95
Black Suede
or
Black Leather
Sueded
Classic
Handsewn Vamp Construction Flexible Neolite Soles
maine aires
McCoy's
813 Mass.
VI 3-2091
GAS-TOONS
A woman reaches into a car hood to retrieve something.
"... and why does Madam think she can persuade me to service her car ahead of others?
We look ahead to the service for all our customers.
LEONARD'S STANDARD SERVICE Telephone VI 3-9830 706 W. 9th
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results
The CAMPUS Jay SHOPPE 12th & Oread
Minex Models
Minx Models
FOR
HOMECOMING
HOMECOMING . . .
A white jersey sheath that gathers you in . . .
metallic houndstooth checks that glitter and glow ... touches the same luxury at sleeves and belt ... and you've the unstudied elegance for which so many strive. In white wool with gold or silver Lurex metallic checks.
Sizes 7-15.
29.95
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Nov. 1, 1962
Wong the JAYHAWKER trail
By Ben Marshall
Last week the fortune teller's little crystal ball was right on the money.
Four right and none wrong equals a 100 per cent effort for this rookie's first week of forecasting. But the prognosticator picked up a few gray hairs during the first half at Stillwater.
This week, however, the fortune teller's little crystal ball is pretty cloudy, especially when it is rubbed and asked what will happen in Lincoln. Nebraska this weekend.
The overall "hits and misses" now stand at 24 right and 6 wrong, for an even .800 average.
It doesn't say a thing. Crystal breaks, you know, so I'm bound to pick up a few more gray hairs this time around.
MISSOURI OVER NEBRASKA:
Yes, I did this on my own — the crystal ball is not to blame. Missouri has a line that gets progressively better each weekend — and it was supposed to be the toughest one in the Big Eight at the outset of the season.
This line last week held the volatile Iowa State offense to six points. Dave Hoppmann's score was the first touchdown on the ground scored on the Tiger forward wall this season—and it came with five seconds left to play against the Tiger third-teamers.
And the Tiger backfield, bolstered by the return of last year's starting fullback Andy Russell and a conference sophomore standout Johnny Roland. can't be overlooked.
On the other hand, Nebraska has ripped through its first five games without a loss (Missouri is undefeated, but was tied by Minnesota, 0-0), and has averaged 31.3 points per game.
The Tigers will have to watch Nebraska quarterback Dennis Claridge the Big Eight's total offense leader with 897 vards.
But the Missouri defense will make the difference, in spite of the fact that the Huskers will be playing at home. MU by one touchdown.
IOWA STATE OVER OKLAHOMA STATE AFTER 1980
Anyway, the men with the money
are saying Iowa State by three points.
Iowa State's offense, somewhat stifed by Missouri's tough forward wall last weekend, will be itching to bust loose, and the O-State defenders will have to be on the lookout for Iowa State tailback-quarterback Dave Hoppmann.
The Cyclones are 1-3 in conference play and virtually out of the Big Eight race. Oklahoma State stands 1-2 in the Big Eight, and will be out to avenge last week's loss to Kansas.
The O-State passing combination of Mike Miller, the league's best passer with 664 yards to his credit, and Don Karns, the third best receiver, bear watching by the Cyclone defense.
But the Cowboys will fade in the second half as they did last week, and Iowa State will win by a touchdown.
OKLAHOMA OVER COLORADO:
In years past, the altitude at Boulder has bothered the Sooners, but they should breathe free and easy while routing the gasping Buffaloes.
CU has the two best pass receivers in the league in John McGuire and Ken Blair, who have caught passes for 298 and 275 yards respectively, and the third best passer in the Big Eight, Frank Cesarek, who has thrown for 573 yards.
But Colorado hurts defensively, and this is Oklahoma's strong point. Two other OU strong points, Joe Don Looney and Jim Grisham, should be enough to riddle the CU line and win by four touchdowns.
KANSAS OVER KANSAS STATE
Regardless of the odds, which now stand at about 100-to-1 against the Wildcats, Doug Weaver's crew should be fired up for this one.
The Jayhawkers, on the other hand, might have trouble getting enthused about the trip to Manhattan. But co-captain Ken Tiger's return to the starting lineup should spark the Hawkers once they hit Aggie territory.
And maybe Gale can rack up 300 this week.
Kansas by five touchdowns.
Vehicle Wash
We'll fill your tank with Gasolene...FREE if we forget to wipe your windshield!!!
FRITZ CO.
8th & N. H.
VI 3-4321
Downtown—Near Everything
CITIES SERVICE
CITIES SERVICE
Open Thursday, Evening 'til 8:30
Sparked by solid defensive play in the opening minutes of the game, Delta Upsilon struck for two quick touchdowns and then coasted to a 20-0 win over Sigma Phi Epsilon yesterday.
This win boosted Delta Upsilon's season record to 5-0, gave them undisputed possession of the Fraternity "A" Division II championship and placed them in the winners' bracket of the fraternity Hill championship playoffs which begin Friday.
The DUs scored on the fourth play of the game when Buddy Evans took a punt and then orbited a 58-yard pass to Bob Sorem for a touchdown. Phil Harrison kicked the extra point.
On the Sig Ep's next offensive play, linebacker Fred Bolick intercepted a stray pass and returned the ball 18 yards to the Sig Ep two yard line. DU quarterback Tom Hamill then threw to Sorem for the second touchdown and Harrison again added the conversion.
FRITZ CO.
8th & N. H.
VI 3-4321
Downtown—Near
Everything
CITIES SERVICE
CITIES SERVICE
Open Thursday Evening 'til 8:30
CITIES SERVICE
During the last three quarters, however, the battle was fought to a standstill, as the "off-and-on" DU offensive machine failed to find the range.
CITIES SERVICE
DU's Rip Sig Eps, Take Division Title
At the same time, Sigma Phi Epsilon mounted several offensive drives, but the mobile, hard-nosed DU defense kept the Sig Eps at bay and they could get no closer than the DU 10 yard line.
Four University of Kansas footballers were named by the Football Writers Association of America (FWAA) as candidates for All-America honors today.
Senior quarterback Rodger McFarland, sophomore halfback Gale Sayers, senior end Pack St. Clair, and senior guard Ken Tiger, were listed with 18 other Big Eight stand-outs for the honors.
4 Hawks Listed for All-America Honor
A total of nine backs and 13 line-
men were named.
Oklahoma and Missouri each had five players listed, KU had four, Nebraska and Oklahoma State had three each, and Iowa State and Colorado each had one.
Jack Fiscus $ ^{*} $
says...
All Premium Payments Are Refunded as an Extra Benefit if death occurs within 20 years after you take out The Benefactor, College Life's famous policy, designed expressly for college men and sold exclusively to college men because college men are preferred risks. Let me tell you about all 9 big Benefactor benefits. No obligation. Just give me a ring.
*JACK FISCUS
Area Director
P. O. Box 272
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Viking 2-3206
- * *
representing
THE COLLEGE LIFE
INSURANCE COMPANY
OF AMERICA
Delta Upsilon found the range on the final play of the game, however, when Hamill fired a 28-yard strike to end Gene Shofner in the Sig Ep end zone. Harrison's conversion attempt was wide and game ended, 20-0.
Pairing were drawn yesterday by the six teams who will compete in the Fraternity "A" Hill championship Playoffs.
the only Company selling exclusively to College Men
First-round action will start tomorrow afternoon when Sigma Nu, runner-up in Division III, meets Sigma Alpha Epsilon, runner-up in Division I. Division III champs, Phi Delta Theta, will square off against Phi Gamma Delta, runner-up to the DUs in Division II.
The Division I champions, Beta Theta Pi, and Division II winners, Delta Upsilon, drew byes and will play in first-round action.
The Betas will play the winner of the Sigma Nu-SAE game, and the DUs will take on the winner of the Phi Delt-Phi Gam game Tuesday in second-round action.
A
like it hip ?
Buffs who dig fresh ideas flip for Pipers, slim-as-adrumstick slacks that fit so great, you'll go over really big. Nobelt, nocuffs to bug you; wear 'em low down on the hips and man, you're saying something! In a heap of colorful, washable fabrics; at swingin' stores $4.95 to $12.95.
h.i.s
Piper Slacks
A
Open Every Evening
Safeway
Key Rexall Drugs
AT
T. G. & Y.
ACME Laundry & Cleaners
Speed-Wash
Western Auto
Malls Barber Shop
Ronnie's Beauty Salon
Little Banquet
Count Down House
Peggy's Gifts & Cards
Elms
Sinclair
Service
Maupintour Travel
Kief's Record & Hi-Fi
Shop Evenings
Page 9
Mr. K.Retreats- To Regroup Again?
By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst
At a Moscow diplomatic reception a little more than a year ago, First Deputy Anastas Mikoyan remarked the Soviet Union's greatest secret weapon was Nikita Khrushev's tongue.
And, indeed, the fast-talking Khrushchev was riding high.
He held the initiative in Berlin and used it to threaten and squeeze out the Western Allies through a separate peace with East Germany.
Using Soviet missile and nuclear successes as his propaganda springboard, he sought at the same time to spread fear of Soviet power among small or wavering nations and the neutrals. Western peace organizations became vehicles for his propaganda.
WITH HIS DECLARED POLICY of peaceful co-existence, his call for immediate freedom for all colonial peoples and for immediate and complete world disarmament, he sought to picture himself as a champion of peace standing against Western aggressors.
In 1960 he reached a peak
In 1960 he reached a peak. In that year, at the summit conference in Paris, he tongue-lashed the President of the United States.
HE DEMANDED THE resignation of United Nations Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold for policies frustrating to the Soviet Union in the Congo.
He declared Nationalist China a corpse which should be thrown out of the U.N.
More important to the present, in
that year he had his emotional meeting with Fidel Castro at the United Nations and in that year declared:
"WE CONSIDER THE Monroe Doctrine has outlived its time . . .
has died..."
In July, 1960, he warned the Soviet Union would use rockets against the United States if the U.S. intervened militarily in Cuba.
He repeated the threat in April, 1961, when he said the Soviet Union will "render the Cuban people and their government all necessary assistance in beating back the armed attack on Cuba."
These are the statements which may come back to haunt Khrushchev and which contribute to one of the great imponderables in the present crisis.
Khrushehev's announcement he is ordering his missiles in Cuba dismantled and shipped back home is a major retreat but not yet a retreat of historic dimensions.
HISTORICALLY, the Kremlin has preferred to let others fight its wars and to avoid war itself.
Rather it could be another example of one Soviet step backward in order to take two forward.
He made it clear he had no intention of releasing his hold on Cuba, a hold which now extends into every walk of Cuban life.
Nonetheless, events of the last few days could be enough to cause Khrushchev trouble at home. His failure after four years to settle the Berlin problem and now the unfavorable events in Cuba might provide just the ammunition needed by the Stalinists and others who oppose his brand of personal diplomacy.
Students Entertain Children With Judo at School Carnival
Five members of Phi Kappa Tau and Delta Chi found tricky things to do last night but they tricked for a purpose.
The students dressed up and put on a judo show at the Cordley Grade School carnival last night. Mat-size tickets cost 10 cents.
Jim Carr, Carthage, Mo., senior who organized the group emcee the "judo bouts," dressed in a colorful silk kimono. The wrestlers were Jim Stevenson, Kansas City junior; Richard Britz, Severna Park, Md., senior; John Pulley, Kansas City freshman and John Peoples, Lawrence junior.
Stephenson, who has 6 years experience in judo and karati, first demonstrated his ability to break
various size white pine boards with his elbow, fist, and the side of his hand.
Pulley, as a planted member of the audience, was asked to participate as Stephenson demonstrated judo kicks and falls. Masked goblins and fairy princesses giggled with delight as Pulley spun and threw Stephenson time after time.
University Daily Kansan
The exhibition ended with a five minute match between Britz and Peoples, who were "Japanese judo experts" by way of the eyebrow pencil make-up they wore.
The judo exhibition served as a point of interest to adults at the carnival who tired of fishponds, make-up booths, and other forms of entertainment.
Hashinger Girls Create Own Rug
By Tom Winston
Like many students who have frozen their bare feet once too often in climbing out of bed onto a cold floor, two girls in Hashinger Hall solved their problem by getting a rug—but with a difference.
They made the rug themselves out of 68 carpet samples, each one different, put together with two-inch masking tape.
"It took 10 woman hours of hard labor to put it together," roommate Joyce Mitchell, Kansas City senior, said. "Joanne and I took five hours one hot evening and did it, wiping sweat from our brows with one hand, slapping tape on with the other. It sure was hot."
"I BEGGED THE samples from furniture dealers in my home town, Aberdeen, S.D.," Joanne Randall, a senior in theater and voice, said.
The girls said their rug has been a hit with visitors at dorm open houses and other girls in the hall.
"THERE'S QUITE a market for the pieces we have left," Joanne said. "Eight or 10 girls have indicated that they'd like to make a rug like this and asked where they could buy the materials."
The rug has 36 pieces 13 by 18 inches and 32 pieces 11 by 16 inches, arranged in parallel lines of eight and 12, in pastel colors, tans and browns. There are some solid colors and some patterns, mostly tweeds and stripes. The one unharmonious note is the bright red welcome mat in front of the door, surrounded by a big black square.
"It's our version of the red carpet treatment." Miss Mitchell said.
Visitors are often intrigued as to how they put the rug together, Miss Randall said. Even Mrs. Fred Ellsworth, wife of the man for whom a new men's dorm will be named, asked at a recent open house if the girls sewed it together.
"One girl asked me if we just laid it there," Miss Randall said. "But there are others who think it is a patchwork pattern carpet in one piece. Several have tried to pull it apart with their feet.
"Actually, the masking tape is better than sewing it, because the more it is walked on the better it sticks." Miss Randall added.
"WE HAVE MANY more pieces." Miss Mitchell said. "We'll put a new line of squares on every night or something.
The girls plan to make their rug wall-to-wall eventually.
"It makes the place look real homey," Miss Randall said. "But our biggest problem is cleaning it.
Anti-Red Riots Start In India
NEW DELHI — (UPI) — Five hundred rioting Indian students shouting "death to the invaders" today stoned an Indian Communist Party office and smashed Chinese shops in a protest against the Communist Chinese border attacks.
The rioting broke out in downtown New Delhi as an ominous quiet settled over the fighting fronts and V. K. Krishna Menon, denoted Defense Minister, flew to Tezpur, 150 miles from one battle area.
The rioting students broke of
from a crowd of 10,000 protest marchers and attacked a Chinese restaurant, curio shop, and shoe-maker's shop. None of the Chinese proprietors could be seen.
Outnumbered police fought the rioters but could not hold them back as they threw rocks through the plane glass window of the fashionable restaurant and ripped down the Chinese characters of its sign.
The students burned an effigy of Chinese Communist Premier Chou En-Lai and shouted "drive the Chinese back to the China wall.
Jerry's Specials
★ Snow Tires Just $9.95 . . exchange plus tax
★ Do-It-Yourself Carwash Only 50c
Guaranteed Anti-Freeze Protection Only $1.00
JERRY'S CONOCO 9th & INDIANA
VLADIMIR HOROWITZ COLUMBIA RECORD DEBUT
On Mono & Stereo Records
BELL'S
925 Mass. VI 3-2644
TRADING POST
7041/2 Mass. Ph.VI 3-2012
Located 1 door South of K.P. & L.
in basement.
Two matching twin Hollywood
beds complete (ea.) ... $29.95
Danish style sofa & chair ... $87.50
Hide-A-Bed ... $99.00
2—Matching night chairs (ea.) $ 9.95
Dressing table & stool ... $ 8.00
5-Drawer chest ... $11.00
Baby bed with mattress ... $10.00
Play pen with pad ... $ 8.50
New 9x12 rugs with rubber backing, Special at ... (ea.) $24.00
Big 3-drawer desk $10.00
21" Console TV $19.00
Console TV, radio, record
player ... $28.00
Portable 4-speed record player .. $ 7.00
2 Maytag automatic washers
(ea.) ... $24.50
Bleeding, Special (40) ... $10.00
Big 3-drawer desk...
RCA High Fidelity Console
record player $49.95
We invite you to come in and look around. Remember a few steps down gives you a big step up in savings.
WARREN WIGGINS
★ Associate Director of the Peace Corps
- Author of "The Towering Task"
★ Holder of the "Distinguished Flying Cross"
- Recipient of the "Fleming Award"
ALL STUDENT CONVOCATION
FRIDAY — 10:30 a.m.
Page 10
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Nov. 1, 1962
The Standard' Views Economic Problems
11
By Tom Winston
The Standard is a journal of opinion published by a group of KU students and circulated to all colleges and universities in Kansas.
In the October, 1962 issue a number of rhetorical questions are asked concerning, "Why the Standard?" Some of them are:
"Why do most discussions of basic political and economic issues evolve into the emotional hurtling of little-understood cliches?
"Why are individuals losing their basic principles and clinging to irrational dogmas?
"Why is laissez faire capitalism still criticized with fallacious economic theories?
"Why have men given up their standards?"
THE STANDARDS that "The Standard" speaks of are expressed in the Declaration of Independence: that the individual has inherent rights, that they are supreme, and that man has moral right not to be pushed around by other men.
The Standard tells that this nation's founding fathers thought that this basic liberty was "the essential condition for man's fulfillment within society."
THERE ARE SEVEN ARTICLES:
"The Great Research," by Robert C. Tyson, chairman of the Finance Department, United States Steel; "Those Who Protest" by Robert LeFevre, an editorial writer for the Colorado Springs Gazette Telegraph; "Debate: Are Labor Unions Necessary in a Free Society?" the yes by Kenneth Ciboski, Lawrence graduate student in political science, the no by Marick Pavton, Lawrence resident.
"Cliche; If Free Enterprise Really Works, Why the Great Depression?" by Paul Poirot; "The Communist Idea," quotations from Karl Marx; "Violence As a Way of Life" by David Jackman III, Wichita sophomore and current editor of The Standard, and "The Elite Under Capitalism" by Ludwig von Mizes.
“THE GREAT RESEARCH” contains reference to communism, without actually naming it, as a “Godless and alien philosophy, whose established and steadfast purpose is the destruction of our kind of society.” It also attacks the wartime slogan of the four freedoms saying “limited freedom is not freedom.”
"Those Who Protest" states that "It is the individual, not the government who is the sovereign. . . Government, conceived either as a welfare agency or a police agent of aggressive potential, is invalid. . . A 'strong-man' government, even for the purpose of sustaining it, would dethrone human liberty."
IN THE DEBATE on the worth of labor unions, the case for them is more strongly and clearly written than the case against them. The affirmative seeks to tell why, but the negative case, though it sets forth background, never comes to grip with the purpose it was supposedly written for: why labor unions are not necessary.
"The Elite Under Capitalism" states: "Men are unequal and the inherent inferiority of the many manifests itself also in the manner in which they enjoy the affluence (prosperity) that capitalism bestows upon them.
The article, "If Free Enterprise Really Works, Why the Great Depression," actually says, "If government control (socialism) is so wonderful, why the Great Depression." When politics interfere with production and leave idle plants and idle men, the fault is that of socialism, not free enterprise, the article says.
"THE COMUNIST IDEA" emphasizes that we were warned of the factors that make a successful communist revolution.
Editor Jackman's editorial "Violence As a Way of Life" says:
"Only to the extent that men cooperate voluntarily with one another for mutual gain without the intrusion of force and violence is civilization, security, and a higher standard of living possible. Philosophically this means individualism; economically it means capitalism. Until these abstract ideas are understood, violence will reign as a way of life."
LET YOUR EYES TELL THE STORY!
All New "Double Take" eye make-up
"Tote-back" Mascara and Eye Shadow Eye Duo Pencils
In All the Fall and Winter Colors
ROUND CORNER DRUGS
VI 3-0200
801 Mass.
ALSO: Full line of medicated make-up
GOP Stresses Cuban Subject; Elections Near
WASHINGTON — (UPI)—Republicans today continued to keep the Cuban issue alive during the closing days of the current election campaign.
"I think there is only one issue and it is Cuba," Goldwater said in Little Rock, Ark.
Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., produced the hardest statement.
But the leader of GOP conservatives declined to predict what effect the Cuban situation will have on the election.
"It's the biggest guessing game going," he said. "In a tight race the incumbent might be favored. But it will be unfavorable for those who have been calling us warmongers, amateur generals and the like."
Democrat Rep. Frank Thompson of New Jersey took an opposite view.
"We are now hearing great choruses of 'I told you so, from those militarists who had advocated a blockade or even invasion of Cuba months ago.'" Thompson said in a newsletter. "The events of recent days have shown how foolish that counsel was."
Thompson said recent events showed that "we must be prepared to withhold action until the time for action is precisely right."
Republicans also questioned whether the crisis has actually passed.
Sen. Alexander Wiley, R-Wis., said yesterday the situation "remains alive, explosive and dangerous." Wiley said his view was strengthened during a talk with former President Dwight D. Eisenhower.
The wise may learn things from theiroes.—Aristophanes
JOE'S BAKERY Open 24 Hours Night Deliveries 412 W.9th VI 3-47"
I am a girl. I love my school and I will always be grateful to my teachers.
PAULA BRUCKNER
The Coach House congratulates Paula on her election as Social Chairman of G.S.P. She likes our clothes and so will you.
Unstable Silence Surrounds Indian-Red Chinese Conflict
NEW DELHI, INDIA—(UPI)—An ominous quiet settled over the fighting fronts today in India's undeclared border war with Communist China.
THE SPOKESMAN SAID there were no Indian casualties from the mortar fire.
An official spokesman reported in Ladakh in the northwest Chinese mortar firing on Indian patrols in the North East frontier agency (NEFA) area of Jang in the northeast. Jang is about four miles east of Towang, an important monastery town which fell to the Reds more than a week ago.
COACH HOUSE
Garden For Trees and Grazing
"Chinese casualties were considerably higher," the spokesman said without giving any figures.
He reported, however, that 10 Indians were killed and 10 wounded in fighting near Damchok in southern Ladakh before the Indians withdrew Oct. 29.
An official spokesman reported there was no change in the situation in Ladakh in the northwest. He reported only some minor Chinese men.
This report was in sharp contrast to the figure of 2,000 to 2,500 dead and wounded which India previously was reported to have suffered in the first 10 days of fighting that started Oct. 20.
MEANWHILE, the Indian government thanked the United States for offering military supplies and said that further requests would be placed as the need arises.
The United States already has announced that it will begin an emergency airlift of weapons to beef up India's badly outgunned army by the end of this week.
The poor showing of the Indians in initial battles with the invading Communist Chinese has been attributed to their antiquated weapons and poor organization under ousted defense minister V. K. Krishna Menon.
Krishna Menon was demoted to the job of minister of defense production yesterday by Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru, who assumed the defense post himself.
Nehru moved quickly in that role today by summoning the chiefs of the three armed services to a staff meeting designed to map strategy for beating back the Communist invasion of Northern India. Krishna Menon was excluded from the session.
GRANADA
NOW SHOWING!
Join The International Set . . . And Live!
M-G-M presents
Kirk Edward G.
Douglas Robinson
2 weeks in another Town
GO COMING
Cyd Charisse - CINEMASCOOR
-METHOUGH COURT
Shows At 7:00 & 9:00
SUNSET
NOW SHOWING!
"The Singer Not The Song"
Distributed by WARNER BROS.
A CINEMASCOPE PICTURE IN COLOR
— ALSO —
"THE FIERCEST HEART"
Show. Starts At 7:00
Walt Disney's happiest motion picture
Lady
AND THE
Tramp
TECHNICOLOR'
CINEMASCOPE
from the movie by Ward Greene
© Walt Disney Productions
together with
WALT DISNEY'S
NEWEST motion picture
Almost
ANGELS
BOTH ORGANIZED BY Walt Disney Productions
(901) 235-8470
NOW SHOWING SPECIAL "SCHOOLS OUT" MATINEE FRIDAY, 2:00 CONTINUOUS SHOWINGS SATURDAY & SUNDAY
REGULAR PRICES
Adults 90c
Children 50c
VARSITY
TREATME TELEPHONE VK560 3-9865
This pigeon came to make war—and she threw in the towel!!!
AT LAST! A MOTION PICTURE THAT DELIVERS...
FUN!
CHARLTON ELSA
HESTON·MARTINELLI
in MELVILLE SHAVELSON'S production of
The Pigeon That Took Rome
CO STARRING HARRY GABRIELLA BRIAN
GUARDINO·BACCALONI·PALLOTTA·DONLEY·MARIETTO
This pigeon came to make war—and she threw in the towel!!!
THE FUN STARTS
- SATURDAY
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI3-5788
Thursday, Nov. 1, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 11
CLASSIFIED ADS SHOP YOUR
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.
Cozy 3 room furnished apartment suitable for single person. Good location. Outside bath and entrance, also parking. All utilities paid. $53 a month. PHIL VI 3-2896. 11-7
FOR RENT
Attractive furnished apartment for one woman for $65 a month. Utilities paid and garage available. Phone VI 3-1209 or see at 1633 Vermont. 11-7
For rent a single room for men 1/2 block
from Union. Kitchen privileges, maid
room, linens. Available Now at
1334 Oread or phone VI 2-1581. Call or
see evening.
Unfurnished large 4-bedroom house with 2 baths. Parking space. Excellent location. Clean, reasonable, ideal for large family. Phone VI 3-7038. 11-6
2 bedroom duplex. Also large furnished
enforcement for 3 or 4 boys. Phone
2281 11-5
Small second floor furnished bachelor type apartment suitable for 1 person. Private bath and kitchen. Steam heat. Oil-prepared oven, gas range, per person. Electric electricity. Rogers Real Estate Co., 7 West 14th. Phone VI 3-0005 or VI 3-2929. 11-5
2 bedroom house 1/2 block from campus.
Fully carpeted, screened porch, wood
floor. Excellent condition.
full basement with a large lot. $10,500.
If interested call VI 3-4291. 11-2
Two apartments for rent. A one second floor with kitchen for $70 a month. A 3 floor apartment to share with two boys. See at 1400 Ohio or phone VI 3-2464.
ROOMS FOR MEN: Double room only, share with Law student; one-half block from Student Union; private entrance, quiet, telephone and utilities paid. Call VI 3-4032 or see at 1301 Louisiana after 5 p.m. weekdays. tf
Apartment for rent to musician or hi-fi enthusiast. 2 bedroom furnished apart-
ment with high ceiling. Combination living-dining room—acoustics excellent. Large yard, stove, refrigerator with all utilitie
electricity. $75 a month. Phone VI 2-2593. 11-2
2 room apartment, private bath. I block
paid. Come and see. 1142 Indiana. If
Vacancies for young men in contemporary home with swimming pool, shower bath, private entrance, 5 evening meals weekly. $65 a month. Call VI 3-96355 tf
FOUND
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. to appreciate. For appointment call VI 3-6153 or see after 5:30 p.m.
Found in Summer room 4th floor. WED-
FEB GING initials "CR." Call V11.
7711
TYPING
English major and former secretary will type themes and theses on electric type-writer. For neat and accurate work call Mrs. Melis and Jones, VI 3-5267. tf
TERM PAPERS, THESES, ARTICLES BOOKS. Quick, accurate, neat work by
knowledge of good English and spelling
Ruth Skimmer, 805 Missouri, VI 3-3076.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses. Neat, accurate service with an electric drill. Service rates. Cm Mrs. Charles Pattil, VI 8-3879.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tf
Typing done in my home. IBM electric
time at VI 2-1880. 10-31
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
accurate, neat work. Reasonable rates.
Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff
VI 2-1749. tt
Experienced secretary with electric type-
ers, call center operators, etc.
Phone Nancy Cain at VI 3-0242
Experienced typist. 7 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rate. Mrs. Barlow, 2014 Yale VR, VI 2-1648.
Typist experienced in theses and term papers. Prompt service, reasonable rates, electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Howard Mehlinger at VI 3-4409. tf
Would like typing in my home — term papers, theses, manuscripts, etc. Fast, accurate dependable service. Call Mrs. Rogers. VI 3-0774. tt
Typing — reasonable rate, neat and ac-
cident. Mrs. Bodin, 825 Greaves Terr.
Mrs. Bedin, 825 Greaves Terr.
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.
Paper prewarm 35 keys.
Experience education and science.
Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. VI 2-1546.
FOR SALE
Stereo or hi-fi diamond needles for mos makes. Half price during November. Don't wait, buy them now at Pettengil-Davis, 723 Mass. tf
Used Rathine TV with AM-FM phono
signals guaranteed Pettet 12.
Davis, 725 Mass.
new stereo FM—new portable stereos—new AM-FM radio—new FM radio dis-
mantle as low as $268.7 —month, at Jay Stoneback s., 929 Massachusetts.
st. 11-20
GUNS: LAWRENCE FIREARMS CO. We have moved to even more palatial accu-
sories into Ohio. See our paralled stock of new and ammo. 1026 Ohio. 11-2
1960 Vauxhall. Good condition. Phone VI 2-3684. 11-8
4 new 700-1X 100 level big edge new
200-1X 100 level big edge new
700-1X 100s. All four tires cut to $88.00 installed! No federal tax. Hurry to Ray
Brown's Discount Tire Center in Mass, Sh.
11-6
Used G.L. Electric Dryer. GUARANTEED $49.97. Used washer dryer combination; late-model — perfect — cut to $135.00. Hurry to Ray Stoneback s, 929 Mass. St.
Used TVs $5.00 each! Six set must go
on! Rock Store backdrop, a 329 Mass. St.
11-6
Corvair-Valiant-Lancer Owners! Four lst line new narrow white tubeless tires 14" for $35,000 or $38,000 stalled! Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center. 929 Mass. St. 11-6
One fifty-four volume set leather bound Great Books of the Western World, "Published by Encyclopedic Britannica" with bookcase. 8 months old. Call VI 3-5998
3-speed Royce Union 26" men's or ladies"
929 Mass. Used bikes $10.00 each. 11-12
929 Mass. Used bikes $10.00 each. 11-12
Transistor Radios! 6 transistors now $10.97! AM-FM radios—twin speaker now $45.97! FM radios now $26.97. Ray Stone-back's, 292 Mass. St. 11-12
Sports Car Compact Owners Attention!
We have all sizes of snow treads avail-
able at Basketsack's Discount Tire
Center, 929 Mass. St., 1,000 new
low discount prices! 11-12
1958 Volkswagen with radio, heater, and white wall tires. Excellent condition. Priced lower than K.C. prices. Lots of extras. Phone VI 2-0771. 11-5
Five-string Orphium Banjo; $80. Martin
steel string Folk Guitar; $45. See Gene
Bernofsky at 70412 Mass. after 4. 11-5
One Roberts four-track model 980 stereo tape recorder and player with two Roberts matching external speakers 60 days old. Phone VI 3-5996. 11-5
1957 MG. Make an offer. Rapton-radio-
heater-wire wheels. Phone VI 2-1033.
All kinds of house plants. Potted . . .
Including pedilendron to be used for
room dividers and in picture windows.
Phone VI 3-4207. tf
Tape Recorder—RCA VICTOR—cartridge type Stereo, nearly new, latest model.
$170—new—will sell for $130. Call Robert Johnt at VI 3-5770. 11-1
Rav Stoneback's. $929 Mass. St. Annual Fall Sale! $15.95 $1. tube radio $12.97-$13.99 $16.99 $19.99 $99.95 twinning Stereo $- $97.97 $179.95 Stereo Console-$149.97; $202.90 Stereo Console AM-FM-$185 Hand wired portable TV-$128.88. All Brand New 11
HELP WANTED
TV shopping? Magnavox 24" automatic TV has a 3 year picture tube warranty. Get it from just $149.90. See the magnificent Magnavox at Pettengil-Davis, 723 Mass.
Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised. extremely comprehensive timecographed and bound for $4.00 per book. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
Printed Biology Study Notes: 70 pages,
bundle of highly detailed diagrams and definitions; revised
for all classes. Formerly known as the
Lake Biology Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery.
$4.50.
TYPING PAPER BARGAINS. Pink typing paper 85c per ream. Yellow paper 100c per ream. Per pound. The Lawrence Outlook. 1065 Massachusetts, open all day Saturday. tt
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in the lowest—Pet phone VI1-2321. Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m week days.
Business School junior who wants to learn discount merchandising on part time extra help basis. Must be able to work 2:30 to 5:30 p.m. daily, and 8:30 to 5:30 Saturday. Must be able to work full time during school holidays. Do not apply unless you can work these hours. Apply in person at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. St., 11-6
Wanted: Wattles at full or part time. Apply to manager at Holiday Inn Restaurant.
Classified Display Rates
MISCELLANEOUS
Monthly Rate
One time ___$1.25/inch
For Sale; Baby bassinet, never used. A baby basket. Aluminum dry rack and child's red plastic rocker. Phone VI 2-2593. 11-1
Every day ---- $1.00/inch
No art work or engraving allowed
Call KU-376 or bring your ads to 111 Flint Hall
Need a place for a private party or dance.
Phone VI 3-6376. 11-7
TRANSPORTATION
Travel-only a limited number of airline flights still available for Thanksgiving and Christmas Holiday.
Suggest making reservations Now!
First National Travel Agency 746 Mass. VI 3-0152
WANTED
Baby sation wanted for 1 baby girl 8-00
marriage. Phoen VI 3-8810
own own transportation. Phoen VI 3-8810
Would individual who purchased bound copies of Cervantes' books at library auction please contact Judith Nelson at VI 3-7600 immediately. 11-2
BUSINESS SERVICES
GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I study notes.
Completely revised and extremely comprehensive. $4. For free delivery call VI 8-8246. tf
LARRY CRUM suggests all kinds of Pancakes. T-Bone steak only 98c. We are open 24 hours a day. "K"P-Cancake Grill and Sundries. 14th and Mass.
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
tatics. Vol 19 (2008). Ola Smil
1939) 9512; Mass. Call VI 2-3263.
TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rental.
Electricity, Royal, Olympia, Smith Coronas,
Olivetti and Remington portables. Bond
Typewriter, 7x9, Mass. Phone VI 3-3644.
PATRONIZE YOUR
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center. 1218 Conn. Personal service—seCTIONAL birds, painters, chameleons, turtles, pet supplies, plus complete pets. **tt**
ADVERTISERS
ARENSBERG'S
819 MASS.
Go everywhere . . . handsome saddle or the ever popular Chucka Boat
VI 3-3470
THE DEPARTMENT OF HOSPITALITY AND CARE
SHOE
BASILICIAN BULLDOG
Hush Puppies
Rugged, easy to clean, brushed pigskin by Hush Puppies
Bouncy, crepe soles . . . they're so, so comfortable.
Saddle, Root beer with black $9.95
Chucka, Hound Dog $9.95
CHARGE ACCOUNTS INVITED
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Nov. 1, 1962
Crisis Threatens Adenauer Regime
BONN — (UPI) — Police action against the news magazine Der Spiegel erupted today into a full-scale government crisis which threatened to unseat Chancellor Konrad Adenauer.
Members of the coalition Free Democratic Party and the opposition Socialists, infuriated over the handling of the affair, were considering a demand for Adenauer's resignation.
Officially, police ransacked the magazine's offices in Bonn and Hamburg and arrested four employees including publisher Rudolf Augustin on suspicion it printed military secrets allegedly obtained from ranking military personnel through bribery.
But today the obscure trail of how the police action got started led to the door of Defense Minister Franz-Josef Strauss, who for years has been attacked by Spiegel.
During the past week, the defense ministry stubbornly has denied it knew anything about the action against Der Spiegel. An authoritative source said that Strauss' state secretary in the defense ministry, Volkmar Hopf, has admitted
giving the order to keep Justice Minister Wolfgang Stammberger uninformed.
The Social Democrats announced that as soon as possible they would force Strauss to appear before parliament to explain the action of his secretary.
The Free Democrats scheduled an executive meeting for tomorrow to decide on further action.
Sources said Strauss has brought libel actions against the magazine at least three times but failed each time.
Political sources said that Adenauer's scheduled talks with President Kennedy in Washington next Tuesday may be seriously impaired if overshadowed by an unsettled government crisis in Bonn.
The Free Democrats let it be known they may not be satisfied with the resignation of the persons involved in the police action, but may possibly demand that Adenauer resign and a new government be formed.
Stammberger has offered his resignation in protest against the police action against Der Spiegel.
Around the Campus Romanian Dancers Oler to Speak At Hoch Tonight On Children
A company of 50 Romanian dancers and musicians will perform at 8 tonight in Hoch Auditorium.
"The Rapsodia Romina" will feature Romanian folk dancers in native costumes and the Barbu Laatuur Orchestra, the Romanian State Philharmonic Orchestra.
Tickets can be purchased at the Fine Arts Office for $3.59, $2.82 and $2.05. Students with ID cards are admitted free.
The program is the first in a series of concerts in the KU concert course. The dancers and musicians came from behind the Iron Curtain as part of the State Department's Cultural Exchange Program.
Loram to Speak On German Drama
Prof. Loram who has published many articles on the modern German drama, will speak on "The Theater of Friedrich Durrennatt."
Ian C. Loram, professor of German, will be the next speaker for the KU Humanities Forum at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Oread Room of the Kansas Union.
Graduate of Yale University and former teacher at Northwestern and Cornell Universities, Prof. Loran is the editor of two anthologies of modern short stories. His book on "Goethe and His Publishers" will be brought out this fall by the KU Press.
Tibet Is Key—
(Continued from page 1)
"They only pay them lip service now," Ravenholt added.
He cited the shortage of food in China as one of the major factors contributing to the discontent of the Chinese people.
In the last 18-months, Ravenholt said, the Red Chinese rulers imported 18-tons of food. Despite such internal illies, the AUFS expert said he doubted a revolution in China in the near future.
He said that if the Nationalist forces attacked, it would be doubtful that the mainland Chinese would join with them until it was certain the Nationalist forces would prevail
Ravenholt will be on the campus until Nov. 7 to lecture classes in political science, economics and other areas on developments in Asia. The American Field Staff program is designed to bring up-to-date instruction directly from various areas of the world to the classroom.
Prof. Frances B. Oler of the State University College at Oswego, N.Y., will lecture on exceptional children at 9:30 a.m. tomorrow in Bailey Hall auditorium.
Professor Oler has worked extensively in the use of art with the cerebral palsied, mentally retarded and emotionally disturbed in schools for exceptional children in Atlanta, Go. She began the art program for children at the Speech and Hearing Clinic of Pennsylvania State University.
Prof. Oler has said, "We accept art as a natural and important means of expression for our normal children. I believe that for those who through physical, mental or emotional handicap are limited in some modes of expression, art can have particular value.
"From their art, the way they go about it as well as the results, we can better understand children, their personalities, concepts and problems."
Dickson Knocks UP Statewide Activities Plank
Halloween Hoods Hit Traffic Booth
Campus police reported this morning that the booth at 12th and Sunnyside was punctured with rocks and splattered with eggs.
Police have caught the students involved and they will appear before the dean of men. The damage was done at 12:01 this morning.
Halloween pranksters struck a KU traffic control booth last night.
Two windows were broken and the doors were punctured by a large rock.
"The Peace Corps," a documentary film, will be shown at 4:30 today in the Kansas Union. The 27-minute color film, narrated by Dave Garroway, shows Corps volunteers at work abroad.
Pranksters also topped the statue of Jimmy Green with a pumpkin.
Student Body President Jerry Dickson yesterday criticized a University Party plank which attacked the All Student Council Statewide Activities program.
Corps Film Shown Today
The UP plank states that Statewide Activities have been "ignored and grossly aborted" and it suggests the creation of a student speakers' bureau.
By Jackie Stern
Dickson, Newton senior and member of Vox. said:
Prof. John Ise to Speak
John Ise, professor emeritus of economics, will be the guest speaker at the University Women's Club meeting today. He will speak at 2 p.m. in the Watkins Room of the Kansas Union.
"The UP plank is of little value considering the fact its proposals are already in the process of going into operation."
"Letters have been written and plans are underway for a speakers' bureau which would send student leaders to Kansas high schools before and during Christmas vacation." Dickson said.
Stephen Stazel, Statewide Activities chairman and Denver, Colo. senior, said in a telephone interview that four recommendations have been made by his committee. These recommendations are:
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
- The change of duties of the county chairmen.
- The creation of a speakers bureau.
- The elimination of the Statewide Activities Convocation.
- The change of make-up in the Executive Board.
Stazel explained that county chairmen will be selected from applications which are to be turned in tomorrow.
He said the committee suggested the elimination of the out-of-state chairman to minimize the out-of-state program and re-emphasize the in-state program.
"This reorganization suggesting the speakers' bureau was read to the All Student Council last fall. I think everyone was—well aware the organization was being planned and—put into effect well before the UP platform." Stazel said.
Charles Whitman, Shawnee Mission junior, speaking for the University Party, said in a telephone interview:
Whitman said the suggestion on Statewide Activities to include only Kansas was far more limited than he felt was necessary.
"What we had hoped to achieve," he added, "was a compensation of responsibility for representing the University in the hands of eight students who knew they had the responsibility of representing the University, not only in this state, but on this campus and throughout the nation."
Crushed Ice
Ice Cold 6-pacs
of all kinds
PARTY SUPPLIES
Having a Party?
LAWRENCE ICE CO.
6th & Vt., VI 3-0350
FAST FINISHED Laundry Service
The Swedish Academy of Sciences announced the physics prize for Soviet theoretician Lev Davidovic Landau for his pioneering work on extreme low temperature research on gases, especially helium.
DR. JOHN C. KENDREW, 45, and Dr. Max Perutz, 48, of Britain shared the Nobel Prize for chemistry.
STOCKHOLM — (UPI) — A 53-year-old Russian, crippled and nearly blinded by an auto accident, and two British scientists today were awarded Nobel Prizes in physics and chemistry for 1962.
The two men who work together at the Cavendish laboratory, at Cambridge, England, share the prize of $50.043 for their studies on "The Structures of Globular Proteins."
Landau, still weak and ailing from a near-fatal auto accident in Russia last January, won an equal amount.
Three Awarded Nobel Prizes
Last month, the Swedish Nobel Committee awarded Nobel Prizes for literature and medicine.
STILL TO COME is the prestigious Nobel Peace Prize Award to be decided by the Norwegian parliament's Nobel Prize Committee. A spokesman today indicated a decision could come at any time — or may be delayed up to the Dec. 10 deadline.
RISK'S
ALTHOUGH hospitalized since January, Landau still is technically head of the Theoretical Department of the Institute of Physical Problems of the U.S.S.R. Academy of Sciences in Moscow.
613 Vermont
LANDAU, THE FIRST Soviet scientist to win a Nobel Prize since 1958, was recognized for his theoretical researches into the behavior
of gases in the frigid world of absolute zero.
This is the point at which, theoretically all molecular motion ceases and is estimated at 459.7 degrees below zero farenheit (273.16 below zero centigrade).
Landau proved that helium gas could be brought to a point near absolute zero, the closest ever attained.
GLASS
AUTO GLASS
TABLE TOPS
Sudden Service
AUTO GLASS
East End of 9th Street
VI 3-4416
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
60tl
E
TV-
RADIO
BIRD TV-RADIO
VI 3-8855
- Guaranteed
908 Mass.
- Expert Service
- Quality Parts
BOWLING is FUN!
Try It This Weekend at Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa
32 AUTOMATIC LANES
Bong Yul Shin Instructor from the Orient
JUDO-KARATE AIKIDO
A 4th Degree BLACK BELT Instructor
World Renown Instructors
Separate Classes for Women, Men and Children MONDAY THRU SATURDAY, 2 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Bring this ad for a student discount
TOPEKA JUDO ACADEMY
1408 Huntoon - Phone FL 4-9701
Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
60th Year. No. 36
Friday, Nov. 2, 1962
QUEEN BARBARA—Over 200 students looked on as Barbara Schmidt, Kansas City senior, was crowned 1962 KU Homecoming queen on the steps of Strong Hall this morning. She is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma. Her attendants are Anne Peterson, Clifton senior, representing Hashinger Hall; and Karen Jo Emel, Colby junior, representing Chi Omega.
UP Concentrates Fire OnStatewide Activities
The University Party platform, which attacks the All Student Council committee system — specifically Statewide Activities — has been the target this week for a barrage of political pot shots by Vox leaders.
Jerry Dickson, Newton senior and student body president, and Stephen Stazel, Denver, Colo., senior and chairman of Statewide Activities, both members of Vox, stood behind the present management of the committee.
LAST NIGHT at a University Party Campus Committee meeting with UP candidates for ASC seats, party leaders continued the attack and then hit the Vox platform.
Charles Whitman, Shawnee Mission junior and UP platform cochairman, started the UP rebuttal by defending a statement made previously by him concerning the platform plank which advocates the allocation of ASC funds to each class
The statement which appeared in the Tuesday issue of the Daily Kansan read:
"Dean Woodruff told me that the last sophomore class president who functioned went in the hole and the debts had to be paid off two years later."
Concerning Dean Woodruff's denial, Whitman said last night, "I talked to Dean Woodruff this morning. He said there is the possibility he did say something to this effect a year ago, but he could not remember."
DEAN OF STUDENTS. Laurence C. Woodruff, told the Daily Kansan Tuesday he had never made such a statement.
"The point is." continued Whitman. "the statements I made are true. There definitely was a sophomore class president a few years ago, who did go into debt trying to function."
WHITMAN REFERRED to a statement by Salter, which said that funds should not be allocated until class officers demonstrated a need for
funds by accomplishing something. "It is recognized by the Alumni office that this argument that class officers must first show a need for funds is not valid," Whitman said.
In a telephone conversation last night Richard Winternote, associate secretary of Alumni Association, told the Daily Kansan, "I don't want to get into the middle of a political argument. It is not right for the administration to take sides."
"It would make it much easier for class officers to function if they had funds," continued Mr. Wintermote.
HE EXPLAINED that practically every senior class starts out with a deficit accumulated from its freshman, sophomore and junior years.
After the meeting UP co-chairman, Nancy Lane, Hoisington junior and Robert Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla., junior, commented on UP party views on Statewide Activities and the Vox platform.
"The class officers just don't have money to advertise or promote any class activities," he added.
Weather
"The UP platform wants these students who make up the Speakers' Bureau to "actively represent KU throughout the state of Kansas and the nation."
MISS LANE SAID UP disagrees with Stazel that the out-of-state chairmen should be eliminated.
A three-man panel will discuss socialized medicine at 8 tonight in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
In the Thursday issue of the Kansen. Stael said, reorganization
Socialized Medicine To Be Panel Topic
(Continued on page 12)
KU students can look for considerable cloudiness and cool weather today with a partly cloudy sky and cooler temperatures tonight. The temperature is expected to reach around 50 today and to dip into the 30's tonight. Saturday's forecast calls for fair and slightly warmer weather with the highs to be in the 50's.
The discussion will be held at an International Club meeting.
Panelists are L. R, C. Agnew,
professor of medical history; Dr.
Russell Frink, Lawrence physician;
and David Nove, special student from London, England,
After the discussion club members may register for the International Club Mexican tour Dec. 20, according to Fritz Gysin, Swiss graduate student and trip organizer.
Gysin said the group would spend one night in Monterey, Mexico, and then travel to Mexico City.
Pictures Reveal Cuban Missiles Being Removed
WASHINGTON — (UPI)—Aerial photographs taken over Cuba confirm that Soviet missile bases are rapidly being dismantled, the Defense Department announced today.
The Defense Department said that "preliminary analysis of the aerial photographs collected in reconnaissance missions over Cuba yesterday provide clear evidence that work is proceeding on the dismantling of the missiles."
A department spokesman said these developments could be seen in the photographs:
- Missile erectors have been removed from the sites.
- Much of the associated launch equipment has been removed.
- Cable conduits between the control points and the launch pads have been broken up.
- Concrete pads at some of the launch erectors appeared to have been broken up by an air hammer.
- Certain areas of the missile sites have been ploughed and bulldozed.
On the question of inspection, the Soviet Union was reported today to be seeking some alternative to United Nations observers — such as the International Red Cross or the diplomatic corps in Havana — to confirm withdrawal of Russian missiles and bases from Cuba.
The department previously said there were 12 Soviet missile bases in Cuba for medium and intermediate range missiles with ranges from 1,200 to 2,200 miles. It said at least 30 of the medium missiles were in place.
Soviet Deputy Premier Anastas I. Mikoyan planned to take off this afternoon for Havana to placate Premier Fidel Castro for the loss of the missiles and bring him into line on a settlement of the Cuban crisis.
The spokesman refused to say how many of these sites were photographed on the resumption of aerial reconnaissance yesterday, but it appeared the department was satisfied that dismantling was proceeding at all the bases.
He confined himself to the subject of dismantling. He would not say whether any additional ships have been intercepted since the blockade was resumed by the Navy nor whether air reconnaissance was being conducted again today.
CASTRO, SPEAKING on Havana Radio and television last night, appeared to reject all forms of international inspection of his captive island. But some Washington sources said they believed he had left himself a face-saving out by referring to inspection "imposed by force."
Asked whether the blockade is still in effect, the spokesman nodded and said "The ships are on station."
Wiggins Stresses Volunteers In Corps
Bv Trudv Meserve
Warren W. Wiggins, acting director of the Peace Corps, said today that his organization can only be described in terms of its individual volunteers.
Wiggins spoke to about 1500 students and faculty members at a convocation in Hoch Auditorium this morning.
"The Peace Corps is not the staff in Washington," he said. "It is not the abundant publicity. It is not the Communist reaction, but it is the volunteer."
"THE PEACE CORPS, at its root and fiber, is the individual volunteer and what he as a man or a woman from the United States represents and does."
Wiggins said volunteers share the following characteristics:
- He is an American who works overseas for a foreigner, to be supervised by a foreigner.
- He is an American who is told where and when to work.
- He speaks the language of the host country.
- He works with citizens of the host country, within their system and for them.
- His purpose is, in part, to increase his own understanding of other countries.
- He does not have any PX or commissary privileges.
- He lives under the laws of the host country.
"The volunteer does not convert others to different religious beliefs," Wiggins said. "He is not out to make a profit from business activity. He is not sent out to strengthen a military alliance or to change a political system."
"THE VOLUNTEER," he said, "is rather an American who wants to give two years of his life to living simply, working hard and helping in the ordinary, every-day tasks of people who desire to make their lives—and the lives of their children somewhat better."
Wiggins said he hoped the notion of simple living abroad may be "contagious" for other Americans overseas.
HE COMMENDED THE rapid organization of similar Corps by other countries. Germany, Denmark, Belgium and New Zealand have announced plans to form or develop volunteer groups modeled on the Peace Corps, he said.
An additional four countries are forming programs where volunteers will work within their own homelands.
"Also," he said, "the Peace Corps example has caused discussion of possibilities for a domestic service Corps on a national scale in the United States."
Wiggins said that between 400 and 800 Americans have signed up to serve abroad since February.
"THESE AMERICANS ARE not volunteering because of duty to state or God or with reference to law, either divine or human," he said.
"Rather, they volunteer and perform as they do because of a personal private virtue that lies in their consciences.
"And to defend this, they will give all: their time, their temper, their future and their fortunes, and if need be, their lives. To them, this is sacred."
Vox Continues Attacks On Various UP Planks
The University Party platform lacks originality and seems to reach into the past, Roger Wilson, Vox Populi president and Wichita senior, said last night.
"The UP platform contains five planks on which action has been taken already, one plank which is a reversal of previous UP policy, one plank in which UP contradicts itself, one plank in which Vox excells UP and one plank that won't work," Lauralee Milburg,
By Jackie Stern
a review of the UP platform by Vox members.
Vox took up each plank separately in its general assembly session.
CONCERNING THE STATEWIDE
Activities plank. Wilson commented:
"The point is action was taken before the UP plank was written. Last year it appeared in the Vox Populi platform."
Wilson termed the UP plank calling for more student loans the best plank in the UP platform.
"However, I am a little dubious how a student committee can influence the Endowment Association," he added.
(Continued on page 12)
A PLANK WHICH supports the College Intermediary Board said nothing, Wilson commented. "I can see no reason for it being in the platform."
Wilson accused UP of reversing its stand of the past two years on a plank limiting the All Student Council to issues which directly effect the KU student.
Arms for India En Route by Air
NEW DELHI, India—(UPI)—The United States flew arms to India today to help the country's embattled troops fight the Communist Chinese invaders in the northern mountain borders.
The first of 10 giant C135 jet transports took off from Frankfurt, Germany this morning en route to India by way of Adana, Turkey.
U. S. AMBASSADOR John Kenneth Galbraith said the first plane load of badly-needed infantry weapons will reach Calcutta tomorrow.
The weapons are the first of an expected long list of military items heading for India, including ar-
(Continued on page 12)
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Nov. 2, 1962
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
P-T-P Growing
Introduced here on the campus level last year People-to-People has grown to become one of the largest organizations in the nation for dealing with foreign students and international education. Although apparently reaching its maximum activity last year, People-to-People has further expanded and become just that much more worthwhile to every KU student.
SOME OF THE LARGER programs which are provided by People-to-People include:
- The Brother and Sister program which provides specific friends for international students and allows an excellent opportunity for an American student to become acquainted with an international.
- The series of Happy Hours, usually sponsored by some living group, at which there is a general mixing of interested persons and provides another fine opportunity for exchange of ideas and interests.
- A broadened job placement branch which aids international students in finding employment and will further expand to include a program wherein there will be a one for one summer exchange with foreign students to provide opportunities to further enhance the international education of both KU students and international students.
- The American study abroad program which is a chance for students to vacation in Europe. This is expanding to allow considerable educational facilities for the traveling students on campus in preparation to their trip.
- The home placement function which puts international students in local homes for weekends, vacations and arranges industrial and cultural trips to give the visiting students an opportunity to learn more about this country.
A NEWLY ANNOUNCED program is a sports committee which is designed to teach the games of various countries to students of other nations and possibly organize competition to apply this learning.
One of the encouraging aspects of the program is that, with the exception of some assistance at the start from the national office, all of this work has been accomplished with funds from local sources such as contributions and All Student Council appropriations. And this brings up the interesting point that the ASC chose to undercut the People-to-People request by some $300 and reduce the budget for the group by $105 from last year.
THE LEADERS of the committee are, of course, perplexed by the ASC action last week at its budget session. They feel that since People-to-People is a student organization, and an arm of ASC, it is the students' obligation to sustain the program.
Much of the complaint of the committee heads is that the Peace Corps committee had its budget increased over $1,000. The complaint is that the Peace Corps committee serves very little function which is of direct benefit to the individual student.
The administration and student leaders have apparently decided that there is a growing future for the Peace Corps committee on campus. If it becomes anything in scope to that of the People-to-People committee it will prove itself worthy of such attention as it got from the ASC and will make KU one of the driving national forces in international relations on a student level.
—Bill Sheldon
Birth Control
Much has been said and more will be forthcoming in the next few weeks against "public works" programs, "depressed areas" spending, and "welfare state" programs. For the purposes of this election, conservative politicians will be able merely to take a stand against these political bugaboos. It is unlikely that they will be forced to present any alternatives.
But, sooner or later, politicians—no matter what their predictions—will have to accept birth control as a political issue or else accept the political responsibility for the financial burdens of ever-increasing welfare programs.
AT THE 42ND ANNUAL meeting of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America, held in New York recently, Adolph W. Schmidt, governor of T.Mellon & Sons, said the United States is "faced with the likelihood that we will have to devote all the physical growth of our economy just to the task of standing still."
Birth control is a dirty word to many people, especially when it is thought of as mass dissemination of birth control information and contraceptive devices. But the fact remains that we already have too few of the necessary kinds of jobs or too many of the unnecessary kind of people.
At the same meeting, Lammot du Pont Copeland, president of E. I. du Pont de Nemours & Co., said the prevalent notion that America's high birth rate is "a good thing" for the economy is false. "It has been widely assumed," he continued, "that more people will mean more economic benefits for us all. The time has come for some sober second thoughts."
THIS IS INDEED a sobering thought for an aspiring lawmaker. Procrastination and a purely negative attitude will suffice for a while longer, whether justified or not, but it is past time that our lawmakers either quit dodging the issue by complaining of the cost of welfare, or else propose some constructive means of getting to the source of the problem. For some it will mean merely alienating some constituents—for others it may mean taking a stand on an issue which is against their own secular beliefs.
—Bob Hoyt
Republicans Confident In Missouri
By Margaret Cathcart
"If we don't win this year, the Republicans will never win in Missouri" was the way one Republican committeewoman viewed the U.S. Senate race in Missouri.
Yet since Missouri traditionally votes Democratic, Republican Crosby Kemper will have a difficult time defeating Democratic incumbent Edward V. Long.
THE "LITTLE DIXIE" section of Missouri votes Democratic in allegiance to the South. "Little Dixie" is comprised of counties lying along the Missouri and Mississippi Rivers. It was settled in the late 1820s by settlers from Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee and other Southern states.
St. Louis, one of the two metropolitan voting centers in the state, houses a staunch Democratic population. Forty per cent of its population is Catholic, and Catholics traditionally vote in a solid Democratic bloc. The descendants of the Germans who immigrated to St. Louis in the 1800's, also vote Democratic due to their labor and
In Kansas City, the other Democratic urban vote center, the labor unions again support the Democratic party. During the expansion of the western frontiers, Kansas City was the "jumping off place" for the West. It attracted a restless progressive-minded population. Today Kansas City still is dominated by Western-minded, forward-looking people, interested in the Democratic party.
MISSOURIFS traditional Democratic voting trends point to failure for Kemper, yet Republicans are still hopeful he will win next week.
machine-controlled vote.
One section of Missouri is sure to vote Republican—the Ozarks. The Ozarks were settled originally by non-slave-owing southerners with deep roots in the Republican party. In addition, present Ozark residents are critical of President Kennedy for not having moved more quickly in the Cuban crisis.
And rarely do Republicans finance a state campaign to the extent they have financed this one.
Kemper's wife, Cynthia, is another added advantage in her husband's attempt to win a Senate seat. In one campaign week she made 20 speeches before groups of Democrats and Republicans. Mrs. Kemper goes beyond the usual chit-chat. She examines campaign issues and submits to questioning after her talks.
Rarely does a Republican candidate pull together an organization such as "Neighbors for Kemper," a volunteer telephone campaign.
And Kemper has helped himself by blasting Long for endorsing Senate proposals to send aid to Communist countries. Through this issue Kemper has licensed much of the voting rank against Long.
KEMPER SCORED another victory last week in St. Louis as Kennedy was forced to cancel a Long promotion campaign trip.
Kemper is fighting hard. If the Republicans do not win this time, they never will.
Yet Missouri is a Democratic state.
DO NOT
DISTURB
X-30
"IF YA ASK ME, HE IS JUST ANTISOCIAL —HE WANTS TO STUDY FOR FINALS FOR A WHOLE WEEK-END."
the took world
WHY ENGLAND SLEPT, by John F. Kennedy (Doubleday Dolphin, 95 cents).
There is method in the reissuing of "Why England Slept" today. It has a famous author, it has a new foreword by Henry Luce (who wrote the original foreword in 1940). It has quite a message, one that should remind us that today's pacifists are not greatly different from the pacifists of the 1930s.
The book itself is an incredible achievement; it was a senior thesis by the young Kennedy when he was a student at Harvard. Even then it was a good-selling book. Its perceptions and its scholarship are amazing.
Kennedy gives us here a well documented and startling story of England drifting into war, fighting the idea of rearming, remaining essentially uncritical of what was occurring in Nazi Germany, ignoring the warnings of the Churchills and the Edens. England was absolutely unprepared. An interesting notion, in fact, is this one: Chamberlain may have been right to forestall war at the time of Munich, because in October 1938 England would have been destroyed—CMP
* *
This is a comprehensive—and quite selective—anthology of American poetry. Daniel Hoffman makes no effort to include everybody here. He mentions many poets in his introduction, but when it comes to inclusions he limits the book to Anne Bradstreet, Edward Taylor, Freneaul, Bryant, Poe, Emerson, Lowell, Longfellow, Whitman, Henry Timrod, Melville, Dickinson, Stephen Crane, Santayana, Robinson and Frost.
AMERICAN POETRY AND POETICS, edited by Daniel G. Hoffman (Doubleday Anchor, $1.45).
An interesting group, interesting in part for the virtual ignoring of recent moderns. Interesting, too, for the inclusion of such persons as Melville and Santayana. The selections are good, though predictable ("Song of Myself" must be in all anthologies, one would gather). Hoffman also provides a section of critical essays on the writing of poetry, from John Cotton's introduction to "The Bay Psalm Book" to an essay by Frost.—CMP
Daily Hansan
University of Kaasas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Telephone Viking 3-2700
Extension 376, business office
Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Scott Payne ... Managing Editor
Richard Bonett, Dennis Farney, Zeke Wigglesworth, and Bill Mullins, Assistant Managing Editors; Mike Miller, City Editor; Ben Marshall, Sports Editor; Margaret Cathcart, Society Editor.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Clayton Keller and Bill Sheldon ... Co-Editorial Editors
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Charles Martinache ... Business Manager
Jack Cannon, Advertising Manager; Doug Farmer, Circulation Manager;
Gene Spalding, National Advertising Manager; Bill Woodburn, Classified Advertising Manager; Dan Meek, Promotion Manager.
Friday, Nov. 2, 1962
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Issues No Factor in Massachusetts Campaign
(This is the thirteenth in a series of
statistical contests in the 1962 election.)
By Ben Marshall
The emptiest and yet one of the most closely observed races prior to this fall's congressional elections, has been in Massachusetts—to decide who will take over President Kennedy's old seat in the Senate.
The candidates are Edward Moore (Ted) Kennedy, youngest brother of the President, who is running on the Democratic ticket, and Republican George Cabot Lodge Jr.
This race is significant for two reasons:
- There are no major issues separating the two major candidates.
- The election of the President's brother to his old seat could hurt the administration more than could a Lodge victory.
Concerning issues, there is little difference between the two candidates. In terms of experience, Kennedy has had none and Lodge has had little. He was employed by the Boston Herald as a political reporter for four years, and under Labor secretaries James Mitchell and Arthur Goldberg he was assistant secretary of Labor for international affairs.
The candidates' campaign promises show little difference. Lodge bases his campaign on two major points: a system for meeting unemployment in depressed areas of the country with preventative measures taken before unemployment actually occurs, and beating the Soviets in cold war strategy.
KENNEDY FAVORS such things as a jet airport for Worcester, pollution control on the Merrimack River, a federal highway through the Berkshire Mountains, new industries for the state, and a healthcare program for the aged financed by social security.
Worth Repeating
In making the rounds, I was struck by the fact that schools divide into two kinds: those which we might call adolescent reservations, fenced off from serious adult concerns, and those which represent a transition to adulthood. — David Boroff
Neither platform offers anything to get excited about.
At this point, however, a third candidate enters the picture, running as an independent.
He is Stuart Hughes, a 46-year-old history professor at Harvard University, and a member of another prominent Massachusetts family. Hughes is the grandson of the former Chief Justice Charles Evans Hughes, who also was the Republican candidate for the Presidency of the United States in 1915.
HUGHES IS an enigma, to say the least. Not only is he more than liberal, in direct opposition to the conservative political philosophy of his grandfather, but he is the only candidate in the current Massachusetts congressional campaign who is running on any specific platform—socialism.
"I have never been strenuously anti-Communist," says Hughes. "My sympathies have mostly been with democratic socialism."
A look at the campaigning verifies Hughes' statement. He has spoken in favor of U.S. recognition of Red China and East Germany, a drastic reduction of NATO and a closing down of missile bases in NATO countries, and nuclear de-
Having a Party?
militarization of West Germany and adjoining Soviet satellites.
Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES
LAWRENCE ICE CO.
6th & Vt., VI 3-0350
YE OLD
PIZZA HUT
In domestic policy, Hughes advocates a 35-hour work week, a $1.50 minimum wage law, government subsidization of housing, and "medical care for all." He has not made the traditional campaign promise to uphold the free enterprise system.
Good Things Are Breaking Out All Over at the Pizza Hut
Try Our Quality Pizza and Tasty Submarine Sandwiches
Free Delivery in Campus Area
Pizza Hut
DESPITE HUGHES' strong stand on specific issues as opposed to the secondary promises of the other two candidates, political experts and pollsters in Massachusetts say that Hughes doesn't have a chance.
The final and perhaps most important consideration in this race is the effect it will have on next year's administration.
14th & Tenn.
VI 3-0563
Ted Kennedy's victory in the Massachusetts primaries brought on an issue that goes beyond that state. Sooner or later, the principal issue in the campaign will be "Kennedyism." Many now feel that there are too many Kennedys doing too much to conspicuously and achieving too much power.
cians and journalists believe that Ted Kennedy's primary victory will hurt the administration and Democratic Party badly.
MANY INFLUENTIAL politi-
that the Kennedys have applied the principle of 'the best man available for the job' to everyone but themselves . . . in the end, it is likely to cost the President more votes in the Senate than Teddy will ever give him."
Republican National Chairman William Miller said:
So this race moves on, with few real political issues and many possible political repercussions. Much has been said about Ted Kennedy, and most of it has been bad. On the other hand, nobody says anything about Lodge.
"We're going to take a lot of votes all over the country out of this, because people are now going to think twice about the dynasty issue. It was bad enough making Bobby Attorney General. But even that wasn't the joke this one is. The idea that Teddy is qualified to be a U.S. Senator is ridiculous."
Jonathan Daniels, editor of a strong pro-Kennedy paper, the Raleigh News and Observer, wrote on primary day:
"WHATEVER HAPPENS in Massachusetts today, the implications of Ted Kennedy's campaign will not help the President, the Democratic Party, or the country."
IN POLITICAL CIRCLES, nine times out of ten, bad publicity is better than no publicity at all. The Kennedy impression has been stamped in the voters' minds.
Teddy might have an easy victory.
James "Scotty" Reston, columnist for the New York Times, charged the President with nepotism and abandonment of his own professed standards of talent and ability in letting Teddy run in the first place. "The point," Reston wrote,
"The point," Reston wrote. "is
State Farm Insurance
Paul E. Hodgson Local Agent
Off. Ph. VI 3-5666 530 W 23cad.
Res. Ph. VI 3-5944 Lawrence, Kan.
∞
Learning never stops for engineers at Western Electric
There's no place at Western Electric for engineers who feel that college diplomas signify the end of their education. However, if a man can meet our quality standards and feels that he is really just beginning to learn . . . and if he is ready to launch his career where learning is an important part of the job and where graduate-level training on and off the job is encouraged — we want and need him.
At Western Electric, in addition to the normal learning-while-doing, engineers are encouraged to move ahead in their fields by several types of educational programs. Western maintains its own full-time graduate engineering training program, seven formal management courses, and a tuition refund plan for out-of-hours college study.
This learning atmosphere is just one reason why a career at Western Electric is so stimulating. Of equal importance, however, is the nature of the work we do. Our new engineers are taking part in projects that implement the whole art of modern telephony, from high-speed sound transmission and solar cells to electronic telephone offices and computer-controlled production techniques.
Should you join us now,you will be coming
to Western Electric at one of the best times in the company's history. In the management area alone, several thousand supervisory jobs are expected to open up to W.E. people within the next 10 years. And our work of building communications equipment and systems becomes increasingly challenging and important as the communications needs of our nation and the world continue to increase.
Challenging opportunities exist now at Western Electric for electrical, mechanical, industrial, and chemical engineers, as well as physical science, liberal arts, and business majors. All qualified applicants will receive careful consideration for employment without regard to race, creed, color or national origin. For more information about Western Electric, write College Relations, Western Electric Company, Room 6206, 222 Broadway, New York 3B, New York. And be sure to arrange for a Western Electric interview when our college representatives visit your campus.
Western Electric
MANUFACTURING AND SUPPLY
UNIT OF THE BELL SYSTEM
Principal manufacturing locations at Chicago, Ill.; Kearny, N. J.; Baltimore, Md.; Indianapolis, Ind.; Allentown and Laurelids, Pa.; Winston-Salem, N. C.; Buffalo, N. Y.; North Andover, Mass.; Omaha, Neb.; Kansas City, Mo.; Columbus, Ohio; Oklahoma City, Okla.
Engineering Research Center, Princeton, N. J. Teletype Corporation, Skokie, III., and Little Rock, Ark. Also Western Electric distri
bution centers in 33 cities and installation headquarters in 16 cities. General headquarters: 195 Broadway, New York, N. J.
30 29 28 27 26 25 24 23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14 13 12 11 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 0
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Nov. 2, 1962
Cuban Setback Probably Won't Hurt Khrushchev
By Henry Shapiro United Press International
(Editor's Note: What will be the consequences in the Soviet Union of the Cuban crisis? Specifically, is there any way that a U.S.-occupied Kbrushichesy himself may be in danger? These subjects are discussed in the following dispatch by the long-time bureaucrat at the U.S. international bureau in Moscow who is presently on leave in the United States.)
What may result is a thorough reappraisal of the international situation leading toward a more moderate and realistic foreign policy with Nikita Khrushchev firmly in control of Soviet destinies.
The Kremlin policy makers may be expected to take the Cuban setback in stride and avoid drastic domestic shakeups.
SOVIET PROPAGANDA is already busily snatching victory from the jaws of defeat and building up Khrushchev as the man whose caution and restraint saved the world from nuclear holocaust. The Kremlin can still hopefully boast of retaining a foothold in the Caribbean which it did not have a few years ago and can point with satisfaction to President Kennedy's pledge that Cuba will not be invaded if Soviet missiles are removed.
Western speculation that Khrushchev's position as supreme leader has or will be weakened following the Cuban fiasco is based on at least two false assumptions. These are:
- Top Soviet leadership is rife with antagonistic elements and is at the mercy of strong pressures, particularly from the military.
- Cuban policy was exclusively of Khrushchev's own making and that his future career was staked on its success.
All available evidence points to the fact that although Khrushchev is the dominating figure in the Soviet hierarchy, he still acts very much like a board chairman and executes policy drafted by the 15-man Presidium and approved by the Central Committee of the Communist Party.
Since the expulsion of the oldguard Molotov group in 1957, the Presidium has been made up entirely of Khrushchev supporters, who can rise and fall only with Khrushchev. And at least two-thirds of the present Central Committee elected through October, 1962, consists of virtually hand-picked men who owe their positions to Khrushchev.
UNLIKE THE despotic Stalin, Khrushhev rules with the advice and consent of the Presidium and the Central Committee. There is evidence that they frequently consult the leaders of other influential groups, such as the armed forces, scientists, trade unions and even foreign Communist leaders.
All instruments of power, including the Security Police, which once enjoyed autonomous influence, and the armed forces, are controlled by the Central Committee.
Americans and others now are in the eye of the Cuban hurricane. Nikita Khrushchev has backtracked from a U.S. show of force. Backtracked, that is, with words. Deeds were still to come as the world entered the second week of the crisis.
Castro May Move to Salvage Ego
By Lyle C. Wilson United Press International
Khrushchev's deeds more often than not fail to match his words. And, even if Russian missiles and bases are removed, the problem of Fidel Castro and Communist Cuba will still remain.
PRESIDENT Kennedy's guidelines for dealing with Castro were laid down in early September. There is no evidence so far that Castro was listening.
Kennedy said the United States would be compelled to act under certain specific conditions. These were:
- Any effort by Castro to export his aggressive purposes by force or threat of force.
- Organization in Cuba of a combat force from any Soviet bloc nation.
- Establishment of a Russian military base in Cuba.
- Violation of the 1934 treaty relating to the Guantanamo Naval Base.
- Location in Cuba of offensive ground-to-ground missiles.
IRVING GRANZ presents
AMERICA'S NO. 1
RECORDING STARS
AN EVENING WITH
the Kingston
TRIO
EXTRA ADDED ATTRACTION
MIRIAMMAKEBA
The most exciting new singing talent to appear in many years. —Time Magazine
SATURDAY, NOV. 10
8:30 p.m.
Municipa Auditorium
K. C., Mo.
Tickets—2.50, 3.00, 3.50, 4.00
On Sale At
Auditorium Box Office
FRIDAY FLICKS
Shows at 7 and 9:30
FRASER THEATER
CINEMASCOPE
TECHNICOLOR
A Town...Stripped Down To Its
Raw Human Hungers!
Picnic
WILLIAM
HOLDEN
KIM
NOVAK
ROSALIND RUSSELL
KIM WAK
35c admission—tickets for both shows on sale at Union on Friday till 6 p.m. and then at the door
- Establishment of any other significant offensive capability in control either of Cubans or Russians.
Khrushehvel tested Kennedy on missiles and soon seemed to change his mind. At the moment of Khrushchev's backtrack, however, Castro was probing in another area. One sixth of Venezuela's oil production was knocked out last weekend by saboteurs.
THE SABOTEURS are alleged to have acted on radio orders from Cuba and there is some reason to believe that Castro has ordered a
general campaign of terrorism in Latin America. He is a neighbor to the uneasy island shared by the Dominican Republic and Haiti. Both governments are frail establishments, a real temptation to Castro to move in.
Castro's ego needs mending. He needs a whoop-la triumph of some kind to repair his bully boy public image at home. That is why he may prove to be a more dangerous neighbor, in fact, minus his missiles than when he had them cocked and ready. Now he may feel compelled to strike.
STUDENTS Grease Jobs . $1.00 Brake Adi. 98c
Automotive Service
Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel
Balancing
7 a.m.-11 p.m.
PAGE CREIGHTON
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd
Patronixe Your Kansan Advertisers
When a cigarette means a lot...
get Lots More from L&M
SIN
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
YERS TOBACCO CO.
And L&M's filter is the modern filter—all white, inside and outside—so only pure white touches your lips.
Enter the LM GRAND PRIX 50 For college students only! 50 Pontiac Tempests FREE!
Friday, Nov. 2, 1962
University Daily Kansan
Page 5
GRADUATING THIS SEMESTER?
MARY SCHWERBERG
Keep Up on KU News Next Year With a Subscription to the
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Clip this coupon and mail it, or drop by the Kansan Business Office, 111 Flint Hall
Only $3.00 per semester ( $5.00 for a full year)
University Daily Kansan
Flint Hall, K.U. Lawrence, Kan.
Please mail the University Daily Kansan to
Name ...
Address ...
City .. State ...
Enclosed Find Check For
$5.00 For One Year $3.00 For A Semester
University Daily Kansan
Fridav. Nov. 2, 1962
Food, Sex Topics Of Campus Poets
Poem subjects ranged from food to sex at the Student Union Activities (SUA) poetry hour yesterday.
THE VARIETY of works composed by KU talent was as different as the appearance of the student poets.
Gordon Bennett, Lawrence graduate student, in bow tie and grey suit termed himself a "would-be poet" who writes because he enjoys it. Bennett read, among others, a Halloween poem which he "dashed off while my wife was giving a haircut" for his children to take trick or treating.
Bennett recommended that every-one become a poetry scribler. "Poems create the climate for real talent," he said.
Fine, Lawrence junior, was so nervous that between stanzas of the poem he sipped coffee or drawn on his cigarette.
IT COULD HAVE been his beard, but Warren Fine's appearance seemed to imply a Bohemian flavor.
He explained that his poem was divided into nine sections. It tells how boy meets girl, they part and both grow up. Later man meets women.
At one point he mentioned man's lonliness and his search for love. In another verse he said "Laughter is the only key in man's search for happiness."
Delmar Wilcox, Omaha, Neb. graduate student dressed in dark blue suit, embodied the scholar.
WILCOX SAID that no longer can a university be regarded as a place where people go when they have nowhere else to go or when they can't make it out in the world.
This was the theme of his poem, "The Scholar."
He also said that art galleries are like walking graveyards, meaning that they stand as lasting memorials to the authors' names.
Below are portions of Fine's "Reply to a New Love's Query" and Bennett's "College Lunchroom."
"Reply to a New Love's Query": The universe confuses you And so you ask me what it means, But I am a vagabond too. I, like you, am an illkep guest Who has never met his host; I have stopped here as a ghost stops For a moment in a mirror, Whose sex appearance goes unseen, And soon will disappear.
SO DO NOT ask me what it means
Or what you are to do:
Woman I am as lonely as you.
Synthetic soles scurr and stop, and ran-tab-
Tap on vinyl floors. The gleaming, unstained
Rods roll through white hands. Flat brown travs
Caress cheese casseroles, steam-
table nests
NOSTRILS SPOUT, notions flap as meager
Designed to fill the scholar's crop healthily.
Gabbling, gobbling mouths smile and smile.
Puse their pride, know all the while
That all the answers rest in numbers, glands and viaducts
As hands coil round the coffee cups stealthily.
THE HEART leaps and screams echoing Faustian fates;
We hear from the kitchen the rattle of dirty plates.
D&G
D&G AUTO SERVICE VI 2-0753 1/2 blk. E. 12th & Haskell
Record Classes Boost Enrollment
The record KU enrollment at Lawrence of 10,509 students includes two record-sized classes, graduate students and juniors.
The largest class still is the freshman class, although its total of 2,576 is down 45 from the record set last year. The decline reflects the slight nationwide dip in the number of U.S. and Kansas births in 1944.
After the freshmen, next largest group is the 1,990 graduate students, despite the fact that the move of the freshman medical class to the Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., took 86 graduate students to that campus. Despite the move, this year's graduate class has 151 more members than last year's—an all-time high.
The senior class, unaffected as yet by the 1960 enrollment upsurge, continues its gentle decline of the past four years to a present total of 1,746, 9 less than last year.
The sophomore class made its big jump last year—nearly 350 students. This year the class had a small 81-student rise to 1,884. The bulge of two years ago, which increased the 1960 freshman enrollment by nearly 500 students, now has reached the junior class, jumping it 357 over last fall to a total of 1,981.
"Paint Your Wagon," Lerner and Loew's hit musical, will bring the rough and rowdy California gold rush days to the stage of the University Theatre at 8:30 p.m. Sunday.
Phil Harris, Lawrence graduate student, is Ben Rumson, a wandering miner who moves from strike to strike. He takes his daughter, Jennifer, portrayed by Sylvia Anderson, Wilmette, ill., junior, with him.
Rumson founds a rush town and Jennifer grows from tomboy to lady among 400 miners.
Gold Rush Fun Coming Here
THE MINERS finally suggest Rumson send her back East to a finishing school.
It's bad enough knowin' what you ain't got—namely women, the miners sav.
But it's worse seein' what you ain't got—namely Jennifer.
BEFORE JENNIFER leaves she falls in love with Julio Valveras, played by David Holloway, Gas City junior.
Valveras is a Spanish-American youth, desperately trying to earn enough money to buy a ranch in the California Valley.
"Wanderin' Star" is the theme song of the musical. Other popular
We Rent Most Anything
ANDERSON RENTAL
812 N. H.
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
VI-3-4575
numbers in the show are "I Talk to the Trees," "Another Autumn," "Flisa," and "Maria."
William Kuhlike, instructor of speech and drama and director of the show, said the plot of the story is not just a framework on which to hang song and dance numbers. It's a story that needs to be told like "The King and I" or "Oklahoma."
A HIGH POINT in the show is a can-can by Mimi Frink, Lawrence freshman. Miss Frink is a French ballerina imported to "dance on her big toe" in Jake Whippany's saloon. Whippany is played by Roger A. Brown. Topeka graduate student.
Miss Frink, Tomi Worthham, Lawrence graduate student, and C. Eugene Masoner, Lenexa freshman, have the major dance roles in "Paint Your Wagon."
The play will run through Nov. 10.
Spark every outfit!
Turtleneck Bib
780 Lincoln
- Imported from Italy
- Ribbed Merino Wool
- Warm, snue fitting
$5 POST PAID
The rage of European colleges arrives on the American campus! This Turtle Dickie adds a touch of style and color to men's shirts, skirts, and knit outfits. Smarter than a muffler! One size fits all. Please indicate second color choice. Search or check money order (no C.O.D.'s). For Fraternity volvers, write for information and quantity prices.
Black, White
Red, Gold
Gray, Olive
Charcoal
Orange, Beige
French Blue
Navy, Rust
Yellow
ALLEGRO Imports, Box 15, Clifton, N.J.
KANSAS
48
PLAYER OF THE WEEK
Gale Sayers
For being the leading ground gainer in the Big Eight and also the O-State victory.
Why not try the tops in cleaning and refinishing by the one that leads them all.
1-HOUR
PERSONALIZED JET LIGHTNING SERVICE
Acme
Hillcrest Shopping Center VI 3-0928
LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
Downtown
1111 Mass.
VI 3-5155
Malls Shopping Center VI 3-0895
Friday. Nov. 2, 1962
University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Hawks Visit K-State Tomorrow
Parents' Day, Editors' Day — and Jayhawkers' Day — will be held in Kansas State's Memorial Stadium tomorrow.
Kickoff time is 1:30 p.m.
The University of Kansas Jayhawkers are currently riding the crest of a wave that swept them to a come-from-behind victory over Oklahoma State last Saturday, 36-17.
ON THE OTHER HAND, Coach Doug Weaver's Kansas State Wildcats have lost all six games this season and are in the throes of a 14-game losing streak. Last weekend the Cats were drubbed by Oklahoma. 47-0.
The question is not whether the Hawkers will win. The question is, what will be the margin of victory?
KU's physical condition is improving—but slowly. Starting right guard and All America nominee Ken Tiger has returned to the "Big Blue" lineup. He has seen only limited action during the past three weeks because of an ankle injury.
In addition, the three members of the second unit interior line who have seen only limited action against Oklahoma and Oklahoma State — guards Duke Collins and Wally Barnes, and center Kent Converse — will be ready for full-time duty this weekend.
THE PURPLE defenders will have to keep an eye on the Hawker backfield, too.
Recently nominated for All America honors by the Football Writers Association of America (FWAA),
quarterback Rodger McFarland and T-back Gale Sayers should be out to improve their potential billings tomorrow.
McFarland, a run-pass option threat, has gained 247 yards in 82 rushes, and has completed 21 of 45 passes for 293 more.
Sayers enjoyed the best day of his collegiate career last Saturday as he gained 283 yards in 22 carries to set a new Big Eight single game rushing mark. Among Sayers' dashes last week were carriers of 96, 69, and 33 yards, which boosted him to the front of the conference rushing race. The Omaha T-back has racked up 709 yards in rushes, 87 yards better than conference runner-up Johnny Roland of Missouri.
KEN COLEMAN, who has been
Four Teams Open Hill Playoffs
First-round action in the Fraternity "A" Hill Championship playoffs start today on the intramural fields at 4 p.m.
Sigma Ma, runner-up in Division III, meets Sigma Alpha Epsilon, runner-up in Division I. Phi Delta Theta, Division III champs, battle Phi Gamma Delta, runner-up to Delta Upsilon in Division II play.
Beta Theta Pi and Delta Upsilon, Division I and II winners, drew first round byes. In second round games Tuesday, the Betas will play the winner of the Sigma Nu-SAE contest and the DU's will meet the winner of the Phi Delts-Phi Gam game.
Top Mexican Driver Killed in Accident
Mexico City — (UPI) — "Don't let me die . . . please don't let me die."
Those were the last words uttered by 21-year-old Ricardo Rodriguez, the world's most promising sports car driver, after he cracked up yesterday in speed trials for Mexico's first Grand Prix race Sunday.
The idol of Mexican teen-agers lost control of his Lotus car, hit a railing and turned over several times on the final, steep turn at the Sports City Track.
He was dead on arrival at Ealbuena Hospital.
A rundown on the teams playing this afternoon follows:
SIGMA NU — In their only loss of the season, the Sigma Nu's were defeated by the Phi Delts, 20-0. The team is led by Rich Johnson, a 220-pound, 6-2 right halfback, Hutchinson senior; Tom Hunter, 135, 5-10, quarterback, Des Moines, Iowa junior, and Tom Reed, 185, 6-0 left halfback, Des Moines, Iowa, junior.
SAE — The Betas defeated the SAE crew, 20-7, for their only loss of the season. Quarterback Mike Mason, Omaha junior, and end Jim Meyer, Alton, Ill., junior, led the SAE offensive attack.
PHI GAMS — The DU's hande the Fijis their only loss of the season, 13-0. Top Phi Gam players are Steve Wickliff, Mission senior, a guard; Harvey Martin, Salina senior, an end and team captain, and Fred Exline, Salina senior, the blocking back.
**PHI DELTS** — Yesterday the Phi Psi's were the first team to score against the undefeated Phi Delts, but the Phi Delts romped, 46-7. The
See You At
ANTIQUE SHOW Fri.-Sat.-Sun—11 to 10
team's top players are Del Campbell, Kirkwood, Mo., quarterback; Mike Holland, Russell graduate student, left end; Keith Abercrombie, Kansas City senior, center, and Sam Bruner, Kansas City junior, blocking back and team captain.
Lost. She Walks Home
the first quarter.
Book Nook-Cobweb
In addition to Weaver's problem, the K-State offense is not overly impressive. In fact, the Purple has scored only one touchdown all year (in the Nebraska game which State lost, 26-6), while the opponents have run rampant through the 'Cat defense for 173 points.
Putting it mildly, Coach Weaver's charges have their backs to the wall. Kansas currently has a six-game winning streak in the series between the two teams which dates back to 1902. The Wildcats have not won since they whipped KU at Lawrence, 46-0, in 1955. Kansas has the edge in victories, 39-17-3,
Tomorrow the Hawkers should break 40.
ALBANY, N.Y. — (UPI)— When Mrs. Katherine Soukek, 67, became separated from her husband and friends yesterday while mushroom hunting, her companions notified state police who organized a search by 100 volunteers.
Tub of Chicken
15 pieces, 5 hot rolls
$3.50
BIG BUY
And Kansas State will have plenty of trouble with this array of backs. Coach Weaver and his staff admit that the Wildcats' biggest problem is defense. Kansas State has not stopped any opponent long enough to get possession of the ball.
sharing the fullbacking chores with Armand Baughman, also turned in a creditable performance last Saturday. Coleman picked up 57 yards rushing, and now needs a net of 75 yards gained tomorrow to reach the coveted 1000-yard career rushing mark. He has 269 yards rushing this season, and paced the club in that department last year as a sonhomore with 656.
Nine hours later word came that Mrs. Sowek was safe at home. She said she couldn't find her husband's car and decided to walk home—20 miles away.
Baughman, also a junior, scored the first two touchdowns of his collegiate career last weekend against O-State. Baughman will start tomorrow if Kansas receives — Coleman, if the Hawkers kick off.
Interviews will be held on Nov. 9,1962 on the campus.See your placement office now for an appointment
FOR INSTANCE, last week against Oklahoma, Kansas State ran 39 offensive plays during the ball game —OU run 99. Kansas State held the ball for only five plays in
FISHER GOVERNOR COMPANY Marshalltown, Iowa
FISHER GOVERNOR COMPANY
Manufacturers of Automatic Control Equipment
An Engineering CAREER
with
A RUNNER
EVERYONE'S ON THEIR WAY TO
Sandy's
Thrift & Swift Drive-in
ACROSS FROM HILLCREST
Hamburgers
15c
French Fries
10c
KU
REMEMBER HOW GOOD CIGARETTES USED TO TASTE?
(MAYBE YOURS STILL DO)
IF YOU'D LIKE TO FIND OUT...
BRING YOUR CAR TO UNIVERSITY FORD FOR A COMPLETE MOTOR TUNE-UP
AND WHILE YOU'RE THERE...ASK ABOUT
WINTERIZE SPECIAL FRONT END WORK
TRANSMISSION WORK MAJOR OVERHAUL
UNIVERSITY FORD 714 VERMONT DIAL V13-3500
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Friday. Nov. 2, 1962
Lowell Andrews Handed Setback By State Court
TOPEKA — (UPI) — Convicted killer Lowell Lee Andrews' battle for life received a setback yesterday when the Kansas Supreme Court ordered him hanged Nov. 30.
Andrews, convicted of the Thanksgiving, 1958, killings of his parents and sister, was recently denied a review of the proceedings of his trial by the U.S. Supreme Court.
The only courses left open to Andrews appear to be a request for a writ of habeas corpus from federal district court, a new mental examination, or executive clemency from Gov. John Anderson. Anderson denied clemency once.
ANDREWS WAS convicted and sentenced to die on Dec. 22, 1959, and since then has been carrying on a legal battle to escape the hangman.
His attorneys have tried to prove that insanity drove the youth, then a University of Kansas student to fire 18 bullets into his family in Welcott, near Kansas City.
Although judged legally sane at his trial, a Menninger Clinic Psychiatrist testified that Andrews was mentally ill.
They also claim that the family's pastor exerted undue influence in getting Andrews to confess.
SINCE LAST YEAR the youth, who escaped the hanging dates of April 18, 1960, March 9, 1961, and Sept. 11, 1962, has been represented by the American Civil Liberties Union and Washburn University professors James Ahrens and Richard C. Allen.
Ahrens is expected to seek a stay of the Nov. 30 hanging from U.S. District Judge Arthur J. Stanley of Kansas City. Stanley recently stayed the executions of convicted killers Perry Edward Smith and Richard Eugene Hickok.
In the event he does take a writ of habeas corpus to federal court, Andrews could then appeal any denial to the U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals and finally to the U.S. Supreme Court.
KU Professor Writes Book
The novels of the British writer Ford Madox Ford are the subject of a full-length book by a University of Kansas teacher to be published November 23 by the University of Minnesota Press.
The author is John A. Meixner, assistant professor of English. The book is "Ford Madox Ford's Novels: A Critical Study."
In 20th century literature Ford was known as a literary personality, a brilliant magazine editor, an encourager of talented young writers; and as a major novelist whose stature has been increasingly recognized in recent years.
During his lifetime, 1873-1939. Ford published 78 books — novels, poetry, memoirs, history, travels, biography, and literary criticism. He collaborated on three novels with Joseph Conrad, was an early champion of Henry James, introduced D. H. Lawrence to the literary world, and published the first sections of James Joyce's "Finnegan Wake."
Professor Meixner, a KU teacher since 1957, earned the A.B. degree from City College of New York and the M.A. and Ph.D. degrees from Brown University. He taught at Brown and Clark Universities before coming to KU.
Portraits of Distinction
Portraits of
Distinction
HIXON
STUDIO
摄
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
Romanian Dance Team Gets Standing Ovation
By Rose Osborne
An enthusiastic audience gave the "Rapsodia Romina" company a standing ovation following the Romanians performance at Hoch auditorium last night.
Public reaction to the first program of the KU Concert Series was so receptive that the Barbu Lautaru Orchestra deviated from Romanian folk music during the final part of the program to break into strains of "Yankee Doodle" and "Oh Susanna."
DANCERS WHIRLED and swayed in their colorful, ornamentally embroidered native costumes while musical director Ionel Budisteau steered the audience through periods of silence, pathos and humor.
The only English spoken in the program came from a huge clock with a jaunty hat and a smiling face painted on its front. The clock expressed the wish that the audience enjoy their tour through Romanian folk lore.
To present a picture of Romanian
AN UNUSUAL NUMBER was the dance of the Capilina girls which depicted an old wedding tradition. The bride's girl friends embroider a shirt and present it to the blushing groom in a special dance.
folk lore, dancers and musicians emerged from a large picture frame.
One of the most impressive productions was the dance of the wheat garland in the Golden Cornfields suite. Under soft lights skirts of dancers changed from orange to yellow as they swayed and bowed symbolizing the undulation of fields, the baking and tasting of bread in harvest.
AT ONE POINT, violinist Budisteanu held the entire audience breathless while he pursued a single tone in the flight of Ciocirlia, The Skylark.
A gay Romanian wedding in which the bride threw a garland at the bridegroom and he chased her off the stage concluded the program.
KU SPORTS
on
BERLIN—(UPI) —Soviet officers delayed a U.S. Army convoy for 80 minutes today in what appeared to be the first harassment of the Berlin access routes since the American quarantine action against Cuba.
DIAL KLWN
1320
Army spokesman said the small supply convoy was stopped at the Babelsberg checkpoint at the West Berlin end of the 110-mile autobahn through East Germany.
7:30 a.m. ... Daily Sports Shorts
5:00 Today ... In the Enemy Camp
5:20 ... Tom Hedrick Sports
It was the fourth convoy the United States had sent across East Germany in three days and the delay came — significantly or not -- while East German Communist boss Walter Ulbricht is in Moscow conferring with Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev.
Soviets Halt Berlin Convoy
The convoy—six trucks with four trailers carrying a dozen soldiers—was on its way from Berlin to West Germany.
LONDON—(UPI)—The Shaw Society said today it has started sending its anti-Christmas cards which bear a drawing of George Bernard Shaw in a Santa Claus suit and this quote from the playwright:
"Courage, friend. We all loathe Christmas, but it comes only once a year and is soon over."
Kansan Classified Ads Get Resultst
One of yesterday's two convoys had to wait for 30 minutes at the Marienborn control point, at the West German end of the autobahn, but that holdup had not been considered unusual.
The convvoys are normal supply movements but they also generally are regarded as re-emphasizing continued Allied rights of access to isoated West Berlin.
Society Braces for Christmas
officer today "praised a procedural issue" when the convoy stopped for checking at Babelsberg.
The Army said a Soviet control
Quality Watch Repair
Lowest Prices
DANIELS
Kirsten's
Hillcrest Shopping Center
Sports Wear
Majestic Jr. House of
White Stag Milwaukee
Helen Harper Patty Woodard
Open evenings
ALLEN'S DRIVE-IN
invites you to watch the
FUN
at
Allen's 'Cram-A-Rama'
SAT.
Nov. 3rd
FUN IN THE CAR
SUN.
Nov. 4th
Stop in and watch KU students cram themselves into our Volkswagon
ALLEN'S DRIVE-IN
1404 W.23rd
University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Morgenthau Hits Rocky On Presidential Issue
NEW YORK — (UPI) — Robert M. Morgenthau is coming down to the wire in New York's governor's race with an incessant attack on Nelson A. Rockefeller's ambition to be President.
Given by most only an outside chance of ousting Rockefeller, the 43-year-old Democratic nominee is campaigning as if victory were definitely in sight. One of his electioneering buttons reads;
"TRUMAN DID it in '48, Bob will do it in '62."
Morgenthau's main disadvantage is that he was virtually unknown last September when he received the nomination. Even today he could walk through Times Square and go unrecognized by most people. "Rocky," on the other hand, has become a celebrity, although he campaigns as if he were in dire political danger.
"GOVERNOR Rockefeller's overwhelming interest is running against the President of the United States, President Kennedy," Morgenthau told a Bronx sidewalk crowd this week.
Morgenthau has found his most effective campaign weapon to be demanding whether Rockefeller will serve his term if elected.
"And I, for one, am satisfied with the present President," he added.
Morgenthau says Rockefeller has shown "complete arrogance." He solicits the votes of the people of Houston, Chicago and Des Moines and doesn't want to be tied down to New York, the Democratic candidate charges.
"The governor has been on the job one day out of seven," Morgenthau savs.
Morgenthau also hits Rockefeller's refusal to meet him in a series of television debates. The fact is that Rockefeller's strategy does seem to include there is no such person as Robert M. Morgenthau.
THE DEMOCRATIC candidate is naturally a reserved, almost shy man. But these last weeks he has forced himself to meet people and now he is doing it gracefully and with apparent enthusiasm, if not pleasure.
The New York gubernatorial contest is a perfect example of the pros and cons of whether President Kennedy's performance in the Cuban crisis will rub off on Democratic candidates.
Kennedy's decision certainly removed a GOP campaign weapon but it also removed him from active campaigning.
The President was to have brought Morgenthau's campaign to a final push with an appearance in the city tonight, but his moratorium on electioneering cancelled a plus the Democrats had been counting on.
Historical periods have been assigned to living groups which will compete in the 1963 Rock Chalk Review, "Historical Hysteria."
Review Groups Get Assignments
Pairs of groups submitted their ideas to the Rock Chalk committee last week. The periods were then assigned on a first come, first serve basis.
Alpha Delta Pi and Sigma Phi Epsilon were assigned the period of Quantrill's Raid; Templin and Lewis, prohibition; Phi Kappa Psi and Delta Gamma, the pigrims; Hashinger and Carruth O'Leary, Tombstone, Ariz. in the 1800's; Alpha Tau Omega and Kappa Alpha Theta, the American Revolution.
Alpha Chi Omega and Sigma Nu, Louis the 14th; Pi Beta Phi and Beta Theta Pi, Marco Polo's voyage; Delta Upsilon and Phi Gamma Delta, the period of the barbaric tribes in the 1440's and Sigma Chi and Chi Omega, the caveman.
ST. LOUIS — (UPI) — Undertaker Paul Fey Jr., who operates an ambulance service, has delivered 20 babies in 15 years. In all the cases, mothers telephoned Fey too late for hospital arrival.
Skits written for the review will be based on the period assigned. Titles of the skits will be announced Nov. 18.
Emergencies Routine to Him
Philosopher To Speak At Humanities Lecture
A philosopher interested in the role of science in modern civilization will give the year's third KU Humanities Lecture.
Friday. Nov. 2, 1962
Entitled "Analysis and Insight," the talk will concern the analytical method used by some modern philosophers to answer questions about science.
Errol Harris, holder of the first Roy A. Roberts Distinguished Professorship at KU, will speak at 8 p.m. Nov. 16 in the University Theatre.
PROF. HARRIES WILL CONSIDER similar questions in a 2-vvolume work he hopes to publish while holding the Roberts Professorship.
Roy Roberts, president of the Kansas City Star Co., gave $200,000 to the University in 1958. Income from the grant is to supplement the salaries of two professors, one in the humanities and one in science and mathematics. Prof. Harris was named the first of these.
Mr. and Mrs. Roberts plan to attend the lecture.
Prof. Harris is a native of South Africa. Author of several books and other publications, he was a professor of philosophy at Connecticut College.
HE GAVE the Terry Lectures at Yale in 1957. The lectures, concerning the compatibility of science and religion, later were published as a book, "Revelation Through Reason."
Africa Featured In Exhibit Here
A new exhibition, "AFRICA FACES AND FIGURES," will open Sunday at the KU Museum of Art. Besides sculpture, masks, weapons, furniture and implements, the exhibit will include a collection of photographs entitled "Faces of the Congo."
The exhibition will be open until November 25. The public is invited to a reception from 3 to 5 p.m. Sunday at the museum.
THE ART OF AFRICA is as diverse as the cultures of its peoples. Moreover, the intermingling of art styles is common, as trade has always been an important feature of African culture. A brisk trade prevailed on the decorative arts level, but sculpture and masks usually had ritualistic significance and were kept within the community which produced them. The decorative arts were, however, sufficient to carry the stylistic traditions, and sculptural representation was indirectly influenced.
Despite the diversity of styles, there are certain characteristics common to most African sculpture. The human figure is almost universally used as subject matter, with animals probably the second most common representations. The human figures are usually small and carved in the round from wood, the favorite material.
IN HIS BOOK, "The Sculpture of Negro Africa," Paul Wingert suggests that the forms of African sculpture result from two factors of almost equal importance: the sculptural tradition of the artist's area, tribe or village, and the artist's powers of perception of the life around him.
However, the African sculptor is not merely an imitator of nature. His concern with sculptural expression is apparent in the distortion or simplification of his representations.
Badges, Rings, Novelties,
Sweatshirts. Mugs, Paddles,
Cups, Trephies, Medals
Fraternity Jewelry
Balfour
411 W.14th VI 3-1571
AL LAUTER
A
The classic answer for a rainy day, modelled by Judi Scroggin, Lewis Hall. Tailored in Du Pont Zelan treated 100% cotton poplin, the coat has fly front, raglan shoulders, and full "tie silk" lining. Beige only.
All-Weather Coat by Valor
$10^{99}
● Matching, sheathed umbrella in beige___$6.99
Edmiston's ROBERT EDMISTON STORES, INC.
845 Massachusetts
VI 3-5533
Prof. Harris was head of the department of philosophy at the University of the Witwatersrand in South Africa before coming to the United States in 1953. During a sabbatical leave in 1959-60, he served as acting head of the department of logic and metaphysics at the University of Edinburgh, Scotland.
JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass.
OPEN
24 hrs. a day
BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results!
THIS THURSDAY and EVERY THURSDAY
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF Griff's FAMILY DAY SPECIAL
THIS
THURSDAY
and EVERY
THURSDAY
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF
Griff's
FAMILY
DAY
SPECIAL
THIS
THURSDAY
and EVERY
THURSDAY
TAKE ADVANTAGE OF
Griff's
FAMILY
DAY
SPECIAL
Griff's
FULL
SIZE!
PURE
BEEF
QUALITY!
ALL
FOODS
AT
PAINLESS
PRICES!
12¢
Gripps
FULL SIZE!
PURE BEEF QUALITY!
ALL FOODS AT PAINLESS PRICES!
12¢
HAMBURGERS
one or a basketful NO QUANTITY LIMIT!
Griff's
BURGER BAR
1618 W.
23rd St.
Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Nov. 2, 1962
AUFS Expert: Reporting Is 'Tough'
"Being a foreign correspondent is like being a bus driver, you have to keep moving to get paid," a veteran correspondent said yesterday.
Albert Ravenholt, American Universities Field Staff expert on the Far East, yesterday told members of a journalism class you have to be able to take the "gaff."
RAVENHOLT, WHO served as a correspondent in World War II and since 1948 has been a correspondent for the Chicago Daily News, said it is no job for a woman.
Strains and stresses on the correspondent are tremendous and only the physically and mentally conditioned can take it, he said.
The AUFS representative said that one year, he spent only weeks at home.
THE JOB IS ALSO hazardous, he said. During World War II, 16 per cent of the war correspondents were killed. Ravenholt said he had contracted malaria 18 times in the Far East and he could no longer get insurance.
Ravenholt said an opportunity to be in on history in the making is the one reason why foreign correspondents maintain their position.
RAVENHOLT ALSO EXPLAINED his formula on how to become a foreign correspondent.
First, he said, attend a journalism school, gain newspaper experience, learn to write well and learn the importance of news.
Second, learn to write so that anyone can read and understand your story.
Third, he said, you must develop a curiosity than never loses its spark. That spark, he said, will be needed to work 18 hours a day, seven days a week.
AUFS Staffer Stresses New Philippine Press
A major revolution in mass communications is developing today in Southeast Asia, Albert Ravenholt of the American Universities Field Staff said last night.
Ravenholt, who spoke on "The Press and Mass Communications in Southeast Asia" at a meeting sponsored by Sigma Delta Chi and Theta Sigma Phi, emphasized the rise of journalism in the Philippine Islands.
Ravenhold said that the Philippine Islands are the most developed in Southeast Asia. "They are at least 25 years ahead of the other countries." he said.
THE AUFS FAR EAST expert said that a major revolution is developing in the Philippines in readership and listenship. Ravenholt said this expansion is essential to the progress of regional and community development in all Southeast Asia.
He stated that the press became important in the Philippines with the arrival of the American soldiers on the Islands. After World War II the English language became common in most of the Philippine newspapers.
TODAY. THE PRESS is most influential around Manila, he explained. He said that there are six English newspapers in the Philippines and three in the Islands' native tongue. Ravenholt added that advertising is dependent a great deal on the Philippine press.
He said the development of tran-
JOE'S BAKERY
Open 24 Hours
Night Deliveries
412 W.9th VI 3-4720
See Us Before You Buy TYPEWRITERS NEW AND USED PORTABLES STANDARDS ELECTRICS Sales — Rental Service
LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER
sisters brought on the revolution in radio improvement in the Philippines. He called radio and television in that area "the newspapers of the air."
735 Mass. VI 3-3644
Ravenholt said he feels communications are beginning to open up, not just in the Philippines, but throughout Southeast Asia. He said that "We can expect that this revolution will move steadily ahead."
HE ADMITTED the communications in Southeast Asia are still inadequate. He said a low standard of reporting and a poor newsprint industry are mainly responsible for this.
Also, he said, the economic situation, especially in the Philippines, is a major concern. Their economy is primarily agriculture.
Ravenholt stressed that the press still holds an important position in Southeast Asia, especially among political figures. "There are very few men of consequence," he said, "who do not turn to newspapers to find out what is happening."
The University Players will hold a reception for the members of International Club at 7:30 p.m. Sunday in the fourth floor lounge of Murphy Hall.
University Players Will Hold Reception
WALT DISNEY'S happiest twosome...
Lady
AND THE Tramp
TECHNICOLOR* Communication
together with
WALT DISNEY'S
Almost
ANGELS
TECHNICOLOR*
© Walt Disney Productions
NOW!
WALT DISNEY'S happiest twosome..
Lady AND THE Tramp TECHNICOLOR CREAMSCRE
Together with WALT DISNEY'S Almost TECHNICOLOR ANGELS ©Walt Disney Productions
The reception will precede the opening performance of Lerner and Loewe's "Paint Your Wagon."
TECHNICAL
Continuous Showings
Saturday & Sunday From 2:00
"The reception is designed to help students appreciate the play before the fact rather than after it," William L. Kuhike, faculty sponsor of the Plavers said.
— COMING NEXT —
Players President Keith Jochim, Birmingham, Mich., senior, will talk about America's contribution to the theater and the musical play. Jochim will also speak briefly about American frontier life, since "Paint Your Wagon" is a story of the American frontier, set in the time of the California Gold Rush.
BONN — (UPI) — Chancellor Konrad Adenauer has postponed for one week his visit to the United States scheduled for Tuesday, it was announced today.
Crisis Postpones Adenauer Visit
COMING NEXT
EDGAR ALLAN POE'S
TALES OF
TERROR in COLOR
VARSITY
THEATRE ... Telephone VIKING 3 1065
The visit will take place Nov.14 and 15, the government information ministry said.
EDGAR ALLAN POE'S
TALES OF
TERROR in COLOR
THE ANNOUNCEMENT did not give a reason for the postponement, but authoritative sources said the main reason is without doubt the crisis in Adenaauer's coalition government caused by security police last week against the news magazine Der Spiegel.
The German press charges the police action violated freedom of the press. The magazine, a frequent critic of the government, has been charged with treason for printing material allegedly obtained from military personnel for money.
Free Democratic members of Adenauer's coalition have threatened to walk out of the government if they do not receive a satisfactory explanation why their party was not told beforehand of the action.
Adenauer promised to announce his decision today on whether to accept the resignation offer made by Justice Minister Wolfgang Stammerberger. The justice minister offered to quit because he was not informed of the police move on defense ministry orders.
Authoritative sources said the latest developments in the Cuban crisis also played a part in causing the postponement. But internal troubles in Germany was the major cause, they said.
Now Thru Sunday!
Show Starts At 7:00
"The Singer Not The Song"
Distributed by WARNER BROS.
CINEMASCORE PICTURE IN COLOR
ALSO "THE FIERCEST HEART"
MOSCOW — (UPI) — A one-ton Soviet rocket hurtled through space today on the first lap of a seven month voyage to photograph the planet Mars 48 million miles away. Moscow said the rocket's instruments were "functioning normally."
Soviets Fire Probe Of Mars
(In London, the British Broadcasting Corp. quoted Soviet Academician M. Sissakian, presidium member of the Academy of Sciences, as saying Russia hopes to bring the "Mars I" back to earth.)
Saturday Only!
Two Bonus Features
● "Female Jungle"
● "The Broken Land"
At 10 a.m. (2 a.m. EST). Radio Moscow said Mars I had passed the 147,264-mile mark and that no further progress report would be given until Sunday night.
PLEASE NOTE!
Starting this week, the SUNSET will be closed Mondays through Thursdays. We will be open on Fridays, Saturdays,
and Sundays, weather permitting.
PLEASE NOTE!
The Russians launched the unmanned probe last night, saying it was the first Soviet shot toward Mars. They hope it will provide information on the "canals" and "ice-caps" on Mars that have fascinated mankind for ages.
SUNSET
DRIVE IN THEATRE ··· West on Highway 40
Soviet astronomer Nikolai Barabashov, writing in the Communist party newspaper Pravda, said the "seas" of Mars were "full of vegetation."
"They became green in spring and summer, brown in autumn and gray in winter," he said. "If the seas were not full of vegetation, the yellow dust of deserts would quickly fill them in and they would become the same color and brightness as the continents."
TRADING POST
704 $ _{1/2} $ Mass. Ph.VI 3-2012
Located 1 door South of K.P. & L.
in basement.
Two matching twin Hollywood
beds complete (ea.) ... $29.95
Danish style sofa & chair ... $87.50
Hide-A-Bed ... $99.00
2—Matching night chairs (ea.) .. $ 9.95
Dressing table & stool ... $ 8.00
5-Drawer chest ... $11.00
Baby bed with mattress ..$10.00
Play pen with pad ... $ 8.50
New 8x12 rugs with rubber backing, Special at ... (ea.) $24.00
Big 3-drawer desk ... $10.00
21" Console TV ... $19.00
Console TV, radio, record player ... $28.00
Portable 4-speed record player .. $ 7.00
2 Maytag automatic washers (ea.) ... $24.50
RCA High Fidelity Console record player ... $49.95
RCA High Fidelity Console
record player ... $49.95
We invite you to come in and look around. Remember a few steps down gives you a big step up in savings.
Bring it Back you Rascal you!
LARRY CRUM
- Suggests -
T-Bone Steak only 99c
Open 24 Hours a day
'K' PANCAKE GRILL & SUNDRIES
WILLIAM J. BOWMAN
THAT "BEN HUR" GUY IS CAUGHT . . .
WITHOUT HIS CHARIOT!
AT LAST!
A MOTION
PICTURE
THAT
DELIVERS...
FUN!
HERO
MESAGE
NERO
DE 1945
CHARLTON
HESTON
MELSA
MARTINELLI
in MELVILLE SHAVELSON'S
production of
The
Pigeon
That Took
Rome
THE RING TAN
This pigeon came to make war and she threw in the towel!
I
This wolf said: "No more love in a pigeon coop!"
HARRY GUARDJNO · BACCALONI · GABRIELLA PALLOTTA · BRIAN DONLEVY · MARIETTO
- STARTS TOMORROW!
Matinee Saturday At 2:00 p.m.
Evenings At 7:00 and 9:00
ay Continuous Showings From 2:30 p.m.
— Ends Tonie —
"TWO WEEKS IN
ANOTHER TOWN"
GRANADA
TNEATRE ... Telephone VKING 3-5783
FHb at HKartwLeV
SIMD Dl UGd Nmcnecl 19V OIbrepaar
4753 M U4aH IUO RI CslatCt OGlbe
3b12 T184a SWatClo 19wP frStBt Otterel AInrpR Rf99StCpM TTBBr Wlpme FfchotPh TtymM HDinMw
Friday, Nov. 2, 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 Kansas 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 SALE
Family heirlooms. cut glass-pressed glass.
Haviland-art art-carnival glass. Brass banquet lamp and many other items. See at 1725 Vermont. 11-9
H. H. Scott L.T.-ten FM tuner, Rek-O-
Kut K355 turntable, Shure M212 stereo
arm slash cartridge, Fairchild 212 tute-
arm and a dynamak Watt amp. tape,
all with price. Guaranteed phone
less than half price. Will finance. Phone
VI 3-8919.
Stereo or hi-fi diamond needles for most makes. Half price during November. Don't wait, buy them now at Pettengill-Davis, 723 Mass. tf
Used Rathaeon TV with AM-FM phono-
lines guaranteed. Fettleit-17
Davis, 723 Mass.
New stereo FM—new portable stereos-
new AM-FM radios—new FM radio dis-
signers—new $200 show on mar-
month, at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Massa-
achusetts St. 11-20
1960 Vauxhall. Good condition. Phone
VI 2-3684. 11-6
GUNS: LAWRENCE FIREARMS CO. We have moved to even more palatial acco-
ruptions and equipment, so our paralled stock of new and used guns
and ammo. 1026 Ohio. 11-2
4 new 700-1X 100 level big edge new takeoff — bigger than most mailorder 750-1X's. All four tires cut to $58.00 installed! No federal tax. Hurry to Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center — 929 Mass. St. 11-6
Used G.E. Electric Dryer, GUARANTEED $49.97. Used washer dryer combination, late-model — perfect — to $135.00. Hurry to Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. St.
One fifty-four volum set leather bound Great Books of the Western World, "Published by Encyclopedia Britannica" with bookcase. 8 months old. Call V3-5994
Used TVs $5.00 eachl Six set must go—
11-6 Rocky Stoneback's, 929 Mass. St.
11-6
Corvair-Valliant-Lancer Owners! Four 1st line new narrow white tubeless tires 1995. 4 for $350.00 stalled! Ray Stoneback's Discount Center. 929 Mass. St. 11-6
3-speed Royce Union 26" men's or ladies'
939 Mass. Used buses $10.00 each. 11-12
Transistor Radios! 6 transistors now $10.97! AM-FM radios—twin speaker now $45.97! FM radios now $26.97. Rock Stone-back's, 929 Mass. St. 11-12
Sports Car Compact Owners Attention!
We have all sizes of Snow treads avail-
able. We can also Sell Our Discount
Center, 929 Mass. St. 1,000 new tires
at low discount prices!
1858 Volkswagen with radio, heater, and white wall tires. Excellent condition. Priced lower than K.C. prices. Lots of extras. Phone VI 2-0771. 11-5
Five-weight Orphum Banje; $80. Martin
Bernofsky at 7042° Mass. after 4. 11-5
Bernofsky at 7042° Mass. after 4. 11-5
One Roberts four-track model 990 stereo tape recorder and player with two Roberts matching external speakers 60 days old. Phone VI 3-5996. 11-5
All kinds of house plants. Potted . .
Including philodendron to be used for
room dividers and in picture windows.
Phone VI 3-4207. tf
Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. St. Annual Fall Sale! $15.95 * 5 tube radio* $12.97; $18.99 * 6 tube radio* $12.97; $99.95 * twinning Stereo* -$79.97; $179.95 * stereo Console* -$149.97; $202.95 * stereo Console AM-FM*-$185 * Hand wired TV*-$128.88 * All Brand MDSE!* 11-2
TV shopping? Magnavox 24" automatic TV has a 3 year picture tube warranty. Buy it from just $149.90 or from just $149.90. Use the magnificent Magnavox at Pettigell-Davis, 723 Mass,
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
Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.00 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
TYPING PAPER BARGAINS: Pink typing paper. 85c per yellow. Yellow paper, 100c per pound. The Lawrence Outlook. 1005 Massachusetts, open all day at Tuesday, tt
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop near Pittsburgh—Pet Store VI 5-282 Modern self-service. Phone 8 to 6.30 p.m. week days.
FOR RENT
Vacancy in an apartment for a male student. Phone VI 3-6723. Union. Avail-11/8/2024.
FOR RENT: extra nice furnished room for men, 11½ blocks from campus, two rooms. Phone 1346 Ohio. Phone 1346 Orie. or VI 3-2522. After 6 p.m. phone II 1-2031.
Dissatisfied with your apartment? Call
about a clean house in good location. 11-8
or call 212-795-4300.
Cozy 3 room furnished apartment suitable for single person. Good location. Firm and entrance, also parking. All utilities paid. $53 a month. VI 3-2583. 11-7
Attractive furnished apartment for one woman for $65 a month. Utilities paid and garage available. Phone VI 3-1209 or see at 1633 Vermont. 11-7
FOR RENT. SINGLE ROOMS for men 11 block from Union. Kitchen privileges, covered lamps, available. 5th, 1234 Oread or phone VI 21-1518. Call or see evenings.
Unfinished large 4-bedroom house with 2 baths. Parking space. Excellent location. Clean, reasonable, ideal for large family. Phone VI 3-7038. 11-6
2 bedroom duplex. Also large furnished
entrance for 3 or 4 boys. Phone 2281
2281
Small second floor furnished bachelor type apartment suitable for 1 person. Private bath and kitchen. Steam heat. Off gas stove. On month 2 payable except electricity. Rogers Real Estate Co. 7 West 14th. Phone VI 3-0005 or VI 3-2929. 11-5
2 bedroom house 1½ block from campus.
Fully carpeted, screened porch, wood
decorated, a pond, a pool,
full basement with a large lot. $10,500.
If interested call VI 3-4291. 11-2
Two apartments for rent. One a secon-
d floor with kitchen for $70 a month. A 3 floor apartment to share with two boys. See at 1400 Ohio or phone VI 3-12-
ROOMS FOR MEN: Double room only, share with Law student; one-half block from Student Union; private entrance. quiet, telephone and utilities paid. Call VI 3-4092 or see at 1301 Louisiana after 5 p.m. weekdays. tt
Apartment for rent to musician or hi-
enthusiast. 2 bedroom furnished apart-
ment with kitchen and high ceiling. Combination living-dining room - acoustics excellent. Large yard. Garitorizer with all utilities paid except electricity. $75 a month. PhI VI 2-2539.
3 room apartment, private bath. 1 block
up from the street. No parking.
paid. Come and see. 1142 Indiana, M
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.
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.
FURNISHED OFFICE SPACE is now available by the day, week or month. Security and Secretarial & Accession Service. Call VI 3-5920 or see them at 10211 Mass.
M-W-F-tf
Stands to reason that a life insurance policy designed expressly for college men—and sold only to college men—gives you the most benefits for your money when you consider that college men are preferred insurance risks. Call me and I'll fill you in on THE BENEFACTOR, College Life's famous policy, exclusively for college men.
TRANSPORTATION
Travel-only a limited number of airline flights still available for Thanksgiving and Christmas Holiday.
Bill Haynes $ ^{*} $
says...
Suggest making reservations Now!
representing
THE COLLEGE LIFE
INSURANCE COMPANY
OF AMERICA
First National Travel Agency 746 Mass VI 3-0152
baby sister wanted for 1 baby girl 8:00
baby brother wanted for 1 baby boy 8:00
portation. Phone VI 3-8810. 11-6
*BILL HAYNES
VI 3-9394
WANTED
... the only Company selling exclusively to College Men
Would individual who purchased bound copies of Cervantes' books at library auction please contact Judith Nelson at VI 3-7600 immediately. 11-2
Lost a Woman's watch: round, yellow
gilt anton. Reward. Contact 303 S. J.
11-6
LOST
Lost Alpha Delta Pi pin chained to Triangle pin on October 31 in vicinity of Fraser or Room 110. Please contact Nancy Brown at VI 3-7847. S10 reward. 11-6
Luggage colored leather tobacco pouch in vicinity of 25 Strong, 2:30 p.m. Tuesdays in environmental value. Finder call VI 2-0452 or with secretary's Psychology Clinic. 11-8
1962 KU class ring with green set in-
terno. Marlyn Wathi Watson VI 5-3100. Reward. 11-8
Found in Summerfield 4th floor. WED-
7711 RING initials "CR". Call V11-
7711
FOUND
MISCELLANEOUS
Need a place for a private party or dance.
Phone VI 3-6376. 11-7
HELP WANTED
Business School junior who wants to learn discount merchandising on part time extra help basis. Must be able to work 2:30 to 5:30 p.m. daily, and 8:30 to 5:30 Saturday. Must be able to work full time. Do not apply unless you can work these hours. Apply in person at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. St. 11-6
Wanted: Waitress full or part time. Apply to manager at Holiday Inn Restaurant.
BUSINESS SERVICES
MILLIKEN'S "S.O.S." Open 24 hours a Day . Regular Office Hours: 7 a.m.-12 p.m.
p.m. Speaking in Encuency.
* STUDENT TYPING & THESIS
CATING & THERMO-FAX COPYING
COMPLETE SECRETARYIAL AND AN-
- STUDENT TYPING & TIESIS
- CUSTOM GETTENET DUPLI-
- COMPLETE SECRETARIAL AND ANSWERING SERVICE, Office Space
$1021_{1}{}^{2}$ Massachusetts Ph. VI 3-5920 M-Fe-Eaf
GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I study notes
Completely revised and extremely comprehensive. $4. For free delivery call VI 3-8246. 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. tf
TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rental
electronics. Royal, Olympia, Sirma Corona.
Olivetti and Remington portables. Bond
Typewriter, Typewriter 79.
Mass. Phone VI 3-3444.
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
more information, Ola Smith 939·938; Mass. Call VI 3-5263.
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center. 1218
Conn. Personal service—sectionalized
birds, hamsters, chameleons, turtles,
etc., plus complete lists. tt
net supplies.
TYPING
English major and former secretary will type themes and theses on electric type-writer. For neat and accurate work call Mrs. Melisand Jones, VI 3-5267. if
11-5
TERM PAPERS, THESES, ARTICLES,
BOOKS, Quick, accurate, neat work by
Bernard Bellman. Knowledge of good English and spelling.
Ruth Skinner, 805 Missouri, VI 3-3076.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, these papers. Reasonable rates. Ecstatic typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VIII 3-8379. tf
Experienced secretary with electric type-
er equipment, telephone Nancy Cain at VI-3-0524.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call M.S. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tf
Experienced typist. 7 years experiences in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Barlow, Bariow, 204 Yale Rd., VT, 11f 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 do typing in home. Fast, accurate, neat work, Reasonable rates. Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 2-1749. tf
Typist experienced in theses and term papers. Prompt service, reasonable rates, electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Howard Mhlinger at VI 3-4409. (f)
Typing — reasonable rates, neat and ac-
cumulatively. VI 3-3188; Mrs. Bodin, 825 Greeter Verre
Efficient typist. Would like typing in her home. Special attention to term reports, thesis, letters. Call anytime at VI 3-2651.
*t*
Manuscripts, theses, and term papers.
Also dissertations typed on wide carriage.
Experience with 35 and key sciences.
Experience in education and science.
Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. VI 2-1546. tt
MILLIKEN'S S.O.S. — always first quality typing on IBM machines, equipped with carbon ribbons. Open 24 hrs a day. 1021½ Massachusetts. VI 3-5920 M-W-fff
CAREERS IN ENERGY with HUMBLE
OIL & REFINING COMPANY
AMERICA'S LEADING ENERGY COMPANY
MONDAY & TUESDAY, NOV. 5th & 6th
REPRESENTATIVE OF HUMBLE PRODUCTION DEPARTMENT WILL BE ON CAMPUS TO INTERVIEW:
Chemical Civil Electrical
Mechanical Petroleum Industrial
- ENGINEERS -
INTERESTED IN DISCUSSING PROFESSIONAL CAREER OPPORTUNITIES IN OIL AND GAS PRODUCTION AND NATURAL GAS PROCESSING
CONTACT COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING PLACEMENT OFFICE FOR APPOINTMENT
"HUMBLE IS AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER"
Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Nov. 2, 1962
India-
(Continued from page 1) tillery, communications and transport equipment.
There was no indication that American military men would follow immediately, save for a relatively few advisers.
Most of the equipment will come by plane and ship from Germany and the United States. Galbraith said American aircraft are standing by in Turkey, ready to pick up mountain guns promised to India by the Turkish government.
"It may be some time before these guns are here because of the problem of getting them to airports." Galbraith said of the Turkish weapons.
BRITIAN ALREADY is giving military aid to India, and Canada is expected to join in shortly.
As the western powers moved into the breach to help the Indians, it was disclosed that Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev sent a letter to Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru through the Russian Ambassador to New Delhi.
A foreign office spokesman declined to comment on the contents of the Khrushchev letter, although it may indicate present Soviet views on the Chinese-Indian undeclared war over their disputed border. Thus far, Moscow has indicated it is siding with Peiping.
ON THE ACTUAL fighting fronts high in the Himalayan Mountains, where the snows of winter are beginning to cover the battlefield, things were quiet again today.
Galbraith, in announcing the start of the American flow of arms aid, warned repeatedly at a news conference against "too high expectations associated with this equipment."
HE EXPRESSED the fear common among Americans here by warning against "disillusionment" if the arrival of U.S. arms did not immediately turn the border war in favor of India, whose forces have lost 2,000 to 2,500 men and have been sent reeling back before the Red onslaught.
"As far as I know," Galbraith said, "American instructors will not be needed to train Indian troops to handle the newly-arriving weapons."
He said the first jetloads would be "light infantry equipment," but when asked about the possibility of India receiving aircraft as well, he said: "Military transport is certainly a possibility."
Used in such a frame of reference, transport could mean anything from planes and trucks through ships and railroad rolling stock.
Galbraith described the incoming weapons as what are "most immediately needed for the soldiers fighting up in the mountains."
Cuban Showdown Has Some Beneficial Effects
Rv Phil Newsom
UPI Foreign News Analyst
By Pim Newson
UPI Foreign News Analyst Since Soviet missiles still are in Cuba and the agreement to remove them still could come unglued, any attempt to look on the bright side of the Cuban crisis must remain in the category of wishful thinking.
But here are some hopeful possibilities already being discussed:
- The display of U.S. determination reduced the possibility of war by miscalculation and could result in a more conciliatory Soviet approach to world problems.
- Khrushchev's proposal that United Nations inspection teams might witness the removal of Soviet missiles in Cuba could lead to agreement on similar inspection of suspected nuclear test sites and therefore to agreement on a nuclear test ban.
- The narrowly averted head-on collision between the two nuclear
Vox-
(Continued from page 1)
The Vox president said another plank calling for full cooperation between Greeks and Independents was "very commendable."
"It is something with which we have never had any trouble," he added.
ANOTHER PLANK which criticized the inactivity of the Human Rights Committee brought the following response:
"Jerry Dickson, all student body president, appointed a Human Rights Committee coordinator at the beginning of the year," Wilson pointed out. "I'm sure UP knew about this."
"We never tell our members how to vote" was Wilson's reply to a UP plank advocating a merit commission to insure impartiality in the appointment of persons to ASC committees.
In regard to UP's proposal to conduct a Student Educational Campaign (SPEC), Wilson said the ASC Public Relations committee performs the same function.
"THE COMMITTEE plans to send out letters to each living group to see if they want a speaker," Wilson said.
UP's final plank which proposed a fund from ASC to each class was termed "a ridiculous statement" by the Vox president.
"I DON'T FEEL it is a question of money. It didn't work last year," he said, citing the freshman party.
Mike Harris, Shawnee Mission senior, summed up the UP platform as "75 per cent verbose and 25 per cent old planks.
He also criticized UP for not giving Vox more than 24-hours notice in the Lewis and Hashinger debates. He attributed their failure to poor organization on the University Party's part.
!!!
J
If You Hate Cold Weather
BANK-BY-MAIL
MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INBURANCE CORPORATION
1ST
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF Lawrence
746 Massachusetts St.
1ST MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF Lawrence
746 Massachusetts St.
giants clearly illustrated to other nations, including Great Britain, that they could expect to be informed but not consulted in any conflict of national interests between the two biggest powers.
It therefore emphasized the importance of early British entry into the European Economic Community and for development of a strongly United Europe able to speak with a voice of its own.
- While the U.S. action appeared to by-pass the U.N., both the U.S. and the Soviet Union willingly accepted U.N. services, thus giving rise to the possibility the U.N. might be able to function as an intermediary in big conflicts as well as small ones.
While the chances for less U.S.-Soviet tension must remain in the realm of wishful thinking for the moment, the possibility received some impetus through agreement between President Kennedy and Nikita Khrushchev that they have important matters to discuss.
British Prime Minister MacMillan said it well in the House of Commons Tuesday. Calling for restoration of confidence in a divided world, he said:
"We must not be cynical. You cannot live in a world which has nothing but suspicion, as it becomes almost intolerable."
Statewide Activities-
(Continued from page 1) Statewide Activities and the creation of a Speakers' Bureau was made well before the UP platform."
"IF THE NEW chairman is so well organized, why has he waited until now to select county chairman, and why haven't alleged Statewide Activities improvements been brought to attention before?," replied Miss Lane.
"The plank in the UP platform has
forced the committee (Statewide Activities) to take some action at last." Stewart added. "This is good because this is what UP is calling for—revitalization of ASC committees."
Stewart criticized the Vox platform for dealing with "petty issues while UP is dealing with long range ideas."
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results!
Bong Yul Shin Instructor from the Orient
JUDO-KARATE AIKIDO
A 4th Degree BLACK BELT Instructor
World Renown Instructors Separate Classes for Women, Men and Children MONDAY THRU SATURDAY, 2 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Bring this ad for a student discount
TOPEKA JUDO ACADEMY
1408 Huntoon - Phone FL 4-9701
YOUR FAVORITE BEVERAGE
FREE
at the
PURPLE PIG
FRIDAY AFTERNOON - 2 p.m. to 6 p.m.
SPONSORED BY K.U. YOUNG DEMOCRATS
MEMBERS AND NON-MEMBERS INVITED
Nite-Aires LEISURE LOVELIES FIRESIDE SNUGGLERS
Nite-Aires®
LEISURE LOVELIES
For Lazy Fireside Lounging ...
Nite-Aires®
LEISURE LOVELIES
FIRESIDE SNUGGLERS
As Seen in
MADEMOISELLE
4.95
You'll love this fluffy ball of fur that encircles your foot . . . promising. you a warm winter. In luscious colors: white, gold, turquoise, blue, lilac, orange, red, and pink
white, gold, turquoise, blue, lilac, orange, red, and pink
813 MASS.
McCoy's
VI 3-2091
Daily hansan
60th Year, No. 37
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Monday, Nov. 5, 1962
Administration Calls Cuban Crisis 'Unclear'
WASHINGTON —(UPI)— President Kennedy conferred today with his top advisers on latest developments in the Cuban crisis. Administration sources said the current situation could be summed up in one word—"unclear."
Tension appeared to have eased for the time being. But U.S. officials stressed that the basic problem of removing Soviet missiles from Cuba under international inspection remained unsolved.
One development today was the announcement from the International Committee of the Red Cross in Geneva that the Cuban government has agreed to let Red Cross inspectors check cargoes of Cuba-bound Communist ships for hidden arms.
KENNEDY MET for about 45 minutes today with the executive committee of the National Security Council, the top policy-strategy
See related story on page 4.
panel for planning U.S. moves in the crisis. The President confers with the group every day.
He will fly to Boston tonight to vote in tomorrow's election and will return to Washington at mid-morning. He will then meet with the National Security Council group at 3 p.m.
Two administration officials said yesterday the United States would continue to insist on on-the-spot inspection in Cuba to make sure that all Soviet offensive weapons are removed.
PRESIDENTIAL assistant Theodore C. Sorensen said there could be no U.S. pledge not to invade Cuba until the Soviet missile withdrawn was completed under "satisfactory" arrangements.
Adequate inspection, he said, "would include on-site inspection, and both aerial and sea inspection."
Sorensen said in a television interview (Meet the Press - NBC) that any pledge the President might give on a Cuban invasion "would be in keeping with alliances" and would be "acceptable to all."
EDWIN M. MARTIN assistant Secretary of State for Inter-American affairs, said that unless there was agreement on inspection within a reasonable length of time, American officials would have to "reconsider our picture over-all."
Martin, who appeared on another television program (Issues and Answers — ABC), did not elaborate on his statement.
U. S. officials reported that three Soviet ships were headed toward Cuba, possibly to pick up dismantled offensive weapons and related (Continued on page 12)
Bonn Head Is Fired In Security Dispute
BONN — (UPI) — Chancellor Konrad Adenauer today fired one top government official and suspended another to save his coalition government from collapse.
State Secretary Walter Strauss of the Justice Ministry was fired. Adenauer suspended until further notice Volkmar Hopf, state secretary of the Defense Ministry.
The 88-year-old chancellor moved against the pair — both no.2 men in their respective ministries — after almost day-long talks with leaders of the Free Democratic Party.
THE FREE Democrats, junior partners in the government coalition with Adenauer's own Christian Democratic Party, had threatened to withdraw their support unless Adenauer acted. The Free Democrats had protested Strauss' and Hopf's handling of a government security crackdown on the news-magazine "Der Spiegel."
The Free Democrats had threatened to withdraw their parliamentary votes — and thus topple Adenauer's government — unless the chancellor met their demands by noon. The chancellor's action was taken several hours after the deadline.
Reports in government quarters said the morning talks involved tough negotiations. The Free Democrats had demanded Adenauer fire some officials for allegedly hiding plans for the magazine crackdown from the Justice Minister, a Free Democrat.
Negotiators declined to comment on details after the morning session. But Free Democratic leader
F.
IT WAS REPORTED Adenauer made a series of proposals at the morning session. The Free Democrats were expected to give their reply during the second meeting.
Erich Mende, asked by newsmen if the coalition had been saved, said, "not yet."
Chancellor Konrad Adenauer
The Free Democrats have announced that all five of their ministers will resign from the coalition cabinet with Adenauer's Christian Democrats—thus robbing it of its majority base—unless the chancellor punishes the Christian Democrats for the affair.
THE CRISIS centers around a police raid 10 days ago on the Hamburg and Bonn offices of Der Spiegel, a weekly West German
(Continued on page 12)
Cuba Agrees To Ship Check
GENEVA — (UPI) — The International Committee of the Red Cross said today the Cuban government has agreed to let Red Cross inspectors check cargoes of Cubabound Communist ships for hidden arms.
But the Committee warned it cannot assume direct responsibility for the control action and said this "remains the direct affair of the United Nations and the nations concerned."
THE STATEMENT from the head-quarters of the all-Swiss body here said the Red Cross had been informed by the United Nations that Cuba now agrees to the control of ships coming to Cuban ports by Red Cross inspectors. The United States and the Soviet Union already have accepted such an arrangement.
It said, however, that "in the superior interests of peace" and "in a desire to save the people from the scourge of war," the Red Cross was prepared to assist in the inspection.
Approximately 30 Red Cross inspectors would take part in the operation which would last about a month, the statement said.
It said the inspection would take place "on the high seas" and it was therefore assumed that Red Cross inspectors would be operating from U.S. ships now blockading Cuba.
THE RED CROSS STATEMENT said the Cuban operation is "beyond the conventional and traditional scope of the humanitarian mission of the Red Cross."
Paul Ruegger, a former president of the committee, will fly to New York tomorrow to arrange details of the control operation with American, Russian, Cuban and U.N. officials.
The Red Cross said its "definite (Continued on page 12)
Nobel Peace Prize Held
OSLO, Norway — (UPI) — The Nobel Institute announced here today that no Nobel Peace Prize would be awarded this year.
It was the fifth time since the end of World War II that no Peace Prize had been awarded. In two of these cases, the prize was awarded the following year along with the regular prize for that year.
A spokesman for the institute said the prize committee had decided to reserve the award money for next year.
President Kennedy and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev were reported to have been high on the list of possible Nobel Prize winners.
But the Nobel Committee of the Norwegian National Assembly said in a tense communique that there will be no Peace Prize this year and the prize amount will be reversed for 1963.
The decision was taken behind closed doors at the Nobel Institute in Oslo where the committee met under the chairmanship of Director Gunnar Jahn.
The prize money this year amounted to $50.043.
Weather
The weather today will be fair.
It will become partly cloudy tonight and Tuesday. Highs today will range from 45 to 50. Tonight's low will be in the lower 30s. The high for Tuesday will be in the 50s.
NEW DELHI — (UPI) — Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru has rejected Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev's call for an immediate unconditional cease-fire in the undeclared border war between India and Communist China, informed sources reported today.
Red Truce Offer Rejected By Nehru
The report coincided with official disclosure of a serious setback for India on the western sector of the disputed border and the reported massive buildup of Red troops and equipment on the eastern sector.
INDIAN OFFICIALS confirmed that Nehru's reply to Khrushchev's latest letter was sent to Moscow today. They refused to reveal what it said.
But informed sources said that Nehru repeated his demand that Red troops pull back to positions held before launching the major offensive last Sept. 8 in advance of any cease-fire or peace negotiations.
Communist China recently proposed that both sides withdraw their troops 12.5 miles from the present "line of control" while representatives from Peiping and New Delhi try to resolve the border dispute by negotiations. India immediately turned down the proposal.
A DEFENSE ministry spokesman today told newsmen that Indian forces have abandoned a major outpost guarding the Karakoram Pass entry into the Indian subcontinent in Northern Ladakh.
On the opposite eastern sector of the 1,000-mile border, informed sources reported Chinese Communist troops and equipment pouring into the Indian monastery town of Towang in the Northeast Frontier Agency (NEFA) in apparent preparation for another major attack.
THE SPOKESMAN said the western sector post at Daulet Beg Oldi was evacuated "a few days ago" as (Continued on page 12)
(Continued on page 12)
India Club to Discuss Sino-Indian Conflict
The India Club will meet at 7 p.m. tonight in the Kansas Union to discuss Red China's attack on India. A resolution offering moral support to the government of India from the Indian students here will be proposed.
This meeting was originally scheduled for Friday night; it was postponed because of a small turnout.
part of a "planned withdrawal" of forces from northern Ladah.
Daulet Bed Oldi was the major military command post in the Chipchap Valley. The spokesman said he did not know whether Red troops had occupied the post but added:
"If they are . . . they are in better position to control Karakoram Pass." The spokesman acknowledged that Daulet Beg Oldi was situated west
[Image of a man with a white cap].
Prime Minister Nehru
of the line which Peiping said originally in 1956 was the boundary. Informed sources said it was "one of two" places where the reds have pushed across the line. Peiping revised the line in 1960 to add another 2,000 square miles to its claims in Ladakh.
THE WITHDRAWAL from Daulet Beg Oldi was seen as a serious loss for the Indians since the area could be used for airlifting men and supplies. The spokesman said there was no airstrip as such but that a number of planes had landed there. The post was only a few miles directly south of the pass, which meant that the Chinese Red forces now had a new entry into the subcontinent, the southern part of Asia which India shares with Pakistan.
The pass was used by the American Consul General in Manchuria to flee to India after the Chinese Communists overran mainland China and forced the Nationalists from the continent.
TOWANG IS at the northern end of the main jeep track leading to the Assam Valley 40 or 50 miles away. The Chinese took the town,
(Continued on page 12)
Anyone who votes more than once in the campus primary elections tomorrow or Wednesday, will be fined or expelled from school, said John Stuckey, Pittsburgh junior and chairman of the All Student Council elections committee.
Court Will Prosecute Student Vote Violations
Violators of any election procedures will appear before the student Court. The minimum fine for violation by political parties is $50 and the maximum $100, Stuckey said.
The minimum penalty for individual violators is $10. The maximum penalty is expulsion from school.
"I JUST WANT anyone who may be considering fraud to know what penalties he is facing," Stuckey said. "I won't hesitate to prosecute if there is any question of a violation."
"Some people have said," Stuckey continued, "that cheating at the polls this year would be easier because of the new voting system."
There are four voting polls and three sets of deans cards. Two polls are located in Strong Hall, one in front of the Registrar's office and one in the rotunda. Other polls are in the lobbies of the Kansas Union and Murphy Hall.
After picking up their dean's cards in any one of the three buildings, students may vote at any of the four polls between 8 a.m. and 5:15 p.m. tomorrow and Wednesday.
"IF ANYONE TRIES to vote twice by using more than one of his dean's cards he will be detected," said Stuckev.
He explained three sets of safeguards against duplicate voting.
- The student I.D. card is punched.
- Information is stamped on the I.D. card.
- The machine that reshuffles the IBM dean's cards in preparation for the general elections will indicate the use of more than one card by a student.
Stuckey reminded students that they must present their ID card to get a dean's card in order to vote. Students who wish to vote for All Student Council representatives from their district must present a party card too.
The only other office to be voted on in the primary elections besides ASC representatives is freshman class president. One of the four candidates running for that office, Stuckey said, will be eliminated for the general elections, Nov. 15 and 16.
THIRTY-SEVEN students are competing for ASC seats in the primaries. Twenty candidates are Vox Populi and 17 University Party.
Stuckey reported that 36 poll workers will be on duty. "If at any time a poll goes under its quota of poll workers, I will be forced to close the poll," stated Stuckey. "I can't have the election contested."
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Monday, Nov. 5. 19
Free Forum for Ideas?
College and university presidents often proclaim that their institution lives up to the basic obligation of a university to protect the rights of students to hear and discuss all ideas, no matter how controversial.
Such proclamations often return to haunt the president, for before too long nearly every university president is faced with the problem of whether to defy public criticism when a student group invites a controversial speaker.
At the University of Michigan, the Board of Regents recently passed a by-law which re-stated the university's policy "to foster a spirit of free inquiry and to encourage the timely discussion of a wide variety of issues."
However, it then went on to specifically prohibit speakers from advocating that the audience taken action prohibited by federal, state or university regulations and said that "advocating or urging the modification of the government of the United States or of the state of Michigan by violence or sabotage is specifically prohibited."
WHEN SUCH CRITICISM arises, many university presidents fail to live up to their responsibilities and conveniently forget their earlier lofty proclamation that a university must be a free forum for ideas.
IF FOLLOWED, this by-law would ban not only members of the Communist Party but also members of the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) and other groups advocating peaceful violation of segregation laws in Southern states.
The by-law probably is the result of the controversy which arose when two members of the Communist Party were invited to speak at
the Michigan campus last year. The invitation brought severe pressure upon the university administration to prohibit the speaker from appearing.
The Michigan president refused to bow to the pressure. However, this year he was completely in favor of the Regents' by-law.
AT A NUMBER of other universities, presidents or Regents took steps last year to ban Communists from speaking on campus. Yet in many cases these same presidents earlier had proclaimed their agreement with the idea that a university should not place any restrictions on the free exchange of ideas.
Most university administrators are afraid or unwilling to protect the basic function and purpose of a university in the face of opposition from politicians, pressure groups, or the public in general.
The reason for such hypocrisy is not hard to find. It is the same reason that the editor of the Colorado Daily was fired by the CU president last month.
Such presidents are to be commended for having the courage to preserve the freedom and basic purpose of their institutions. Unfortunately, too few presidents have this courage.
THERE ARE NOTABLE exceptions. The University of Minnesota and University of Oregon last year were faced with severe criticism when members of the Communist party were invited to speak. Both refused to back down.
Too many university presidents act more like politicians or corporation presidents rather than like responsible university presidents.
-Clayton Keller
Pennsylvania Race Desperate
By Zeke Wigglesworth
(This is the fourteenth in a series of articles on gubernatorial and congressional contests in the 1962 election.)
Few gubernatorial races are being fought as desperately as the one in Pennsylvania. More is at stake than just control of the state and the prestige of being governor; at stake are more than 50,000 "spoils" jobs.
They are Richardson Dilworth, mayor of Philadelphia, and William W. Scranton, Congressional representative of Pennsylvania's 10th district.
This year, for the honor of handing out the 50,000 jobs, two men with almost completely contrasting personalities are running for the governorship of the Keystone State.
DILWORTH, a Democrat, is given credit, along with Sen. Joseph Clark, for having made once-Republican-dominated Pennsylvania a democratic borough. Dilworth, a graduate of the Harvard Law School, is considered by his followers and his opponents to be a thorough politician but basically a slow mover. He is, according to Time Magazine, "uncomfortable while partaking of that backslapping, handshaking routine..."
Dilworth roams the state of Pennsylvania, delving into the many problems the state faces; unemployment, natural resources, industrial well-being, and mental health. His basic approach to Scranton is to label him "Little Lord Fauntleroy" and brand him as a political babe-in-the-woods. (Scranton's first job of any importance was his present position as U.S. Congressman.)
If William Scranton had to be labeled, it would have to be as the representative of the big industrial interests in Pennsylvania. Several big companies operating in the state, such as U.S. Steel, the Pennsylvania Railroad, Bethlehem Steel Corp. and others, have given "at least $2.5 million" to Scranton's campaign, according to The Nation magazine.
SCRANTON'S BACKGROUND lends itself easily to big industry interests. After he returned from World War II (as a captain in the Army Air Force), he became involved with the International Text Book Co., Huddon Craftsmen, Inc., and served as president of the Scranton-Lackawanna Trust Co.
Later he acted as chairman of the board of the Northeastern Broadcasting Corp. and then served as special assistant to then Secretary of State Christian Herter.
In addition, he had dealings with the International Salt Co., the Lackawanna Railroad Co., and the University of Scranton.
With this background, it is not surprising that Scranton emerges as the popular favorite with the industrial forces of Pennsylvania. In addition to the 50,000 jobs that the Pennsylvania governor hands out, there are many duties concerning industrial grants, health and accident insurance, labor regulations and minimum wage legislation. Scranton's background and interests, plus the $2.5 million he has received in campaign funds from big business in Pennsylvania, make it clear that he will bend a friendly ear to industry in the state.
THE OTHER KEY race in the Pennsylvania elections is between Sen. Joseph Clark and Rep. James Van Zandt.
Sen. Clark, elected in 1956 to his present senatorial seat, is the type of man President Kennedy had in mind when he called on the American people to elect "thinking" Democrats to Congress this November.
When Clark ran for senator in 1956, the Republicans in Pennsylvania had an edge of slightly more than a million over the Democrats. Today, thanks chiefly to Clark's efforts, there are 161,000 more registered Democrats than Republicans in Pennsylvania.
CLARK'S RECORD in the Senate has been almost perfect for a Democrat. In the last session of Congress, for example, he voted "for" on almost every piece of legislation that President Kennedy tried to pass. The only exception was a non-vote cast on the minimum wage bill of $1.25 an hour.
Rep. Van Zandt is an old politician who has served in every Congress beginning with the 76th. Some of his opponents call him a "professional patriot" because of his participation in the BFOE, the Masons, the MOOSE, the Eagles, the Lions Club, the American Legion, the Veterans of Foreign Wars
In the Senate, he serves on some liberal-minded committees such as Labor and Public Welfare, Special Committee on Aging, and the National Cultural Center Committee. In addition, he serves on the important Post Office and Civil Service Committee.
and the AMVETS. He is a retired Navy rear admiral and is one of the few congressmen who resigned their seat to join the armed forces in World War II.
UNLIKE CLARK, who has heaped scholastic awards upon himself, Van Zandt is not a college graduate. He says in his own biography that he was educated in the "schools of Altoona (Pa.) and the apprentice shops of the Pennsylvania Railroad." He received an honorary doctor of laws degree from Rider College in Trenton, N. J., in 1956.
Over the years, Van Zandt has voted along more or less strict party lines. He was violently opposed to Franklin D. Roosevelt, moderately opposed to Truman, and cool to Kennedy.
The races for governor and U.S. senator in Pennsylvania are being fought with usual political vehement, but according to many observers the Scranton-Dilworth fight is a political historian's dream. The amount of name-calling between the two men is enormous, and indications are that it will not cease until election day.
IF PENNSYLVANIA sends Clark back for a second term, one more strong voice will be added to the Kennedy camp. If Van Zandt goes back to Congress as a senator, however, another chilling voice of Republican conservatism will shrill in Kennedy's ears.
His campaign, according to The Nation, has been "exclusively devoted to calling Clark names in the scatterfire fashion associated with the late Senator McCarthy and the late . . . Richard Nixon."
When people seek freedom, they are always impatient. — Ralph J. Bunche
All things considered, the races in Pennsylvania should be noisy—and interesting.
Short Ones
The greatest minds are capable of the greatest vices as well as of the greatest virtues.—Rene Descartes.
Half a fact is a whole falsehood. Elias L. Magoon
The wrong way always seems the more reasonable.—George Moore
It Looks This Way
Rules Apply to All
It appears that the world has been granted a reprieve from thermonuclear destruction. After a week in which many persons went to bed skeptical of ever seeing the light of another dawn, the two super powers, the United States and Russia, are making an effort to ease the crisis which came dangerously close to an explosion.
In establishing a bold arms blockade of Cuba, President Kennedy and his advisers acted under a calculated risk that Russia was not willing to risk an atomic war to establish offensive missile bases in the heart of the Western Hemisphere. Khrushchev's announced plan to remove the bases from Cuba, if sincere, seems to argue that the President and his advisers guessed right.
NO ONE AWARE of the gravity of the situation is yet ready to say the crisis is over or that everyone can go back to feeling "uneasy" about the state of world affairs as opposed to the near terror that existed much of last week. The U.S.-and in a larger sense, the world-is not out of the woods yet.
One thing, however, seems to have been demonstrated by events of the past week, combined with certain other world developments over the past few years. It is that those around the world who expect world peace to be paid for always by the United States' backing down when the Russians decide to apply pressure had better search for another formula.
As committed to world peace as the U.S. must be, and as conscious as it must be of its responsibility as a nuclear power, it is justly committed even more to its own national security—whatever the cost to itself, its protagonist, and whoever else might be unlucky enough to get caught in the cross-fire.
Nor can the United States be lectured on this point by the so-called neutral nations of the world, least of all by those neutrals who define their stand as one which must allow them a free hand to seek whatever national goals they choose, and by whatever means.
THE GENERAL approval given by the American people to the actions of their government in the Cuban blockade, even while fearing the possible outcome, indicates their belief in the justness of their own national survival, Lord Bertrand Russell and assorted peace committees to the contrary.
The U.S. is and has been more susceptible to world opinion than the Soviet Union, and Moscow has proved itself adept at making use of this turn of events as a potent propaganda and diplomatic weapon. Perhaps the attitude of the neutrals has been prompted by a belief that there is no use to try to deter Moscow but that the U.S. can always be influenced in the cause of world peace.
In some respects such an attitude is flattering to the U.S. It is also patently erroneous, as the recent Cuban crisis should demonstrate.
In its present dangerous tight-wire walk, the world can use all the bona fide neutrals and pacifists it can get. But it must be a moral neutrality that is practiced and not a narrow nationalistic neutrality which places self-seeking ends first. It must be a neutrality which is committed first and foremost to world peace, and which speaks out forcefully against any threat to that peace, from whatever source.
THE UNITED NATIONS may be a good start in the right direction, but there has not yet been fostered a system of world order strong enough to serve as a guard against the ancient game of naked power politics, with all that it implies in the way of dangers to world peace.
While the leaders of many of these neutral nations have shown themselves adept in the use of the platitudes which have currency in the discourse on world peace, several have shown that in a conflict between world peace and their own national fulfillment, world peace is a secondary consideration.
It is folly to scold the super powers for tampering with the peace of the world while members of the "in group" are allowed to justify aggression under the cloak of anti-colonialism. Either we are all committed to world peace or we are all committed to power politics. The first principle of equitable law is that the rules apply to everyone or they apply to no one.
The willingness many neutrals have shown to stand mute while the Soviet Union plays havoc with world peace—such as in the case of the deafening silence that came from the Belgrade conference earlier this year when Russia broke the nuclear test moratorium—and at the same time to scorn for shame any U.S. action to protect its own security or that of its allies, is further evidence of the amoral character of some types of neutrality.
THUS, SUCH a world pacifist and staunch neutralist as Nehru of India saw no need to apologize for his country's invasion of Portuguese Goa, and Sukarno of Indonesia strutted belligerently in his demand for West New Guinea. With Red China presently battering down its northern frontier, India soon may be forced to reassess neutralism as a way of life in the present world situation.
University of Kaasas student newspaper
—Richard Bonett
Daily Transan
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Telephone VIkning 3-2700
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.
Monday. Nov. 5, 1962
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Steinbeck and Journalism Editor:
This letter comes in reply to a page 1 story in the Oct. 29 Kansan, which carried comments of three English professors on John Steinbeck's winning the Nobel prize for literature. Two of these professors are good friends of mine, and I trust they will bear up under my complaints.
STEINBECK WRITES too simply, apparently. He can be understood. He uses short words. He understands parallel construction. In short, journalistic. Journalistic in the sense of Mark Twain, Stephen Crane, Sherwood Anderson, Ernest Hemingway, all of whom sullied their hands in newspaper offices?
The other professor comments that Steinbeck's work is "sociological." This is another convenient handle, which appears to mean that an author considers topical—and meaningful—subject matter. Like whaling, for example, which a chap named Melville wrote about, or bigotry, which cropped up in "The Merchant of Venice," or slavery, which was a theme in "Huckleberry Finn," or big city environment, which was considered in "An American Tragedy," or radicalism, which even the revered Henry James—neither a journalist nor a sociologist—wrote about in one of
One of these professors demurs from the decision of the Nobel judges with the observation that Steinbeck's work is "journalistic" I had hoped that Dennis Farney's editorial in the Oct. 25 Kansan would have brought a brief moratorium on such remarks, but the word "journalist" to the English department is like the word "Communist" to the John Birch Society.
- * *
Short Ones
Woman learns how to hate in proportion as she forgets how to charm.—Nietzsche
Most lawyers would rather look back than forward.—R. C. Heege
Those who can, do. Those who can't, teach. — George Bernard Shaw
After all there is but one race, humanity.—George Moore
***
... Letters ...
True nobility is exempt from fear.—Shakespeare
IRVING GRANZ presents
AMERICA'S NO. 1
RECORDING STARS
AN EVENING WITH
the Kingston
TRIO
EXTRA ADDED ATTRACTION
MIRIAMMAKEBA
his best novels, "The Princess Casamassima."
The most exciting new singing talent to appear in many years.
—Time Magazine
SATURDAY, NOV. 10
8:30 p.m.
Municipal Auditorium K. C., Mo.
Steinbeck wrote one book which is far superior to anything done by most of the contemporary crop of literary darlings. Had he written only "The Grapes of Wrath" he would have earned an important place in American literature. But that beautiful and angry novel was preceded by "In Dubious Battle" and "Of Mice and Men," and followed by "East of Eden."
Tickets—2.50, 3.00, 3.50, 4.00
On Sale At
THE DAILY KANSAN article quoted somebody as saying that the award was too late. If Steinbeck deserved an award for "The Grapes of Wrath" in 1940 he deserves one in 1962. Do we judge an artist only on his early work? If so, then Mark Twain should be dropped from the reading lists, for his greatest writing came early in his career. And Faulkner, when he
Auditorium Box Office
received the Nobel award in 1950, had just gone through a decade of near-inactivity which had produced only "The Hamlet" and "Intruder in the Dust."
Steinbeck has been a prophet without honor in America, perhaps. Recent commentators have observed that he holds a higher position abroad than he does in America. This is nothing new. A hundred years from now some English professor may rediscover him and launch a Steinbeck renaissance, and there will be an emphasis — for a change — upon authors who write in clear English, about recognizable and believable people who are worth caring about, about causes and issues worth fighting for.
Now please, somebody, note the journalistic preposition at the end of the last sentence.
Calder M. Pickett
Professor of Journalism
the took world
CRIMSON DESERT, by E. E. Halleran (Ballantine, 36 cents)—all about a Quaker named Ben Lyman and his trouble with the Apaches. For the action lover who is not too demanding re style or point of view.
- * *
THE IMPOSSIBLE, by Dick Gardner (Ballantine, 50 cents)—a book that deals with folks who swallow deadly poisons, fight savage animals, walk on hot coals—as an occupation, that is.
- * *
CONDITIONALLY HUMAN, by Walter M. Miller Jr. (Ballantine, 50 cents)—science fiction stuff, three novellas that range from suspense to satire.
THE REIGN OF TERROR IN THE FRENCH REVOLUTION, by Cleveland Moffett (Ballantine, 50 cents)—a story of that gory period when 16.000 mounted the steps to the guillotine, the prisons were full, cannon fire blew up soldiers, mobs smashed windows and so on.
lighter...
warmer...
livelier...
foam
lined...
outerwear
Foam, laminated to fabric is the new way to winter comfort.
from
$25.00 to $42.50
diebolt's
be hard to see. It's really clear. I'll use a different font.
I'll just use standard text.
Wait, is it a paragraph or just a single line? It looks like a single line of text.
Actually, it's a single line of text with some spaces in between.
I will use plain text for the main body and a decorative line for the first line.
The second line is just a simple paragraph.
One more check on the spacing:
Left side: 3 spaces
Right side: 5 spaces
Let's re-read the instructions carefully.
"I'll use plain text for the main body and a decorative line for the first line."
"One more check on the spacing: Left side: 3 spaces Right side: 5 spaces"
Yes, that's what I should do.
Final output:
Main body text (plain text):
The instructions say "Use plain text for the main body and a decorative line for the first line." This means the text should be left-aligned and not bolded.
Decorative line:
One more check on the spacing: Left side: 3 spaces Right side: 5 spaces
Main body text (plain text):
The instructions say "Use plain text for the main body and a decorative line for the first line." This means the text should be left-aligned and not bolded.
Decorative line:
One more check on the spacing: Left side: 3 spaces Right side: 5 spaces
Final output:
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Nov. 5, 1962
Many States to Vote On Reapportionment Proposals
WASHINGTON—(UPI)In addition to electing officeholders, voters in most states will cast ballots tomorrow for or against a wide variety of constitutional amendments, referenda and other legislative propositions.
In about a fourth of the states, interest will center on reapportionment or redistricting proposals designed to give urban voters more equitable representation in legislative bodies.
West Virginia voters will weigh the sale of liquor by the drink (alcoholic beverages are now sold only through state monopoly stores). Idaho voters are asked to repeal an old restriction which forbids foreign-born Chinese to vote, serve as jurors or hold public office. Washington will act on a proposal to allow aliens to own land in the state.
FIVE STATES—Rhode Island, Kansas, Maryland, Utah and West Virginia—will consider higher pay for members of their state legislatures.
Washington, Virginia, Texas and Wyoming will act on constitutional amendments designed to provide for emergency functioning of the state government in case of nuclear attack.
The rash of reapportionment proposals can be attributed to the U.S. Supreme Court's ruling, earlier this year, that federal courts may require a state to correct gross inequities in representation in its legislative bodies.
Candidate 'Snowing' Voters
JONESPORT, Maine - (UPI) A Democratic candidate for the state legislature is distributing these campaign signs: "Forecast — Snow Nov. 6."
He is Dr. Bradford Snow.
ORDER Personalized Greeting Cards
BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass.
BUSHED?
I am very sad.
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 NO RESCRIPTION NEEDED
NO PRESCRIPTION NEEDED
IN MANY STATES, ancient apportionment schemes have given thinly-populated rural areas disproportionate power in legislatures compared to fast-growing cities.
Plans for reapportionment of state legislatures will be on the ballot in California, Colorado, Florida, Mississippi, Nebraska, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Oregon, Tennessee, Washington and West Virginia.
Maryland voters will act on a constitutional amendment to divide the state into eight congressional districts instead of seven. Georgia's electorate will pass on a new method of electing members of the recently-reapportioned state senate. In Hawaii, voters of Honolulu County will act on a geographical adjustment of state legislative districts.
ALSO ON THE ballot in at least three states (Washington, Idaho and Kansas) are proposals to reduce residence requirements for voting.
Southern concern about desegregation of public schools is reflected in a Georgia proposition to authorize payment of state tuition grants to students who attend private schools because their public schools have been integrated. Louisiana voters will also be asked to authorize financial aid to children attending "non-sectarian" private schools.
California's Communist control law—placed on the ballot by initiative petition as a constitutional amendment—would bar members of "subversive organizations" from holding public jobs of any kind, and would require teachers to answer questions of legislative investigators about their affiliations.
Proponents have argued that California is a "prime target" of Communist machinations, and that the law is necessary to plug loopholes in its defenses against subversion.
Opponents contend that it would hand over to extremists the legal weapons to destroy constitutional liberty.
Portraits of Distinction
摄
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass. VI 3-0330
Soviet-Cuban Talks Search For Common Crisis Policy
HAVANA — (UPI) — Soviet First Deputy Premier Anastas Mikovar huddled with Cuban Premier Fide Castro for nearly six hours yesterday in the second round of talks designed to "settle differences" in Soviet-Cuban relations.
A new round of talks between Mikoyan and Cuban leaders was scheduled for today at the national palace. No statement was issued after the Soviet trouble-shooter left yesterday's long session at the palace.
Topics for discussion have not been spelled out, but the timing of Mikoyan's arrival indicated a key point was international inspection to verify removal of Soviet missile bases from Cuba. The Russians have agreed to such inspection but Castro has refused to permit any
international inspection team to enter Cuba.
The official press again emphasized yesterday Castro's "five points" for peace between the United States and Cuba. The five points call for American withdrawal from the Guantanamo naval base, lifting of the naval blockade, discontinuance of surveillance overflights, ending of economic sanctions and a halt to subversive activities and raids against Cuba organized on U.S. soil.
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
...AND THEN THERE WAS ONE
Winston
FILTER CIGARETTES
Winston
KING SIZE FILTER CIGARETTES
Start with a carton and you'll end up knowing why Winston is America's number one filter cigarette...first in sales because it's first in flavor. The next time you buy cigarettes, buy pleasure by the carton...Winston!
PURE WHITE,
MODERN FILTER
PLUS FILTER - BLEND UP FRONT
Winston tastes good like a cigarette should!
© 1962 B. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. C.
5.
Monday, Nov. 5, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
50 Pontiac Tempests FREE!
America's hottest new sports convertible!
LE MANS
L&M GRAND PRIX 50
Sweepstakes for colleges only
Your chances of winning are 50 times better than if open to the general public
You can win! 50 flashing new '63 Pontiac Tempest Le Mans convertibles are up for grabs! They're easy to win and it's lots of fun! The big sweepstakes is starting now . . . keeps going and growing through the school year. There'll be drawings for 5,10,then 15 and finally 20 new Tempest convertibles—four exciting laps—50 cars in all! Enter often . . . no limit on the number of entries per person!
Enter nowl Here's all you do:
1. Pick up a free official L&M GRAND PRIX 50 entry blank. Look for them where cigarettes are sold-on and about campus, Fill it in.
2. Detach your serialized L&M GRAND PRIX 50 LICENSE PLATE from your entry blank. Save it! Tear off the bottom panels from 5 packs of L&M KING, L&M BOX, CHESTERFIELD KING or CHESTERFIELD REGULAR. Menthol smokers can enter with OASIS. 5 panels, or acceptable substitutes (see entry blank), must accompany each entry. Each entry must be mailed separately.
3. Mail us the panels and your serialized entry blank . . . it matches your license plate. Your serial number may be one of the 50 that wins a '63 Tempest convertible!
FASHION TRENDS
If you win, you may choose instead of the Tempest a thrilling expensepaid 2-week Holiday in Europe -for Two! Plus $500 in cash!
EXCLUSIVE FOR THE GIRLS!
Winners' Tempests will include: 3-speed floor shift, bucket seats, deluxe trim and special décor, radio and heater, deluxe wheel discs, windshield washers and white sidewall tires; with delivery, sales tax and registration all pre-paid! And, choice of body, trim and top colors as well as choice of differential gear ratios!
Important: As your entries are received they become eligible for all subsequent drawings. So enter often and enter early-before the drawing for the first five Tempests (right after Thanksgiving). Entries received by Thanksgiving weekend will be eligible in drawings for all 50 Tempests!
Remember: The more entries you submit, the more chances you have to win!
THE MIRACLE TIP
THE MIRACLE TIP
L&M
FILTERS
L&M
FILTERS
THE MIRACLE TIP
L&M
FILTERS
LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO.
Chesterfield
KING
CIGARETTES
LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO.
Chesterfield
KING
CIGARETTES
LIGGETT & MVERS TOBACCO CO.
Get with the winners... far ahead in smoking satisfaction!
See the Pontiac Tempest at your nearby Pontiac Dealer!
Oakleaf - Stanley Pontiac - Cadillac
1040 Vermont
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Nov. 5, 1962
Socialized Medicine Discussed By Panel
Two doctors and an Englishman discussed socialized medicine in the United States and Great Britain during an International Club panel discussion Friday.
Panelists were Dr. Russel Frink, Lawrence physician, L. H. C. Agnew, professor of medical history, and David Nove, special students from London, England.
Dr. Frink:
Views ranged from condemnation of socialized medicine as bureaucratic to wholehearted approval of the system based on a financial need.
"There are those who want better medical care and are willing to pay for it."
"I favor anything that makes for cheaper medicine without compromising quality."
PROF. AGNEW;
"Any party that tried to do away with socialized medicine in England would be cutting its own political throat."
Nove:
Dr. Frink maintained that socialized medicine would encourage "an unwieldy bureaucratic superstate." Nove said the result in England was a more unrestrained living atmosphere.
"If a man becomes seriously ill, he doesn't have to worry about medical bills."
Dr. Frink foresaw waves of hypochondriacs beseigning harried doctors long waiting lines at hospitals and a serious shortage of medical students.
NOVE DESCRIBED the results or socialized medicine in England as more than satisfactory. He cited these points:
- Doctors are allowed a maximum of 3,500 patients, he said. Most have approximately 2,500.
- Doctors can practice publicly for the National Health Service and privately. Approximately two per cent of the country is privately insured.
- Patients have a choice of doctors and hospitals within their area. In an area of 30,000 Nove said he had a choice of 10 doctors and three hospitals.
- Patients may switch doctors in their area by registering with a new doctor.
- Doctors with the maximum number of patients on their list have the right to refuse to treat a patient.
"I'm not worried about the very rich or the very poor." Prof. Agnew said, pointing to high medical costs in the United States.
"I'm worried about the middle class who are being bled of their savings. With their typical middle class pride they keep paying as long as their savings last," he said.
Prof. Agnew questioned the medical profession's distain of being a servant of the state and termed them grossly overpaid.
"Teachers are servants of the state," he said, "and with a possible income of $20-30,000 a year debts incurred in college are soon paid off."
He said medical schools had accepted $247 million in government aid.
The medical profession should be a calling and not a means to the fast buck, he added.
LARGE BEAUTIFUL MUMS
for
HOMECOMING
Yellow, Bronze, White with
KU DECORATIONS
Only $1.50
Boxed and Delivered Saturday Morning, Nov. 10th
ORDER BY PHONE NOW! Call VI 3-6111
OWENS Flower Shop and Greenhouse 15th and New York
Big Weekend Ahead!
RX
Yes, there is quite a busy weekend ahead for the University of Kansas and its students.
Parties Friday night, the homecoming game Saturday afternoon and the dance that evening.
You will want your good clothes to be freshly cleaned and pressed for this weekend.
Don't wait till later, avoid the last minute-rush today.
Call us for immediate pickup. We will Sanitone clean and press your clothes and deliver them in plenty of time for your use this weekend.
Remember, the Sanitone cleaning process is exclusive at:
"Quality Guaranteed"
LAWRENCE
launderers and dry cleaners
Monday, Nov. 5, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Catchy Songs Highight "Paint Your Wagon"
A Review
By Rose Ellen Osborne
Lerner and Loewe's music "Paint Your Wagon" opened Sunday night in the University Theatre to an almost-full house.
Costumes and settings were colorful and tunes were catchy. The cast appeared to be in a dress rehearsal. They failed to project either their voices or their mood to the audience.
With the exception of Roger Brown, Topeka graduate student, cast members seldom bridged the gap between the orchestra pit and the first row.
BROWN, AS A California gambler, had a small part. But the moment he stepped on the stage, the audience responded to his booming voice. The audience did not hear some of the most significant lines in the songs and the dialogues of other characters.
WHAT DAVE HOLLOWAY, Gas City junior, lacked in Spanish ancestry in the play, he made up for in song.
Phil Harris, Lawrence graduate student, was convincing as the rough and tumble gold miner who founded the town of Rumson. At times, Harris seemed to capture the spirit of the loud and boisterous miner without difficulty, but for the most part he needed to be more forceful.
with his closely-cropped hair and his Spanish accent, it was difficult to imagine Holloway as a Mexican youth. But the audience seemed to forget Holloway's dramatic shortcomings when he burst into "I Talk to the Trees" and "Another Autumn."
Sylvia Anderson, Wilmette, Ill., junior, maintained the personality of Rumson's understanding daughter. Jennifer, throughout the play.
One of the cleverest angles in the entire play was the arrival of a Mormon and his two wives in Rumson. The town people offer the Mormons, Ed Dittimore, McLauth graduate student, and Liz Getz, Schenectady, N.Y., sophomore, sanctuary if the Mormon man will auction off his other wife Anne Baker, Shaker Heights, Ohio, freshman.
DITTEMORE ISN'T too displeased with this proposal. Miss Baker is sold to Harrison.
The orchestra, directed by Robert Baustian, associate professor of orchestra, was excellent. Under the direction of William Kuhlke, instructor of speech and drama, scenery and cast whirled into place on a revolving turn-table stage.
The Fandangos, dance hall girls imported by Brown to give the miners "some good unclean fun," inject color and liveliness into the play with their bouncing bustles and their brilliantly-colored costumes.
MAYBE IT WAS just a case of opening night jitters, but in any case the audience was trying too hard to communicate with the characters in the play. The "Paint Your Wagon" cast needs to project themselves into their parts, and project their parts into the audience.
University Theatre To Present 'The Trial'
Tickets will go on sale today for the University Theatre presentation of Franz Kafka's "The Trial," to be shown here Nov. 11-19.
The play is taken from the French adaptation by Andre Gide and Jean-Louis Barrault and will be presented in an original translation from the French.
The play, directed by Bill Evans, Mississippi graduate student, will be presented in the Experimental Theatre.
Tickets are 50c with student IDs.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
TOMORROW
Episcopal Evening Prayer: 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
WEDNESDAY
Atene se reúmina mícoles el 7 de noviembre a las 4:30 on la tarde en la sala 11 de Fraser. El doctor Jorge Lines dara una conferencia titulada "Notas Sobre la Arqueología de Costa Rica." Todos están cordialmente invitados.
Catholic Masses, 7:30 a.m., 11:40 a.m.
Science Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results!
Recreation Leaders To Meet Nov.18
The Kansas Recreation Society will meet Nov. 18 at the Kansas Union. The annual Kansas Recreation Conference, conducted by KU for the society, will follow on Nov. 19.
Betty van der Smissen, holder of A.B. and L.L.B. degrees from KU, will be guest lecturer for the conference. She is now associate professor and director of the McBride Field Campus, State University of Iowa. Miss van der Smissen holds master's and doctor's degrees from Indiana University.
Fraternity Jewelry
Badges, Rings, Novelties,
Sweatshirts. Mugs, Paddles,
Cups, Trophies, Medals
Balfour
411 W.14th VI 3-1571
AL LAUTER
WILLIAM JENNINGS BRYAN
won't be there, but you should be —
SUA Election Nite Party
Tomorrow Night
Vote Fraud Worries GOP As Off-Year Campaign Closes
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The 1962 election campaign ended today with the Republican high command sounding an alert to guard against vote frauds in tomorrow's balloting.
At stake in the election will be the governorships of 35 states, 39 U.S. Senate seats, all 435 seats in the national House of Representatives and many state and local offices.
The warnings against vote frauds came from Rep. William E. Miller, N.Y., chairman of the Republican national committee, and Rep. Bob Wilson, Calif., chairman of the GOP congressional campaign committee.
MILLER issued a statement calling on Republicans "to report immediately any and all indications of chicanery and irregularity at the polling places."
Wilson telegraphed Atty. Gen Robert F. Kennedy "to double and redouble your surveillance of problem areas in the nation, with particular attention to areas where known abuses have taken place."
Republican leaders still maintain a lingering suspicion that vote frauds in Chicago and elsewhere made a significant contribution to President Kennedy's election two years ago.
THE MINORITY Republican party, the challenger in this election, ends the campaign with solid hopes for winning some governorships from Democrats, who now have a 34 to 16 edge in that office.
However, the Republicans no longer are talking about winning control of the House, which they once proclaimed to be their chief goal this year. The Democrats now hold a 261 to 174 margin in the House. Pre-election indicators suggest a small Republican gain, far short of the 44
additional seats they need for control.
IN THE SENATE, where the Democrats have a 64 to 36 majority, the GOF will be lucky to break even. Of the 39 seats at stake, 21 now are held by Democrats and 18 by Republicans.
Among the 35 governorships to be filled tomorrow, the Democrats now hold 21 and the Republicans 14. Here the Democrats would be overjoyed to break even.
In New York, Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller is an overwhelming favorite to win re-election over Robert M. Morgenthau, the Democratic nominee. A runaway victory for Rockefeller would keep him in front of other possible candidates for the 1964 GOP presidential nomination.
Republican challengers are rated at least an even bet to displace Democratic governors in four other key states.
IN CALIFORNIA. 1980 GOP presidential nominee Richard M. Nixon is trying to unseat Gov. Edmund G. Brown. In Pennsylvania, Rep. William W. Scranton is the Republican candidate against Richard Dilworth
for the job now held by Democratic Gov, David L. Lawrence.
George Romney, the former auto maker, is trying to unseat Democratic Gov. John B. Swainson in Michigan. State Auditor James A. Rhodes is attempting to oust Democratic Gov. Michael V. Disalle in Ohio.
Republican victories in these states would give the GOP a stronger base from which to try to prevent the re-election of President Kennedy in 1964.
ROCKEFFELLER and Morgenthau yesterday made a joint television appearance which almost became the debate, which Rockefeller has shunned. Morgenthau said New York needed a governor "who wants to work with President Kennedy instead of one who wants his job." Rockefeller said Morgenthau was advocating programs which would cost the state $3.2 billion.
In California, Nixon was planning a final television speech tonight. Brown scheduled a flying trip around the state with stops in 11 cities.
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results
I will help you with that. The image is a black and white cartoon of a character running. The character has a large head, wide eyes, and a muscular build. It is wearing a cap and roller skates. The background is plain.
EVERYONE'S ON THEIR WAY TO
Sandy's
Thrift & Swift Drive-in
ACROSS FROM HILLCREST
Hamburgers
15c
French Fries
10c
Is this the only reason for using Mennen Skin Bracer?
Skin Bracer's rugged, long-lasting aroma is an obvious attribute. But is it everything?
After all, Menthol-Iced Skin Bracer is the after-shave lotion that cools rather than burns. It helps heal shaving nicks and scrapes. Helps prevent blemishes. Conditions your skin.
Aren't these sound, scientific virtues more important than the purely emotional effect Skin Bracer has on women? In that case, buy a bottle. And—have fun.
M
TRADE MAY 2017
MENNEN
skin bracer
ARTIFICIAL SHAVE
M
TRADE MARK
MENNEN
skin bracer
ARTEM SHAVE
IN THE NEW NON-SLIP FLASK
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Monday. Nov. 5. 1962
Frantic Life in West Berlin Reflects Political Tensions
By Ralph Villers
EERLIN — (UPI) This one-time capital of Germany, now situated 110 miles behind communism's Iron Curtain in Europe, almost compels a visit by any American traveling on the Continent.
Aside from The Wall dividing East and West Berlin, which in itself has become a lure for travelers, Berlin offers an atmosphere unable to be found anywhere else in Europe, and approximated elsewhere only in Hong Kong, which sits virtually surrounded by Red China in the Far East.
IT'S HARD TO ESCAPE an impression of frantic living for today, if you take even a brief plunge into the city's night life. In some of the "hotter" spots, it almost looks as if money is going out of style, what with a drink of scotch going at prices up to $5 or more.
But neither is it necessary to "go for broke" to catch a glimpse of Berlin's famed, frantic night life. Young, and not too wealthy, West Berliners flock to a place called the Resi, as unique a fun and dance spot as is found anywhere. Guys and gals go in stag groups to the Resi and settle down around the hundreds of tables — all linked to each other by dial telephones and a pneumatic tube system.
FRIENDS GAB the night away on inter-table phone calls, completed via a fully automatic dial system right in the club. Others arrange a dance by messaging a prospective partner via the tube system.
Never have you seen more heart or hips put into the Twist than in the Twist Room, one of the many little rooms in a club called the Eden, where the younger set lives it up at a moderate price by nursing one beer through much of the night. The night life comes in all varieties and price ranges — from a corner beer restaurant, right up to Latin background music in El Panorama, high atop the Berlin Hilton, where you can sit and contrast the bright glow of lights of West Berlin with the relative darkness of the Communist sector of the city.
BUT EERLIN is fully as alive in daylight as at night. When the sun is up, the Western sector of this largest of German cities is busy and prosperous looking. The streets, many of them broad, modern boulevards, are heavy with traffic.
Sidewalks and sidewalk cafes, neatly glassed in and heated against the chill of winter, are crowded. The stores of the Kurfürstendamm, that most famous of Berlin shopping streets, are filled with anything you
MOST OF THE relics of the war are gone, although obvious signs of damage are about and empty lots, even near the city center, testify to buildings that once were there. And right in the heart of the shopping area stands the Memorial Church, or more correctly the facade, vestibule and bomb-damaged steeple of a once magnificent structure, deliberately left as a reminder of the war.
want to buy from smart clothes to expensive silverware and cameras.
The ninth annual exhibit features 161 pieces of ceramic, sculpture, jewelry, silversmithing, furniture, textiles, wall-hanging and enamel work of 83 craftsmen. Work for the display was selected from 296 entries of craftsmen who have lived in Kansas or the Kansas City area for one year.
Design Exhibit Opened In Kansas Union
design department. University Extension, Student Union Activities and Delta Phi Delta, honorary art fraternity. The purpose is to encourage the fine craftsmen of the area and to stimulate an interest in and the purchase of fine crafts.
Specialists from throughout KU will be using the NASA funds to explore their research ideas. Biologists, sociologists, bacteriologists and engineers in several fields will consider some of the problems of space and man's place in it.
"PROGRESS ON these projects will lead to new proposals, and they will bring additional support to the campus," said John S. McNown, dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture and head of the KU committee administering the project.
At the opening of the exhibition on yesterday, 35 prize winners were announced. They received a total of $640 in prizes, contributed by interested persons and firms.
Judge for the exhibition was Mrs. Vanderbilt Webb, chairman of the board and founder of the American Craftsmen Council. New York City.
Acting promptly, KU has selected 15 research ideas from 24 submitted by staff members. KU hopes to have some usable research findings for NASA by this time next year.
The Kansas Designer Craftsman Show will be displayed in the Kansas Union until Dec. 1.
The University of Kansas and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration are teaming up on space research.
In the next few years, the collaboration may multiply the amount of engineering research done in the state.
"The proposals submitted by the faculty were absolutely first rate," McNown said. "The selection committee is excited by the prospect of the research potential they indicate. In fact, we decided to allocate half again as much money as we had
She noted new approaches and techniques in jewelry and sculpture which were "exciting in their end result."
Mrs. Webb described the exhibition as "excellent, vivid and expressing contemporary trends."
NASA has given KU $100,000 over three years to stimulate the beginnings of new research related to space. It was the first NASA research grant to a Kansas institution.
NASA Grant Stimulates Space Research at KU
"THE ACTIVITY which the staff will undertake as a result of this grant will greatly increase space-oriented research on the KU campus." Dean McNown said. "Both staff and students will be involved."
The show is sponsored by the KU
Of the first year's grant of $50,000, University officials had planned to allocate half now, half later in the year. Because of the quality of the research proposals, $38,000 was allocated immediately to start as many investigations as possible. The remainder of the NASA grant will be held in reserve for expenses through the year.
The University of Kansas was more than a $30 million enterprise for the year ending June 30, according to the University's annual "financial report."
Annual Financial Report Calls KU $30 Million Enterprise
originally intended to start activity on as many fronts as possible."
State appropriations provided only 46.5 per cent of the operating income, marking a continuing decline of the University's budget obtained from state tax sources.
One of the subsidiary purposes of the NASA grant is to increase cooperation between specialists in various fields of knowledge. Space research requires a variety of talents.
In 1958, the year of the first KU "financial report" in its present form, state appropriations supplied 51.4 per cent of the University's income.
Income from student fees has increased by $285,000, reflecting the increase in enrollment, and by 0.4 per cent of total income, reflecting last year's increase in out-of-state fees. "Gifts, grants, and sponsored research" continues to play an ever more significant role in the University's finances, an increase of 2.1 per cent bringing the proportion of total income to 18.1 per cent.
Major areas of operating expenditures were resident instruction, 31.8 per cent; hospital and health service, 19.1 per cent, and organized research,
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
KU SPORTS
on
KLWN
D L KLWN 1320
7:30 a.m. Daily Sports Shorts
5:00 Today In the Enemy Camp
5:20 Tom Hedrick Sports
KU-Kansas State Game Movies
Film of game narrated by Roger McFarland
UNION FORUM ROOM TUESDAY — 7:00 p.m. Free Admission
Other areas of expenditures are extension and public services, library service, plant maintenance and central services, residential halls and apartments, student aid and other enterprises.
18. 8 per cent. Administrative and general expenses, already the lowest in percentage terms in the state and the area, declined slightly to 2.8 per cent of the total.
SUA Quarterback Club
FAST FINISHED
Laundry Service
See Us Before You Buy TYPEWRITERS
RISK'S 613 Vermont
NEW AND USED
PORTABLES STANDARDS
ELECTRICS
Sales — Rental Service
LAWRENCE
TYPEWRITER
725 Mass VL 3-3644
735 Mass. VI 3-3644
Having a Party?
Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES
LAWRENCE ICE CO.
6th & Vt., VI 3-0350
Read and Use Kansan Classifieds
Special MON. THRU FRI.
Plain Skirts and Sweaters
39c
each
No Finer Cleaning At Any Price
1 HOUR
Fast
DRY CLEANING
842 M
VL 3-9594
842 Mass.
VI 3-9594
University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Income Tax Cut May Be Issue In New Congress
United Press International
WASHINGTON — An administration attempt to cut income taxes despite continued high federal spending shaped up today as the dominant issue facing the new Congress to be elected tomorrow.
The tax proposal is the most far-reaching of the brand new measures which President Kennedy's aides are readying for submission to the 88th Congress. Other major administration proposals for the most part will cover familiar ground — medicare for the elderly, federal aid to education and changes in the farm program.
EARLIER THIS year Kennedy concluded that the chief reason that economic growth was lagging far behind his rosy expectations was that taxes were imposing too tight a brake. He became convinced that as long as tax rates remain at present levels, unemployment cannot be reduced to acceptable levels.
For a time last summer Kennedy even toyed with the idea of seeking immediate tax relief. He dropped the idea in the face of opposition from powerful Congressional Democrats. They argued that a quickie tax cut could not be publicly justified in the face of the government's heavy red-ink spending.
HOWEVER, KENNEDY vowed that he would recommend general tax relief next year with the cuts scheduled to take effect retroactively to Jan. 1, 1963.
In this period of international crisis no one rules out the possibility that unforeseen developments could by January force Kennedy to shelve his tax-cutting plans and instead assign top priority to national security measures. However, barring the gravest developments, this is not expected to happen.
The question of how to divide the tax-cut pie could produce one of the roughest Congressional battles in many years. Business leaders
have demanded cuts in corporate levels and high individual tax brackets. Labor leaders have demanded tax relief for workers.
THE ADMINISTRATION'S plan for "top-to-bottom" cuts in individual and corporate tax rates, coupled with provisions to close "loopholes" is not likely to satisfy either group.
The administration is putting together a new farm plan for permanently curbing feed grains surpluses which it hopes will be less controversial than the production controls which Congress rejected this year.
The President will renew his drive for medical care for the elderly financed through social security taxes. The administration also is planning to revamp its big programs of federal aid to education which were defeated in the 87th Congress.
Democratic lawmakers from big
Except for taxes, most of the major legislative battles now in prospect for the 88th Congress concern measures on which the 87th Congress failed to go along with Kennedy.
The slightly built, 29-year-old Air Force veteran does not answer taunts and jeers. He walks jauuntly to his classes and he often smiles.
Meredith Faces Campaign Of Psychological Harassment
MOREOVER, BEFORE the 88th Congress adjourns in 1964 Kennedy probably will lead a fight for new civil rights legislation. Throughout the 87th Congress the administration avoided a head-on clash with Southern Democrats on this issue, giving endorsement but no real leadership to an abortive effort to push through the Senate a bill which supporters said would boost Negro voting in the South by outlawing literacy tests.
But he shows no signs of doing so.
In addition, Kennedy plans to seek federal subsidies to cities to help them provide better and faster rail, bus and subway service for suburban commuters. This urban mass transit program — advanced for the first time last spring — fell by the wayside in the 87th Congress.
It is a guerrilla campaign of psychological harassment.
OXFORD, Miss. — (UPI) — Resistance against student James H. Meredith at the University of Mississippi has gone underground.
UNQUESTIONABLY, the "Ole Miss" student body has not accepted Meredith as a fellow student and there is little doubt that many students hope he will crack under the pressure.
Other students rarely greet him, but when they do he answers courteously.
It takes the form of a whispered threat in a class building corridor, a rock hurled from a group of students or a firecracker placed in a pop bottle and dropped from a darkened dormitory room.
And the awesome force of military power which halted the bloody rioting that killed two men and wounded scores of others when Meredith was admitted as the school's first Negro student has not quelled it.
Meredith, son of a Kosciusko,
Miss., dirt farmer, has virtually no
contact with other students.
WHEN HE LEAVES his dormitory room, deputy U.S. marshals and soldiers are always nearby. He usually eats alone, but occasionally a faculty member or newsman will sit with him in the school cafeteria
The day after Meredith's arrival the campus looked like a battlefield. Now it resembles an armed garrison
armed caribou. Five hundred troops, and about 20 marshals remain in Oxford to guard Meredith, but the harassment continues.
Northern industrial areas of heavy Negro voting believe that Kennedy by next summer will take a firm stand on legislation to bolster Negro employment opportunities. Their timetable calls for House passage of a civil rights bill in 1963 with the struggle to push it through a Southern filibuster in the Senate deferred until 1964.
ON ONE OCCASION. a rock was hurled through a window in the school cafeteria and landed several feet from a table where Meredith was eating.
An angry crowd of students gathered outside and jeered before being dispersed by troops and school officials.
A few days later Meredith went into the student union grill and his exit was blocked by several students. A marshal had to shoulder past them to get Meredith out.
ADMINISTRATION policy makers believe there is a good chance that the 88th Congress will go along with President Kennedy's plea for permanent preservation of a national system of wildernesses. The Wilderness Bill passed the Senate in the 87th Congress but was derailed in the House Interior committee by opposition of timber, grazing and mining interests.
Also on the President's list of "must" bills for the 88th Congress is his proposal to establish a program to help high school dropouts and unemployed youths find jobs. It includes a revised version of the civilian conservation corps which worked in the forests during the 1930's.
Birds on a Branch
The Best in Kentucky Fried Chicken
BIG BUY
23rd & Iowa
Atomic Energy Is Lecture Topic
"The Chemical Aspects of Atomic Energy" will be discussed by an expert in that field at 7:30 p.m. Nov. 15 in 122 Malott.
BIRD TV-RADIO
M. D. Peterson, deputy associate laboratory director for education at Argonne National Laboratory, will address the KU section of the American Chemical Society. The lecture is open to the public.
VI 3-8855
908 Mass.
Peterson was professor and chairman of the chemistry department at Vanderbilt University from 1949-57. Before taking the Argonne position in 1960 he was laboratory director of Industrial Reactor Laboratories at Plainsboro, N.J.
TV-
RADIO
- Quality Parts
- Guaranteed
- Expert Service
From 1943-48 he was associated with the atomic energy project at the University of Chicago and with the Clinton Laboratories at Oak Ridge, Tenn., where he was chief of the chemical process development section and director of the technical division.
Monday, Nov. 5, 1962
JOE'S BAKERY
Open 24 Hours
Night Deliveries
412 W.9th VI 3-4720
To Alter Mass With Care
THE DISCUSSION still dealt with the second chapter of a draft on liturgy, the first of some 70 subjects expected to come up during the council.
VATICAN CITY — (UPI) — The Ecumenical Council heard warnings today on the "need to proceed with caution" in changing time-hallowed words and gestures in the mass
The Kansas Engineer magazine has won three awards from the national Engineer College Magazines Associated.
A verbal communique at the end of today's three-hour, 20 minute session in St. Peter's Basilica indicated that several of the day's speakers favored retaining the present liturgy of the mass, confining modifications to some details.
The gathering of more than 2,000 Catholic prelates—attendance today was 2,196—resumed work after a four-day break due to religious holidays and to yesterday's fourth anniversary of the coronation of Pope John XXIII.
"The need was restated to proceed with prudence in revising words, gestures, prayers, attitudes which have acquired great nobility through the centuries, while at the same time they have lost nothing of its original significance," the communique said.
'Kansas Engineer Wins 3 Awards
The magazine won first-place honors for the editorial and single issue layout and third place for the non-technical article last year.
Editors for the award-winning issues were Carl A. Leonard, Brookfield, Ill., senior, and Donald E. Hunter, Oak Park, Ill., fifth-year engineering student.
Current editors are Thurman E. Howell Jr., Raytown, Mo., senior, and Robert B. Simpson, Topeka fifth-year engineering student.
See and Hear STAN KENTON
8 p.m., Mon., Nov. 5 Whiting Field House Washburn University
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
$2 at door
KU Students Invited
THE SOUTHERN PIT
NOTICE:
now features
8" PIZZA &
&
Choice of Beverage
89c
Mon.-Thurs. After 8 p.m.
1834 Mass.
M
A
S
Open Every Evening
S
H
Safeway
P
O
N
P
Key Rexall Drugs
G
ACME Laundry & Cleaners
T. G. & Y.
Western Auto
Speed-Wash
R
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 10
University Daily Kansan Monday, Nov. 5, 1962
Betas, DU's Enter IM Playoffs Tomorrow
By Roy Miller
Beta Theta Pi begins defense of the "A" Hill intramural touch football title tomorrow when it meets Phi Delta Theta in the second round of fraternity competition.
The other second-round match features Delta Upsilon and Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
Phi Delta Theta and Sigma Alpha Epsilon advanced to the second round of the playoffs Friday by defeating Phi Gamma Delta and Sigma Nu, respectively. Beta Theta Pi and Delta Upsilon drew first-round byes.
THE BETAS will be seeking their fifth straight "A" Hill Championship. In intramural football history, which dates back to 1931 in the record books, the Betas have won 12 titles.
The Betas, undefeated in Division I play, received their stiffest competition from the Sig Alphs, Division I runner-ups, before winning 20-7.
Keys to the Beta offense are quarterback Morgan Metcalf and receivers Jim Emerson, Bill Geiger, Laird Patterson, Dave Phillips, and Don Warner.
The Beta defense is led by rushers Karl Kreutziger, John McCormick, Don Greenlee, Keith Kreutziger, and Bob Swan. The secondary is anchored by Emerson, who plays center linebacker.
THE DU'S, who have never won the "A" Hill crown, were undefeated in Division II play. Phi Gamma Delta, which lost to Phi Delta Theta
Friday, gave the DU's the biggest tussle of the season before losing. 12-0.
The DU's are led by Tom Hamill, Bob Sorem, Gene Shofner, Neil Niewald, and Buddy Evans. Hamill, Colby senior, is the team captain and quarterback. Sorem, Clay Center senior, and Shofner, Ottawa junior, are ends. Niewald, Beloit junior, is a DU blocking back, and Evans, Colby junior, is a guard on offense and a safety on defense.
- * *
The Independent "A" Hill crown will be sought by JRPF (Joe's Rough Boys and Friends), a Joseph R. Pearson team, and the Hot Dogs.
The Hot Dogs, who posted an undefeated season, beat the JRPF team, 19-0, in regular season play. JRPF was runner-up to the Hot Dogs in the division race.
DICK FANNING, Shawnee senior, is team captain and center of the Hot Dogs. Bob Yokel, Kansas City junior, is an end. Yokel caught all of the scoring passes for the Hot Dogs in the previous game with JRPF, Carl Nelson, Overland Park senior, is Hot Dog quarterback, and Terrel Hays, Shawnee senior, and Mike Bogart, Kirwin graduate student, are blocking backs.
The JRPF team includes quarterback Jim Poage, Falls City, Neb., senior; end Denny Morse, Lawrence graduate student; end Gary McCabe, Salina sophomore; end Don Gilbert, Riverside, Calif., freshman, and defensive rusher Jim Simms, Des Moines, Iowa, senior.
Hawker Machine Crushes Outmanned Wildcats,38-0
The Kansas Jayhawkers' formidable offensive machine appeared again Saturday at Manhattan, as KU crushed a fighting, but outmanned band of Kansas State Wildcats. 38-0.
More than 16,000 fans watched the machine, featuring the Hawker sophomore sensation Gale Sayers, roll up nearly 500 yards of total offense — 339 on the ground and 145 more through the air — and smash the 'Cat defenses for 30 first downs.
Sayers, who had gone into the contest as the Big Eight's leading ground gainer with 709 yards to his credit, flashed through the Purple defenders for three touchdowns and 156 yards rushing. In addition, the Omaha T-back passed for a pair of two-point conversions.
THIS WAS especially a creditable performance considering that the first unit backfield logged only about 30 minutes of playing time in the game.
In spite of KU's offensive power and a stingy defense, Kansas State displayed its best offense of the season. The Wildcats managed 14 first downs and netted 172 yards of total offense, 92 rushing and 60 passing.
It was Kansas State's ability to put together two and three first downs at a time that kept the Jayhawkers from running rampant until the fourth period. At the half-time, KU held only a 15-0 advantage, and at the end of the third quarter it was 23-0.
But from the outset of the game, there was no question who would be the victor. The Hawkers took the opening kickoff and marched 77 yards in 11 plays to their first score.
KU MOVED forward consistently to the 'Cat 10-yard line, but an errant pitchout moved the ball back to the 24. Sayers picked up the
Quality Watch Repair
Lowest Prices
DANIELS
loss on the following play, however, as he sped around the right side for 12 yards, and then took a quick pitchout around the opposite side, legging the remaining 12 into the end zone. Duff booted the extra point with less than five minutes gone.
Then K-State unloaded its "shot-gun" offense, where the quarterback lines up five to eight yards behind the center. The Hawks, however, made several defensive alignments, and were never seriously threatened by the new pattern.
With six minutes left in the opening period, the shotgun backfired on the 'Cats. When a Tony Leiker punt had put the ball on the K-State 12, Doug Dusenbury tried to throw from the shotgun pattern. But a hard-charging Hawker, tackle Tommy Thompson, caught Dusenbury in the end zone for a safety and a 9-0 KU lead.
Late in the first quarter, K-State made its only real scoring threat of the day after Wildcat halfback Larry Cordit recovered an Armand Baughman fumble on the KU 30. Dusenbury completed a pass to end Jack King on the 19, and Condit swept nine yards to the KU 10.
WITH A FOURTH-and-one situation for the 'Cats, Coach Doug Weaver called for the field goal attempt. Dusenbury's boot sailed wide, and K-State missed its only scoring opportunity of the day.
Dave Crandall wound up with the ball on a double reverse and carried to the Wildcat five. When he was hit by K-State defensive halfback Spencer Puls, he pitched the bail back to McFarland who waltzed the remaining five yards to score. This gave the Hawks a 15-0 spread at the intermission.
KU marched 80 yards to score again before the halftime gun. The tally came on a 15-yard "no, I don't want it. you take it" play. Slotback
The Hawkers took the second half kickoff and moved 70 yards for another score with 10 minutes left in the third period.
ARMAND BAUGHMAN, who contributed 98 yards rushing to the KU cause, picked up 42 of them on this drive — but Sayers got the touchdown on an 11-yard sweep and threw his first two-point conversion pass to Duff.
He threw another one after the Jayhawkers scored at the outset of the fourth period. A double reverse and a pass from Tony Leiker to Pack St. Clair moved the ball to the State 20. On the next play, Sayers blasted off tackle, cut to the outside, and was gone.
Kansas added the final tally with five minutes to go when the reserves opened up an aerial bombardment. Led by Brian Palmer, the third unit marched 45 yards in eight plays when Palmer hit end Dave Greenlee with a 24-yard strike.
GRAMBLING, La. — (UPI) — Grambling College possesses one of the biggest lines in college football. Its seven starters weigh a total of 1,692 pounds for an average of 241 pounds per man.
That's a Lot of Beef
LARRY CRUM
- Suggests -
T-Bone Steak only 99c
DEFENSE WAS a major factor contributing to the Phi Delt win, as Phi rushers Sam Bruner and Mike Holland kept Phi Gam quarterback Jerry Thornton hurrying his passes during most of the game.
In other opening-round action, Sigma Alpha Epsilon rocked Sigma Nu. 20-0.
The Phi Delts first broke the scoring ice midway through the second period when Keith Abercrombie took a pitch-out from quarterback Del Campbell and threw a 25-yard strike to end Gary Ace for the touchdown. Campbell then passed to Bob Brewster, giving the Phi Delts a 7-0 margin at the half.
The Phi Delts came back strong after the intermission with a hustling group of defensive rushers that kept the Phi Gams deep in their own territory during most of the third period.
'K' PANCAKE GRILL & SUNDRIES
The defense actually put game out of reach, as its hard charge drew a wild pass from the Phi Gam center which was recovered in the Fiji end zone for a safety. This made the score 9-0 at the end of the third quarter.
CHEVYER BURKE
Phi Delta Theta kept a five-game winning skein intact Friday by whipping Gamma Delta, 21-0, in the first round of playoffs for the Fraternity "A" Hill championship in intramural football.
By winning, both the Phi Delts and the Sig Alphs advance to the second round of the playoffs which will be held tomorrow afternoon.
14th & Mass.
Phis, Sig Alphs Win In Playoffs
THE PHIS added two more quick scores for insurance in the final period. The first came when Campbell hit Bob Brewster with a 20-yard strike, and the second on another Campbell-to-Abercrombie-to-Ace pitchout-pass play.
Open 24 Hours a day
'Raider' Wilkinson Gets Texans to OU
AUSTIN, Tex. — (UPI) — A sports writer in Texas once called Oklahoma football coach Bud Wilkinson "the greatest border raider since Pancho Villa" for Wilkinson's recruiting success in luring West Texas players to OU.
A check of the Oklahoma roster this year indicates there is still a basis for the tag — the Sooners have 71 names listed, 37 from Oklahoma and 24 from Texas. The Sooners' bitter Texas rival, the University of Texas, list 73 players this year, with only two out of Texas.
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
In the other first-round contest, a hard-nosed defense and pinpoint passing led the Sig Alphs to a 20-0 triumph over the Sigma Nus.
During the game, the Sigma Nus failed to penetrate past the Sig Alph 33-yard line, and could manage only one first down all afternoon. The tough Sig Alph defense was led by rushers Frank Kearny, Ruff Reed, Dave Kerr, Lee Davis, and George Mills.
The Sig Alph offense rolled early, scoring on the first possession. Quarterback Jim Meyer threw a flat pass to Mike Mason, and he lateralled to John Williams who ran 32 yards to the Sigma Nu five. This play set up Meyer's touchdown toss to Don Gutteridge two plays later.
THE SIG ALPHS struck again quickly in the first quarter when Meyer launched a 45-yard aerial to Mason who danced into the Sigma Nu end zone untouched. Williams passed to Mason for the extra point and a 13-0 Sig Alph advantage.
The game turned into a defensive battle through the second and most of the third quarter, but in the closing minutes of the third period, Sigma Alpha Epsilon struck again.
Meyer passed to right end Williams going deep for a 30-yard gain to the Sigma Nu three-yard line. Three plays later Meyer threw a strike to Dave Stinson, and an extra-point conversion pass to Williams for the seven points that completed the scoring.
Now Showing!
CHARLTON • ELEA
HESTON • MARTINEH
MESUELLE SHAWSON's parents *
The Pigeon
That Took Home
PHAWSON * A PROMPTION FELLOWS
Shows At 7:00 at 9:00
ROSS HUNTER #PRODUCTION
IFA MAN ANSWERS
...DON'T HANG UP!
Hang around for the FUN!
COLOR!
ALSO WATCH FOR
"EL CID"
GRANADA
LINE ATRE ... Telephone VIKING 3-5788
COMING
ALSO WATCH FOR
"EL CID"
GRANADA
THEATRE ... Telephone VIKHNG 3-5788
Now Showing!
Walt Disney's happiest motion picture
Lady AND THE Tramp
TECHNICOLOR.COM
Cinemasound
Together with WALT DISNEY'S MOST MOVIE PICTURE
Almost ANGELS
TECHNICOLOR.COM
"LADY AND THE TRAMP"
At 7:00 and 10:01
"ANGELS" at 8:23 only
REGULAR PRICES!
COMING NEXT
SHOCK AND HORROR!
AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL presents EDGAR ALLAN POE'S
TALES OF TERROR
In PANAVISION® and COLOR STARRING
VINCENT PRICE • PETER LORRE
BASIL RATHBONE DEBRA PAGET
STARTS
WEDNESDAY
VARSITY
THEATRE • Telephone VIKING 3-1065
THEATRE •••• Telephone VKIKG 3-1065
1234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789012345678901234567890123456789
Page 11
-Classified Ads-
University Daily Kansan
TRANSPORTATION
Travel-only a limited number of airline flights still available for Thanksgiving and Christmas Holiday.
Suggest making reservations Now!
First National Travel Agency
746 Mass. VI 3-0152
WANTED
Baby sitter wanted for 1 baby girl 8-06
own trip. Phone VI 3-8810.
FOR SALE
YOU OR YOUR HOUSE ought to own a like new Classic 1929 Packard condo. You should like to have this red car with wire wheels, new white sidewalls, etc. for $1850 phone V2-2261 on Friday evening o.p. m. or after 9:00 p.m. Sunday 11-9
Family heirlooms cut glass-pressed glass-
Haviland art glass-carnival glass. Brass
banquet lamp and many other items. See
at 1725 Vermont. 11-8
H. H. Scott L.T.-ten FM tuner, Rek-O-
Kut K335 turntable, Mhore S212 stereo
arm shock cartridge, Fairchild 212 turn-
less with slash adapter, All guaranteed perfect,
less than half price. Will finance. Phone
VI 3-8919. 11-8
Stereo or hi-fi diamond needles for most makes. Half price during November. Don't wait, buy them now at Pettengill-Davis, 725 Mass. tf
new stereo FM—new portable stereos-
new AM-FM radios—new FM radio dis-
scounters as low as $26.77—m
month, at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Massachusetts st.
11-20
Used Rutheon TV with AM-FM phono-
dio equipment guaranteed Patterson
Davis, 723 Mass.
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop Modern self-service. Open 8 to 13:30 pm weekdays.
1960 Vauxhall. Good condition. Phone VI 2-3684. 11-6
4 new 700-1X 100 level big edge new
700-1X base. All four tires to $88.00
700-1Xs. All four tires cut to $88.00
installed! No federal tax. Hurry to Ray
Savings Discount Tire Center - 11-6
Mass, St.
Used G.E. Electric Dryer. GUARANTEED $49.97. Used washer dryer combination, late-model — perfect — cut to $135.00. Hurry to Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. St.
Used Tvs $5.00 eachl Six set must go-
Ray Stoutback's, 929 Mass. St. 11-6
One fifty-four volume set leather bound Great Books of the Western World, "Published by Encyclopedia Britannica" with bookcase. 8 months old. Call VI 3-5996.
Corvair-Valiant-Lancer Owners! Four 1st line new narrow white tubeless tires with 4 for $55.95 stalled! Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center. 929 Mass. St. 11-6
3-speed Roace Union 26" men or ladies
3-speed Roace Union 26" men or ladies
529 Mass. Used buses $10.00 each. 11-12
11-12
Transistor Radios! 6 transistors now $10.97! AM-FM radios—twin speaker now $45.97! FM radios now $26.97. Ray Stone-back's, 929 Mass. St. 11-12
Sports Car Compact Owners Attention!
We have all sizes of Snow treads available.
Brock's Discount Center, 929 Mass. St, 1,000 new tires at low discount prices! 11-12
1958 Volkswagen with radio, heater, and white wall tires. Excellent condition. Priced lower than K.C. prices. Lots of extras. Phone VI 2-0771. 11-5
Five-stripe Orphism Banjo; $80. Martha
Bernsom at 7041%; Bernsom after 4. 11-5
Bernsom at 7041%; Bernsom after 4. 11-5
One Roberts four-track model 990 stereo tape recorder and player with two Roberts matching external speakers 60 days old. Phone VI 3-5996. 11-5
All kinds of house plants. Potted . . .
Including philodendron to be used for
room dividers and in picture windows.
Phone VI 3-4207. tt
TV shopping? Magnavox 24" automatic
TV has a 3 year picture tube warranty.
It comes in black or white from just $149.90. See the magnificent
Magnavox at Pettengil-Davis, 723 Mass.
Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive mimeographed and bound for $4.00 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery, ti
Printed Biology Study Notes: 70 pages.
Provides bensive diagrams and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the
dictionary. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery.
$4.50. **If**
TYPING PAPER BARGAINS. Fink typing paper 85c per paper. Yellow ink 10c per paper. Red ink per pound. The Lawrence Outlook. 1005 Massachusetts, open all day Saturday, tf
2 bedroom house ½ block from campus.
Fully carpeted, screened porch, wood
floor. Interior condition full basement with a large lot. $10,500.
If interested call VI 3-4291. I=11-6
FOR RENT
Two room well furnished apartment just
858. 1447 Vermont. Phone VI 3-6228-119
858. 1447 Vermont. Phone VI 3-6228-119
For rent a furnished 1 bedroom duplex
for boys. Call VI 3-1188 or
VI 3-0661.
Partly furnished 2 bedroom house 1/3 block from campus. Fully carpeted, screened porch, wood burning fireplace, fully air conditioned, full basement, large lot. $100 per month. If interested call VI 3-4291. 11-9
Furnished house. Can accommodate up to
18 persons. Has her new mat.
If interested call VI 5-4291. 11-9
FOR RENT! extra nice furnished room for men, 123 blocks from campus, two dorms to care. 1346 Ohio Phone 504-826 or VI 3-2322. After 6 p.m. phone 21-1031. 11-8
Vacancy in an apartment for a male student now. Phone VI 3-6725. Union. Availability 11-8.
Dissatisfied with your apartment? Call VI 3-0554 after 7 p.m. for information on room rental. Cozy 3 room furnished apartment suitable for single person. Good location. Safe and entrance, also parking. All utilities paid. $5 a month. VI 3-2583. 11-7
FOR RENT. SINGLE ROOMS for men 1½ block from Union. Kitchen privileges, laundry facilities, storage. 5th. 1234 Oread or phone VI 2-1518. Call us even when.
Attractive furnished apartment for one woman for $63 a month. Utilities paid and garage available. Phone VI 3-1209 or ee at 1633 Vermont. 11-7
Unfurnished large 4-bedroom house with 2 baths. Parking space. Excellent location Clean, reasonable, ideal for large family. phone VI 3-7038. 11-6
bedroom duplex. Also large furnished
museum for 3 or 4 boys. Phone IVI-11-5
Small second floor furnished bachelor type apartment suitable for 1 person. Private bath and kitchen. Steam heat. Off gas heating每月每月支付 electric power Real Estate Co. 7 West 14th. Phone VI 3-0005 or VI 3-2929.
ROOMS FOR MEN: Double room only,
room for female students from Student Union; private entrance, quiet, telephone and utilities paid. Call
telephone at 1301 Louisiana after
5 p.m. weekdays.
3 room apartment, private bath. 1 block
paid. Come and see. 1142 Indiana. .tf
Vacancies for young men in contemporary home with swimming pool, shower bath, private entrance, 5 evening meals weekly. $65 a month. Call VI 3-96355. tf
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.
BUSINESS SERVICES
GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I study notes
Completely revised and extremely comprehensive. $4. For free delivery call VI 3-8246. 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. tf
TYPEWRITERS — Sales service, rental, office space electronics, Royal, Olympia, Smith Corona, Olivetti and Remington portables. Bond Typewriter, 79 Mass. Phone VI 3-3644.
DRESS MAKING and alterations. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith, $ 9391\% $ .Mass.Call VI 3-5263. tf
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center. 1218 Conn. Personal service—sectionalized birds, amphibians, chameleons, turtles, pig supplies etc., plus complete lines for pet supplies. **tf**
Black billfold with white cameo clasp.
Important papers and money. Reward.
Lost Halloween night. Call VI 2-0703
after 5 p.m. 11-7
LOST
Lost a Woman's watch: round, yellow gold Alton. Reward. Contact 303 S. Gor
Luggage colored leather tobacco pouch in vicinity of 25 Strong, 2:30 p.m. Tues- clandimental value. Finder call VI 2-6428 or leave with secretary. Psychology Clinic. 11-8
Lost Alpha Delta Pi pin chained to Triangle pin on October 31 in vicinity of Fraser or Room 110. Please contact Nancy Brown at VI 3-7847. $10 reward. 11-6
1962 KU chase ring with green set in-
touch. VI s-3190. Reward. 11-8
TYPING
Monday, Nov. 5, 1962
FOUND
Found in Summerst 4th floor. WED-
1711. RING initials "CR." Call VIV.
7711.
MISCELLANEOUS
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary with type theses, term papers, reports, to hire or curate work for Resmobile Electric. Electric Education. Eldowney. 1521 Alabama. Ph. VI 3-8689.
English major and former secretary will type themes and theses on electric type-writer. For neat and accurate work call Mrs. Melsand Jones, VI 3-5267. tf
Need a place for a private party or dance.
Phone VI 3-6376. 11-7
TERM PAPERS, THESES, ARTICLES.
BOOKS. Quick, accurate, neat work by
former teacher and secretary of
Kerbera High School (1951) and spelling
Ruth Skinner, 805 Missoula, VI 3-3076.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, these, and other material on an electric typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8379.
Experienced typist. 7 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rate. Barlow, Barlow 2014 Yale RL, VI 2-1648.
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast. accurate, neat work. Reasonable rates Familier with legal terms. Marsha Goff VI 2-1749
Experienced secretary with electric type-
ers, equipment, et al. Phone Nancy Cain at Vt 3-0824
Would like typing in my home — term papers, theses, manuscripts, etc. Fast, accurate dependable service. Call Mrs. Rogers. VI 3-0774. tf
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
Typing — reasonable nouns, neat and accu-
tive.
Mrs. Bodin, 825 Greeter Terr.
Manuscripts, theses, and term papers.
Also dissertations typed on wide carriage.
Support for research and keys to
Experience in education and education.
Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. VI 2-1546. tt
HELP WANTED
Business School junior who wants to learn discount merchandising on part time extra help basis. Must be able to work 2:30 to 5:30 p.m. daily, and 8:30 to Saturday. Must be able to work at Ray Dacth. Do not apply unless you can work these hours. Apply in person at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. St. 11-6
Wanted: Waitress full or part time. Apply to manager at Holiday Inn Restaurant.
HAVE YOU
HEARD
ABOUT
ThriftiCheck®
ThriftiChecks save time, trouble — and money, tool Here's a low-cost personal checking account service that has everything to help you manage your money the modern way. Let us tell you all about it.
DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK
9th & Kentucky
VI 3-7474
Are your formals ready for the party season?
You'll want to look your best throughout the party season. Check now to see that your formals are in perfect wearing order. . .
New York Cleaners scientific dry cleaning methods keep all your cloths looking bright and new ..
k
br
@
New York Cleaners VI 3-0501
926 Mass.
Merchants of Good Appearance
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Monday, Nov. 5, 1962
Red Chinese Faced Disaster In Spring, AUFS Expert Says
The Chinese Communist hierarchy came close to disaster this spring for the first time in their history, an expert on the Far East said yesterday.
Albert Ravenholt, American Universities Field Staff expert on the Far East, told the Faculty Club that during May and June Peking was really troubled. He said this was evident in three ways:
First, the National Peoples Congress met during the spring but did not hand down a budget. This is very important to an economy such as the Communists have, he said.
ALSO, THERE was no updating of the present five year plan or any planning of a new five year plan. Second, he said, food shortages were very evident to the outside world. Doctors who escaped from
Cuba Agrees-
(Continued from page 1) decision" would rest on Ruegger's mission. But there appeared little doubt the operation would begin soon.
THE RED CROSS was first brought into the Cuban picture last Thursday when Soviet First Deputy Premier Anastas Mikoyan suggested to U.N. Acting Secretary General U Thant that the international body might supervise both the shipment of goods into Cuba through the American blockade and also the dismantling of Soviet missile bases there.
The Red Cross confirmed Saturday that it was prepared to use its good offices if all parties were in agreement but made no mention of supervising the dismantling of the bases. Today's statement was also silent on that subject.
Wheat at a Wedding?
The University may have to buy a combine to cut the grass in front of Danforth Chapel next summer.
When Ira Faulin, Ford graduate student whose family farms wheat in southwest Kansas, and Marcia Dicks, Prairie Village junior, were married Saturday in Danforth, the assembled friends didn't bother with rice.
They threw wheat.
Judge Cuts Off Liquor Supply
GUERNSEY, Channel Islands— (UPI)—When Joseph Wright, 76, appeared in court yesterday for the 160th time on a drunk and disorderly charge he expected his usual 35 cent fine.
The crusher came when the judge said he was " reluctant to rob you of the pleasure you get out of drink" and put him on the "black list" - banning him from all saloons on the island for one year.
Complete recording facilities for your Homecoming display. 33 1/3 or 45 R.P.M. Discs made for Automatic Record Players
Audio House
HIGH FIDELITY
909 New York VI 3-4916
the mainland reported famine running rampant all over the country.
These doctors reported to Ravenholt that the birth of children was being seriously hampered and that the mortality rate of babies was very high. Also, that many Chinese people had diseases related to lack of food.
THE THIRD EVIDENCE of trouble in Peking was that the people were for the first time openly voicing their views against the government, he said.
Riots were occurring on the mainland and people were escaping to Hong Kong. In addition, a break in Peking was apparent. Mao Tse-Tung was making frequent trips around the mainland trying to restore organization in his country.
RAVENHOLT SAID, "previous to the event last spring I thought the Reds were in China for keeps, but now I have doubts about it."
He said the fate of China may lie in the hands of the peasants.
When the Communists first came to power they took the land away from the peasants and then gave it
back to them according to their needs. The peasants were satisfied. Ravenholt said.
But then, he said, Peking told them to pool their work efforts, land and tools. Peking said that this was the last change they would impose on the people.
BUT IT WAS NOT, Ravenholt said. They imposed the commun system on the peasants. They then started a campaign to erase from China the peasants' religion — Confucianism.
The Communist regime destroyed their religious shrines and temples, he said. It leveled all graves and used some of the contents for fertilizer.
Because of all this, Ravenholt said, the peasants turned to massive passive resistance. It culminated this spring in the riots and the refugees who fled Red China.
Ravenholt said a friend who interviewed Mao Tse-Tung recently told him that Mao is a politician of great ability and that his ideas were good when the Communists took over China, but that these ideas were no longer beneficial.
Administration-
(Continued from page 1)
equipment which Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev has promised to take back to Russia.
The types of ships and how close they were to the U.S. Navy blockade area were not disclosed.
A number of other Soviet bloc vessels were in Cuban ports when the blockade began. According to one estimate about 20 bloc ships now are there. Soviet diplomats, however, have indicated that Russia will have to send more vessels to pick up all the equipment.
U. S. AERIAL reconnaissance has shown that Soviet military officials in Cuba have been dismantling the missile sites, but newsmen here have been given no information yet on whether any of the equipment is being loaded aboard ship.
Officials would not say what the U.S. blockade policy would be on Soviet vessels proceeding to Cuba to pick up equipment before international inspection procedures can be negotiated.
Nor would they discuss whether any vessels carrying nonmilitary cargoes have been cleared through the blockade to Cuba in recent days.
The atmosphere in Washington yesterday was in sharp contrast to the previous two Sundays. Secretary of State Rusk went to his office yesterday but only for what was described as work on some "odds and ends." Few other officials were seen at their desks.
JUST TWO WEEKS earlier, Washington was filled with an air of mystery and tension as the President was getting ready to announce the U.S. naval blockade of Cuba.
Yesterday also was remarkably quiet in comparison with Sunday a week earlier when Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev suddenly announced he had ordered the removal of the Russian bases in Cuba.
It could have been that U.S. officials were marking time momentarily pending the outcome of Havana talks between Soviet First Deputy Premier Mikoyan and Castro.
We Would Like To Be YOUR BANKER
Our business is money. And no matter whether you want to
MAKE IT
SAVE IT
SPEND IT
BORROW IT
we can help you get more for your money. Let's become better acquainted.
J
1ST MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
FIRST NATIONAL-BANK
or Lawrence
746 Mass.
(Continued from page 1) news magazine which has often been critical of Adenauer's government in general and Defense Minister Franz-Josef Strauss in particular. Both Adenuer and Strauss have sued the magazine—and lost.
Two Bonn Heads —
THE POLICE ARRESTED publisher Rudolf Augstein and members of his staff Augstein and four editors still are in jail and charges of suspicion of treason and bribery.
THE TEXT OF the Free Democrats, ultimatum remained secret, but party sources said the five ministers would remain in office only if Adenauer:
Red Truce Offer—
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1)
16 miles south of the McMahon line, five days after they started overrunning Indian frontier posts in human waves Oct. 20.
- Fired State Secretary of Defense Volkmar Hope and State Secretary of Justice Walter Strauss.
- THE FREE DEMOCRATS made it clear they do not object to the action against Der Spiegel, provided the charges can be proved.
- Authorized Minister of Justice Wolfgang Stammberger, a Free Democrat, to conduct an investigation into the crackdown against Der Spiegel.
In Bombay, meanwhile, a wave of panic selling prompted by Red China's border invasion caused the local stock exchange to suspend trading today. The exchange was declared officially closed until further notice just 40 minutes after today's opening.
- Promised disciplinary action against officials who overstepped their authority in participating in the arrest of Augstein and members of his staff.
INDIAN DEFENSE officials said they are now better prepared to stop any new Communist drive in the western NEFA area.
Informed Indian officials said the Chinese advance was so rapid they apparently outran their supply lines and have paused the last few days to consolidate and bring up reinforcements.
(Observers in London speculated the Bombay selling wave may have been sparked by news that India's five - year - economic development was being cut back due to the emergency.)
The sources said the Chinese are using the old caravan route from Tibet by which the Dalai Lama fled during his escape from Communist oppression in 1959.
INDIAN DISPATCHES from the base headquarters town of Tezpur in the NEFA said Indian troops recaptured three hamlets between Towang and Jang Saturday.
The reports were attributed to "unofficial, but reliable, sources."
morial but reliable sources." The Indians pulled out of the monastery town of Towang, on the western end of the NEFA battle zone, when a three-pronged drive by the invading Chinese carried
We Rent Most Anything
ANDERSON RENTAL
812 N. H.
"Individuals with severe injury and high doses of radiation cannot be helped because both physicians and facilities will be inadequate." Drs. Eugene L. Saenger and Max L. Bloom, of the University of Cincinnati College of Medicine, said. They addressed the American Medical Association's 13th County Medical Societies Conference.
them 16 miles south of the McMahon line which marks the border.
Sporadic fighting and artillery and mortar exchanges have been reported in the vicinity of Jang, five miles east of Towang, ever since. Jang straddles a strategic jeep track which leads south into the Assam Flains and Tezpur itself.
THE WEEKEND conference, devoted primarily to discussion of disaster medical care after a nuclear war, attracted 350 physicians and key civil defense leaders from the United States, Canada, and Europe.
"There is little place for heroic treatment. It is preferable to utilize the available treatment potentialities for those who require the least treatment and can perform the most work." they reported.
Indian defense ministry officials reported that Indian troops repelled a Chinese probing attack near the administration center of Walong, at the eastern end of the NEFA border near Burma.
War Would Restrict Radiation Treatment
CHICAGO — (UPI) After a nuclear war, radiation therapy should be restricted to those persons least injured and most likely to recover, two doctors said yesterday.
Paul E. Hodgson Local Agent
State Farm Insurance
Off. Ph. VI 3-5666 530 W 23rd.
Res. Ph. VI 3-5994 Lawrence, Kan.
Are you a one pat or a two pat man? Vitalis with V-7 keeps 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 with V-7 today!
Vitalis V7
FRACTIONAL LIQUID
NATURAL BASED ON NITROGEN
PRODUCTS OF GERMANY
Daily hansan
69th Year. No.38
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Tuesday, Nov. 6, 1962
JOHN M. ELLEN
NO WORK—These poll workers seem bored during the ASC primary elections this morning. The bored trio are Tom Bornholdt, Topeka junior; Carolyn Hines, Kirkwood, Mo., junior, and Gary Button, Wichita freshman.
Record Turnouts In State Races
WASHINGTON—(UPI)—Record turnouts for a Mid-Term Election were reported in hot political battleground areas today as Americans cast ballots which will determine the political hue of Congress and perhaps give a clue to the GOP presidential candidate in 1964.
On the election's outcome also will rest the fate of President Kennedy's legislative program for the next two years. The voters were picking 35 governors, 39 senators and 435 house members.
It was to the gubernatorial results in several key states that political experts look for advance tips on the man the Republicans will pit against Kennedy in 1964.
IN SOME of those states voting records for a non-presidential election appeared to be building up. A record was forecast for California where Richard M. Nixon staked his political life on an attempt to unseat Democratic Gov. Edmund G. (Pat) Brown.
A mid-term voting record also appeared to be in the making in Michigan where auto-maker George Romney was making an all-out assault on Democratic Gov. John B. Swainson.
The first precinct reporting in Michigan gave Romney 12 votes. Swainson 2.
THE SENATORIAL race between Edward M. Kennedy, the President's younger brother, and George Cabot Lodge brought Massachusetts' voters out in numbers expected to break past off-year records.
Texas, too, appeared headed for a record turnout—unless rains in southern parts of the state acted as a deterrent. The big event in the Lone Star state was the gubernatorial battle between Republican Jack Cox and President Kennedy's former Navy secretary, John B. Connally.
HEAVY TURNOUTS were reported in many other places, including Minnesota, South Carolina, New Mexico—where a record was predicted-Virginia, Alabama, and Maine.
Voting was light in Mississippi and Louisiana, as expected, and New Jersey. In Georgia the voting was "steady" but "moderate."
In New York City the voting started out light but became heavy in most districts as the day wore on.
GOP GOV. Nelson A. Rockefeller appeared to be a certain winner by a large margin over Democratic challenger Robert M. Morgenthau
Among the early voters was President Kennedy who flew to Boston to vote for his brother.
"Extremely heavy" voting was reported in Philadelphia and heavy balloting in Pittsburgh and Harrisburg. The Pennsylvania governorship race matched former Philadelphia Mayor Richardson Dillworth against Rep. William W. Scranton, a possible GOP presidential prospect.
Generally friendly weather and hot local issues and races appeared to be swelling the vote beyond expectations.
Partly cloudy skies this afternoon will clear tonight after a few brief showers over the eastern sections of the state. It will be warmer in the eastern southern sections this afternoon. Wednesday will be generally fair and a little cooler. The low tonight will be near 30 with the high Wednesday between 50 and 55.
Weather
U Thant to Meet With Red Cross
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.—(UPI)—Acting Secretary General Thant scheduled a late afternoon appointment today with top International Red Cross officials to work out details of checking against hidden offensive arms in Soviet cargoes bound for Cuba.
Paul Rueger, former president of the all-Swiss organization who is acting as its special representative on the inspection assignment, and Melchior Borsinger, secretary of the international committee's executive board, were expected to arrive by air at 1 p.m., CST to confer with Thant at 5 p.m.
A special election issue of the University Daily Kansan will be available at 6 a.m. tomorrow — giving UDK readers earliest election returns.
Special Election Issue
For this special issue only newspapers will be delivered to all organized living units and campus distribution boxes as well.
This is the first time such an early issue has been available and there will be no regular Wednesday afternoon paper.
For the first time since the Cuban crisis developed on Oct. 22, Thant had no appointments with principals involved in the situation. His only ambassadorial appointment was with Liu Chieh of China, the last of the permanent Security Council members to be called in.
At 2 p.m., CST, Than called together his 20-nation Congo advisory committee to talk things over with Congolese Foreign Minister Justin Bomboko, here on a quick visit to the General Assembly session.
Polls Open Late; Vox Blames UP
The elections committee chairman threatened to close polls in the All Student Council primaries early today because of what he called "the failure of University Party members to report for election duty."
John Stuckey, Pittsburgh junior and elections chairman, said that only one UP election poll worker reported to Strong Hall and only two showed up at the Kansas Union at noon.
The polls, scheduled to open at 8 a.m., were not manned until 10:30 a.m. because of the lack of workers
Stuckey said the first use of polls in Murphy Hall and the Kansas Union indicated that the plan of poll decentralization has worked out favorably.
Nancy Lane, Hoisington senior and UP co-chairman, said, "Since the polls opened so late today, perhaps some of the workers got tired of waiting and left." She said the University Party will definitely have enough poll workers for the general elections November 13 and 14.
At noon 272 students had voted
including 123 freshman who were not necessarily Vox or UP party members.
One student in Murphy Hall said she felt the placement of the poll should have been located on fourth floor instead of in the main lobby because a greater number of music and drama students were in that vicinity during the day.
Holly Thompson, member of the elections committee and Ottawa sophomore, reported six students from the large residence halls had voted at Murphy Hall by noon and none had voted from Stauffer place. Julia Jarvis, Winfield junior, who was stationed in the Kansas Union, said a number of freshman women had used the poll there.
Students May Vote By Absentee Ballot
The Lawrence city clerk reports that any Kansas resident who has registered to vote in his home county may vote in any other county in the state.
The clerk, Harold Fisher, said the voter will receive an instate absentee ballot at the polls. The marked ballot will be delivered to the Lawrence city clerk. He will then mail it to the voter's home county.
For poll information, local residents may call the city clerk at VI 3-4600. Polls will close at 7 p.m.
Turkey Missile Power Blocks Red Expansion
UPI Foreign News Analyst
By Phil Newsom
In Inzmir, some 300 miles down the Turkish coast from Istanbul, it still is summertime, the grapes are ripe and palm trees rustle in the offshore breeze from the Aegean Sea.
Across the Aegean, some 200 miles away, lies Athens.
In the triangle formed by Istanbul, Izmir and Athens are the Turkish Straits and the gateway to the Eastern Mediterranean traditionally sought by Russia.
To the East, Turkey's mountainous border blocks Soviet expansionist aims toward the Middle Eastern oil fields.
NERVE CENTER of this defense complex is Izmir, where U.S. Lt. Gen. Frederic J. Brown commands Allied Forces Southeast Europe and where the Sixth Allied Tactical Air Force also has it headquarters.
Izmir and Incirlik, in the south, are the two most important NATO bases in Turkey, whose defense is based at least in part on the instant retaliatory abilities of allied missiles equipped with U.S. nuclear warheads.
These are the bases which Nikita Khrushchev had in mind when he offered to trade removal of his rockets from Cuba in exchange for similar U.S. action in Turkey.
President Kennedy's prompt reply that the Turkish bases were not negotiable squelched any hope the Soviet leader might have had on that score and heartened the Turkish people who have been among the United States' staunchest allies.
GONE IS THE one-time rag-tag Turkish army of ill-trained men and antiquated weapons. Its new U.S.-equipped Army of approximately half a million men is among the largest and best trained and equipped in Europe.
Its Air Force flies modern U.S. planes and has been promised others even more modern.
Together with a Greek army of around 200,000 men, these are the forces upon which the United States and its NATO allies depend to maintain communications lines to the Middle East and North Africa.
NATO military planners see six main avenues of possible Communist attack on Greece and Turkey.
For more years than men can remember the Turks have fought the Russians.
Man Questioned On UDK Inserts
A middle-aged man was questioned by KU police last night after a student saw him taking a stack of Daily Kansans from the distribution box near Green Hall.
The student, Rick Kastner, Salina senior, told the Daily Kansan that the man admitted inserting religious literature in the paper.
KU Police questioned the man, then left the office with him, declining a Kansan reporter's request to talk to the man, and promising that information would be given.
JOE SKILLMAN, KU police chief, told the Daily Kansas today that the man has been released from custody. However, he declined to give further information, saying the situation is "too involved."
Lawrence police told the Kansan this morning that the man was not brought to them last night.
Kastner told the Kansan last night that he saw the man taking the stack of papers about 7 p.m., and asked him what he was doing. According to Kastner, the man said he could "use them."
"THEN I ASKED him if he was the one who had been stuffing the papers, and he said that he 'migit be', Kastner said.
However, Kastner said the man later admitted to him that he had stuffed the religious material. The man said he didn't see anything wrong with stuffing the papers, Kastner told the Daily Kansan.
According to Kastner, the man accompanied him to the Kansas Union to telephone the KU police. Police picked the man up and took him to the office in Hoch Auditorium for questioning.
COPIES OF THE Daily Kansan have been stuffed with anti-Catholic and "Minutemen" material several times during the past several weeks.
The Kansas City Star last week reported that Robert DePugh, national president of the "Minutemen"—a militant anti-communist organization—said he believed that several members of the organization at KU might have been stuffing the "Minutemen" material.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Nov. 6, 1962
Vote Twice
Today is election day across the nation and on campus. Although there is no considerable interest in the congressional races on the national political scene there is no reason to deny oneself the privilege of voting. In the campus election everyone can vote and has the responsibility to do so.
The national and state balloting, of course, is vital to the progress of the country. But there has arisen some question about the need and significance of the campus primary today and tomorrow.
CERTAINLY THIS WEEK'S election on campus does not mean as much as the general election which will be one week from now. But, just because student representation on the All Student Council will not be decided in the primary does not negate the need to go to the polls in Murphy, Strong or the Kansas Union and express a preference.
Vox Populi, the reigning campus political power is making no effort to display its well-known and feared voting drawing power for its candidates are already selected. This is no secret. Vox picks its representatives through a series of interviews and party meetings. University Party holds the debatable primary which does not prove too much more than spending student funds and iron out the problems in the mechanical process of voting for the people running it.
It has been suggested by a student leader that, if for no other reason, students should vote in the campus primary merely to acquire the experience of voting. For many it will be the first time students will vote in such a manner. This chance is good because it should acquaint the student with the process and eliminate many of the void ballots which could keep some candidate from being elected next week.
—Bill Sheldon
Republicans Strong in Kansas
By Richard Bonett
(This is the last in a series of articles
contests in the 1962 election.
Kansans who are familiar with the names of their top state leaders and national representatives probably will be spared the trouble of learning many new names after today.
Gov. John Anderson is a shoo-in for a second term in his race against Democratic challenger Dale E. Saffels, a former state representative. Eyes will pop if either of the two incumbent Republican U.S. senators is beaten.
IN CONTESTS for seats in the House of Representatives, four Republican incumbents appear to have wide edges. The only race that generated much interest is that involving two present members of the House who are pitted against one another in a newly formed district.
Despite repeated efforts of Democrats to throw the onus of corruption and mismanagement onto Anderson's state house rule the past two years, the charges have failed to produce any general public indignation against the governor.
The charges have included corruption in the state printing office, favoritism by the governor in the matter of the revocation of a driver's license of GOP leaders, a conflict of interest on the part of the chairman of the Turnpike Authority, and mismanagement of the state penal institutions.
To all of this, Anderson generally has found it unnecessary to answer
with anything other than a charge that his opponents are conducting a "fly-speck campaign."
WHATEVER THE VALIDITY of the charges, it is clear that they have failed to make an impression on the ordinary Kansas voter, whose historical allegiance is to the Republican party.
Little more excitement has been generated over the state in the two races for U.S. Senate. With the announcement by President Kennedy of the blockade against the shipment of arms to Cuba, the races lost in the last two weeks of the campaign what little heat they contained.
Hitting the "soft on Castro" line particularly hard has been Sen. James Pearson, appointed to office by Anderson on the death of Sen. Andrew F. Schoeppel. Pearson, a former state senator and Anderson's campaign manager two years ago, is seeking to finish out the remaining four years of that term.
Pearson is opposed by Paul Aylward, an Ellsworth attorney and former member of the Kansas Park and Resources Authority under Democratic Gov. George Docking. Aylward's public statements leave the impression that he would be a "New Frontier" Democrat, supporting in full the President's domestic program. He favors old age medical care under the social security program and tight controls on agricultural production.
IN CONTRAST, Pearson has tended in his year in the Senate to follow the party line in voting
against the Kennedy domestic proposals. He has been endorsed for re-election by conservative stalwarts among his colleagues.
Sen. Frank Carlson, also a safe party-line conservative, has said next to nothing in his campaign for a third term aside from criticizing the Kennedy foreign policy. A former congressman, state representative, and governor from 1946 to 1950, Carlson is assured re-election against his little-known opponent. K. L. (Ken) Smith, a county employee from Wichita.
The loss of a congressional district last year and subsequent reapportionment by the state legislature threatens to squeeze out of office the lone Democrat in the current Kansas congressional delegation.
Democrat J. Floyd Breeding, farmer and stockman, must win over Republican Bob Dole, Russell attorney, if he hopes to go back to Washington for a fourth term. The former districts of these two opponents have been thrown together in the huge, 58-county first district, comprising nearly the entire western half of the state.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
DOLE, SEEKING a second term, has been particularly acid in his criticism of the Kennedy administration, both on foreign and domestic policies. He has tried to paint the Billie Sol Estes scandal as being totally a question of administration corruption in the Agriculture Department.
Here's one-in-every-class, def.
"I THOUGHT YOU SAID WE WOULDN'T HAVE TH' TEST UNTIL WEDNESDAY."
"WASN'T OUR 5,000 WORD THEME DUE TO-DAY?"
HERE'S ONE-IN-EVERY-CLASS, DEPT.!
"I THOUGHT YOU SAID WE WOULDN'T HAVE TH' TEST UNTIL WEDNESDAY!"
"WASN'T OUR 5000 WORD THEME DUE TO-DAY?"
"HA! I CRACKED AN 'A' IN THIS TEST AN' DIDN'T EVEN STUDY FOR IT."
"BUT I'VE JUST GOT TO GET A 'B' OUT OF THIS COURSE AT LEAST! I'M FLUNKING ALL MY OTHERS."
"WASN'T OUR 5,000 WORD
THEME DUE TO-DAY?"
HA! I CRACKED AN 'A' IN THIS TEST AN' DIDN'T EVEN STUDY FOR IT.
"BUT I'VE JUST GOT TO GET A 'B' OUT OF THIS COURSE AT LEAST! I'M FLUNKING ALL MY OTHERS."
Republicans are safe bets to hold or gain seats in other congressional races as well. These include Robert Ellsworth, trying for a second term in the third district; William Avery, going after his fifth term in the second district; Garner Shriver, seeking a second term in the fourth district; and Joe Skubitz, running in the fifth district.
Skubitz gained the nomination over incumbent Rep. Walter McVey in the August primary. McVey had served one term and a rumor was circulated until recently that McVey, whose margin of defeat was slim, would conduct a write-in campaign in the election.
FACING THIS BATTERY of formidable runners is a slate of Democrats, most of whom are political unknowns. They include Bill Sparks opposing Ellsworth, Wade Myers facing Skubitz, Harry H. Kehee against Avery, and Lawrence J. Wetzel facing Shriver.
Of these, only Myers has served in office. He was a member of the Kansas Senate from 1947 to 1949 and was minority leader part of his term.
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
1904, trineweek 1908, daily, Jan. 16, 1912.
Telephone VIKing 3-2700 Extension 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 Street, New York, NY. National. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
COMMENT
An Important Query
A great wailing and gnashing of teeth has come about because of a statement by Arthur Sylvester, assistant secretary of defense for public affairs. In the statement, Sylvester said that "in the kind of world we live in, the generation of news by the government serves as a weapon in a strained situation."
HE ADDED THAT during the recent Cuban crisis, the American press had been used as a "weapon" to assure the success of the Cuban blockade.
The reaction of the press in the United States has caused the aforementioned wailing and gnashing of teeth. The New York Times, for example, said that "a democratic government cannot work if news of and about that government is long suppressed or managed or manipulated or controlled."
Lee Hills, president of the American Society of Newspaper Publishers, labeled the governmental use of the press a "deep shock to responsible newspaper editors."
A DISSENTING VOTE, however, was cast by New York Times columnist James Reston.
"The question in the present case," he said, "is not whether the administration told all the truth—it obviously didn't—but whether, under the grave circumstances of the crisis, it conducted itself in a dishonorable way. This is clearly a matter of opinion. My own is that it did not."
The most interesting aspect of the whole situation is that even the most bitter foe of the government's "weapon" use of the press is not adverse to that same government censoring the press during wartime.
- The government has the right to decide what is crisis and what is not, and use the press as a "weapon" accordingly.
The controversy thus boils down into two declarations.
- In any situation short of actual declared war, the American press has the right to demand full and detailed accounts of the situation involved.
In regard to the first alternative, the question immediately arises as to exactly what constitutes a crisis "crucial" enough to permit government manipulation of the press.
DURING THE SECOND World War, it was agreed that the Japanese and German war efforts warranted government censorship of the press. The reason given then was the same given by the Department of Defense last week: the press, used as a weapon by the government, would ultimately work for the benefit of this nation and the people in it.
Government censorship curtailed the amount of information fed to the Japanese and the Germans, just as it curtailed the amount of information given to the Russians and Cubans during the Cuban crisis.
Who sits on the throne and decides that Situation A is a crisis warranting governmental censorship of the press and that Situation B is not?
THE SECOND statement is equally as confusing. Since the Cuban crisis was not part of an actual 'war,' the press should be allowed to know ento what was going on. But who draws the line? Who is going to sit on the throne?
Columnist Reston said that since the Kennedy administration was pushing this nation to the brink of a nuclear war and possible annihilation, it had the right to manipulate the American press.
This still does not answer the question. The United States was staring annihilation in the face during the second World War; the press allowed itself to be censured. We faced annihilation last week; the press bitterly objected to censorship.
THE ULTIMATE question which arises from this means is whether the press should be censored at all. Did the people of the United States have the right to know that we were about to invade Europe in 1944? Did they have the right to know that the Kennedy administration was about to place us at the brink of nuclear holocaust?
If the people can be considered competent enough to know what they want, perhaps they should have the ultimate say as to whether they wish to chance annihilation. If they are not competent, or if there is no time to make a decision one way or the other, perhaps someone should do it for them.
The people have elected representatives to do their bidding in Washington. These representatives include the President and Department of Defense officials. The representatives and the government itself, therefore, are theoretically working in the best interests of the people.
IF WE BELIEVE in our form of government, we must assume that the government will always work in the best interests of the people. But there may be a danger in allowing the government to make too many decisions without knowing the feelings of the people. One way to know this feeling is to allow the press to have full knowledge of the facts concerning a situation.
But by giving the press the power to print these data, we may be giving the enemy valuable information, and thereby thwart our chance of success.
This is no easily answered question. At stake is more than mere journalistic ire—at stake is the basic concept of this nation. It is a question that cannot be hasitly resolved.
—Zeke Wigglesworth
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Scientists Report Moon Dust May Not Exist
CHICAGO — (UPI) — Spacemen reaching the moon may not be engulfed in the desert of dust that had been expected. Armour Research Foundation (ARF) scientists have reported.
After initial experiments for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), the Armour scientists said yesterday dust particles become harder and more firmly knit under conditions of higher vacuum such as exist on the moon.
They said they have not been able to prove, however, that particles eventually become bonded together in a rock-like substance as the vacuum increases even more.
JACKSON, Miss. — (UPI) — Circuit Judge Leon Hendrick, in a move indicating possible action against Negro James H. Meredith, yesterday instructed a grand jury to indict any person giving false information during voter registration.
The experiments are being conducted at Illinois Institute of Technology and will last up to five years. NASA allocated $51,600 for the first year.
Meredith May Be Indicted On Vote Fraud
BUT THE COURT'S ACTION came several days before he enrolled at the University of Mississippi and several federal injunctions were issued against any interference with Meredith's enrollment and attendance at the university.
Meredith was convicted in Justice of the Peace Court of falsely claiming to be a Hinds County resident when he registered as a voter here in 1960.
ere s a
Dist. Atty. Bill Waller said after the court session he was "going to follow the judge's charge," but he would not say if that meant indicting Meredith.
"I DON'T THINK HE (Meredith) can be arrested," said Waller, because of the injunctions. He pointed out that indictments are not made public until the parties involved are arrested.
Hendrick told the jurors "it is important for us to have charge and determine who should vote in our elections."
If Meredith is tried in Circuit Court, he would be tried for a felony and not a misdemeanor as he was in Magistrate's Court.
Hendrick did not specifically mention the case against Meredith but he soundly criticized the federal government for its actions in his forced enrollment.
Need A Deepsea Diver?
Using a pump to remove air a molecule at a time from their vacuum chamber, ARF men achieved the equivalent of minus 8 atmospheres. The lunar vacuum is believed equivalent to minus 40 atmospheres.
CHRISTIAN
At that point, the scientists had to halt the experiment because the ion pump was pulling dissolved gas molecules from the stainless steel sides of the vacuum chamber, thereby unequalizing their vacuum.
In creating a material similar to the moon's surface, scientists ground up silicon dioxide into particles smaller than grains of talcum powder. The ARF team also experimented with olivene, a rock mineral which researchers at California Institute of Technology's jet propulsion laboratory believe present on the moon.
Read the Classified Ads
TURKU, Finland — (UPI) — Mrs. Anni Augusta Juhola, a 65-year-old widow, was held today for trial on charges that she killed an elderly woman neighbor of 30 years standing for the attentions of a 65-year-old widower.
Widow Held for Murder
After Murder of Opponent
Police alleged that Mrs. Juhola killed Anni Amanda Elo, 58, with a piece of wood Oct.27 after a quarrel over the unidentified widower's affections.
Tuesday, Nov. 6, 1962
MOSCOW — (UPI) The Soviet interplanetary rocket Mars-1 is hurting toward the planet Mars on a path that will bring its initial trajectory to the planet closer than planned, news agency TASS said today.
Tass said scientists plan to make in-flight corrections that eventually will bring the 1,970-pound space probe within 621 to 6,831 miles of the surface of Mars.
Soviet Rocket Mars-1 Will Be Near Miss
TASS said information received today showed that its path will bring it within 156,000 miles of the planet on its initial trajectory.
THE ROCKET was launched from a piggy-back satellite in orbit above the earth last Thursday on a 48 million mile journey that is expected to take seven months.
Its task is to photograph Mars and transmit the pictures back to earth.
It said the original program for the flight "envisaged its placing on the initial trajectory passing near Mars at a distance of up to 300,000 miles."
"THE DESIGN of the interplanetary station envisages correction of its movement in flight on radio signals from the earth with the help of a precise system of astro-orientation, and special engines for insuring the flight of the automatic station over the surface of Mars at altitudes ranging from 1,000 to 11,000 kilometers, (621 to 6,831 miles)," Tass said.
Tass said communications with the station were "fine" and it was responsive to radio commands.
--use
the fourth dimension: TIME
...still a mysterious concept to science. Time is only an idea, an abstraction...an area of shadow, speculation—and surprise.
--use
SEPT. 5, 1752, NEVER HAPPENED!... Nor did any date from Sept. 3 to 13, at least in England and the American Colonies. Why? The King decreed that these days would be skipped to correct a discrepancy between the Old English calendar and the newly adopted Gregorian calendar. This left puzzled Englishmen and colonists with one 19-day month and a 355-day year.
September 1752
5
--use
THE HAMSTER'S BUILT-IN "CONTINUOUS CLOCK" ...enables him to maintain his daily activities of eating and sleeping without the usual stimuli of light and darkness. He lives on exactly the same schedule even in total darkness.
Are you a person who likes to stand out? A Hamilton is both attractive and distinctive, a touch of excellent taste that you can wear every hour of a lifetime. They start as low as $35. Ask your favorite gift-giver. Hamilton Watch Co., Lancaster, Pa.
HAMILTON
Creator of the World's First Electric Watch
IT TAKES TIME TO MAKE TIME. Hamilton's extremely precise version of a timepiece takes from 6 to 9 months to produce. Half of the more than 2000 production steps are quality inspections which assume Hamilton accuracy.
ON
Watch
Accumatic
VIII-B
$59.95
Clover
$45
All prices
plus tax
TASS said at 3 a.m. CST today tn 1,970-pound rocket had reached a distance of 998,400 miles from earth.
12
M
6
It said by 3 a.m. CST Friday it will be a "distance of 1,614,000 miles from the earth."
The agency added:
"As shown by the telemeasurements, the conditions of the functioning of all apparatuses on the station remain within the pre-set limits. Radio apparatuses function normally."
The Mars-1 was speeding toward Mars at the same time the United
States Mariner-2 space probe was heading toward Venus.
VENUS is the closest planet to the earth toward the sun and Mars is the closest planet to the earth away from the sun.
The Mariner-2 is expected to pass within 21,000 miles of Venus sometime in the middle of December.
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
For Painting Those
HOMECOMING DECORATIONS
Mary Carter
BUY ONE
GET ONE
PAINTS
1717 West 6th
FREE
No Limit
VI 2-1411
LUNCHEON
AT
2:00
$39.50
$42.50
$39.50
$45.00
$42.50
$55.00
Individually styled, matched wedding bands... beautiful tu-tone 14K Florentine gold or exclusive high fashion designs.
Imperial
COLUMBIA
It's O.K. to
Owe RAY
It's O.K. to Owe RAY
You Buy the Rings — We'll Buy the License
Ray Christian JEWELERS
Ray Christian
JEWELERS
Formerly Gustafson
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Nov. 6, 1962
India Club to Send Aid To Indian War Aid Fund
Members of the India Club at KU will send monetary contributions and a letter to the Indian government supporting its current fight against the Red Chinese along the McMahon Line.
At a meeting of the club las night in the Kansas Union, Vinod Patel, Bombay, India, special student, said he would collect contributions from Indian students. He will send the money to the Prime Minister's War Aid Fund at the end of this week.
A letter containing two resolutions will be sent several days before. The resolutions are:
- "It is the duty of every Indian to give moral support to our government in the present situation and
in order to give such support we feel that we must contribute something for the war fund of India.
- "It is the humble and the noble duty of every Indian to fight for the nation if the freedom of our mother land is in danger."
The letter will also say that the Indian students are ready to sacrifice their studies if their country needs them, Patel said.
"We will send some money regularly every week," Patel said. "There is no reason to save up until we have a large amount."
The club may later solicit contributions from persons outside the club and used clothing from organized living groups.
Official Bulletin
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
Tau Sigma. 7.00 p.m. Robinson Gym.
Methodist Community Worship, 9:15
p.m.
TODAY
TOMORROW
Radio Production Center 7:30 p.m.
Room 220 Flint, Executive Comm. Meeting.
Catholic Masses, 7:00 a.m. 11:40 a.m.
St. Nicholas Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road.
Omega Tau Iota, 7:00 p.m., Sudlar House, "OTA Convention Report."
El Atenco se reumirá miercoles el 7 de noviembre y salia 11 de Fraser. El Doctor Jorge Lines dura una conferencia titulada “Notas de las reuniones” en la Academia. Todos este cordialmente invitas.
Allen Crafton, professor emeritus of speech and drama department, will be the guest speaker at the SUA Poetry Hour, 4:30 Thursday in the Kansas Union Browsing Room. Prof. Crafton will speak on the subject "Poetry of Many Moods."
Crafton to Be At Poetry Hour
BUENOS AIRES — (UPI) Two Argentina warships scheduled to join in the blockade of Cuban arms shipments will reach the Caribbean Thursday.
Argentina Will Join Blockade
The announcement came last night from Rear Admiral Carlos Kolungia, secretary of the navy. He did not disclose the position where the Argentine vessels will meet U.S. forces.
Earlier in the evening, Foreign Minister Carlos Muniz announced that the Argentine army will build up a brigade if necessary in order to support hemispheric peace. He said the action would be taken under a resolution adopted by the Organization of American States.
State Farm Insurance
Off. Ph. VI 3-5666 530 W 23rd.
Res. Ph. VI 3-5994 Lawrence, Kan.
Paul E. Hodgson Local Agent
Argentine Air Force planes have flown with U.S. aircraft in a patrol of the Caribbean since Sunday.
Argentina has been the first Latin American country to participate in the air and sea patrols around Cuba.
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
Indian Troops Drive Back Reds; U.S. Aid On Way
United Press International
NEW DELHI—Indian forces drove back two Communist Chinese attacks in northeast India today amid reports the Reds have begun a troop buildup near the vital air supply base of Chusul in the northwest.
The defense ministry announced that the Chinese had been repulsed in the central and eastern sectors of the northeast region of the border region.
"In the Subansiri division . . . one of our patrols encountered some Chinese and there was an exchange of fire," a defense ministry spokesman said. "In this action, our patrol inflicted casualties on the Chinese without any loss to themselves.
"IN THE VICINITY of Walong, our troops fired on a party of Chinese who tried to approach one of our positions and forced them to withdraw."
Galbraith said the U.S. aid "is not intended to involve India in a military alliance or otherwise influence her policy."
The military flareup was reported as United States Ambassador John Kenneth Galbraith said the United States is giving India military aid without any strings attached.
The ambassador said the United States accepted India's non-alignment policy and "we would not change our stand now." He assured Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru of this again when he saw him yesterday.
"OUR AID IS designed to help defend India's independence and not to compromise it," he said.
Galbraith added that the United States does not want the border conflict between India and the invading Red Chinese continued or extended.
"We share fully India's interest in a peaceful settlement that does not reward the attacker," he said.
In another development, it was announced that ousted Defense Minister V. K. Krishna Menon and four retired military commanders will be members of India's newly-formed 30-man National Defense Council. Later, amidst rumors of his impending resignation from his new post as minister of defense production, Krishna Menon said in a speech that no matter what his job, "I will contribute my mite to the country's war efforts."
JIM'S CAFE
838 Mass.
OPEN
24 hrs. a day
BREAKFAST OUR
SPECIALTY
S.U.A. ELECTION PARTY ELECTION RESULTS COMMENTARY
by
Congressman Frank Ellsworth and
Profs. Titus & Grumm Of the KU Political Science Dept.
PLUS
VOX-UP DEBATE
BAND 7:30-8:30
FREE REFRESHMENTS
UNION BALLROOM
THERE WILL ALSO BE TELEVISION SETS TO KEEP YOU INFORMED ON ELECTION RETURNS
TONIGHT
Page 5
Soviet Jets Are Stationed in Cuba
Tuesday. Nov. 6, 1962 University Daily Kansan
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Soviet jet bombers in Cuba could turn out to be a sticking point in negotiations for removal of offensive weapons from the island, U.S. officials said today.
Administration sources said recent U.S. aerial reconnaissance showed there might be more IL28 jets in Cuba than were known to have been there a week ago — around 27 to 28, instead of the earlier estimate of about 20.
OFFICIALS SAID the number of jet bombers observed assembled They. said $ ^{ \textcircled{4}} $
Officials said no dismantled missile equipment had been shipped out of Cuba. To take them out, Khrushchev must send more ships to Cuban ports, probably some of them ships with extra-large hatches.
Negotiations to settle the Cuban crisis remained a waiting game.
KHRUSHCHEV, in his Oct. 28 letter, did not spell out what weapons he would take back to Russia, but merely promised President Kennedy to remove "those weapons which you call offensive."
These officials said there was no evidence the bombers had been assembled since Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev's Oct. 28 promise to remove offensive weapons from Cuba.
OFFICIALS SAID the number had slightly increased. They said, however, this might indicate only that some of the planes had been moved out of camouflage.
U. S. officials reported that a number of Soviet vessels have been steaming about the Atlantic, sailing "various courses," apparently waiting for Red Cross inspection procedures to be set up for in-bound ships.
The bombers are capable of carrying nuclear weapons.
On the other hand, they also said there was no evidence any of the bombers were being dismantled, though dismantling of missile bases has gone ahead.
The Russians first proposed the idea of Red Cross inspections of ships bound for Cuba to check for offensive weapons. The United States agreed to the idea.
IF THE SOVIET ships proceeded to Cuba before these procedures are put into effect, the ships would encounter the U.S. Navy blockade, which is still in operation.
An international committee of the Red Cross at Geneva expressed initial approval, but asked the Castro government if it approved. Yesterday, the international committee said it had received Cuba's consent and it was sending an official to New York to work out details.
IT APPEARED that this part of inspection procedures might be agreed to fairly soon. But U.S. officials said this would solve only one-third of the problem.
Barcelona Alerted for Rain After Recent Heavy Floods
BARCELONA, Spain — (UPI) Emergency services were ordered on 24-hour alert for new rains predicted in flood stricken Barcelona province today.
Heavy rains Sunday caused three small rivers in nearby Valleu Valley to overflow, flooding the rich farm and industrial area around Barcelona, leaving 1,000 persons homeless and disrupting rail, road and telephone communications. There were no reported deaths.
The latest floods washed out much of the restoration carried on since the disastrous September floods, Spain's worst modern natural disaster, which killed more than 700 persons and caused an estimated $50 million damage.
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
Wednesday Night
CHICKEN SPECIAL
All You Can Eat
ONLY $1
drink and dessert extra
Little Banquet
The United States also wants international inspection of vessels departing Cuba to see that the offensive weapons are shipped out. And it wants ground inspection of missile sites.
Ample free parking on the Malls
It appaarged these last two points would be much more difficult to negotiate, particularly with Premier Fidel Castro.
Assistant Defense Secretary Arthur Sylvester said yesterday that the U.S. naval blockade and air reconnaissance flights were made.
British Guiana Talks Break Down
LONDON — (UFI) — Constitutional and independence talks for British Guiana, a key Caribbean colony now ruled by Marxist Premier Cheddi B. Jagan, broke down today.
Commonwealth and Colonial Secretary Duncan Sandys ended more than two weeks of stalemate and adjourned the conference because the colony's political leaders failed to reach agreement on plans for independence.
SANDYS SAID the talks would be reconvened at some future date. Jagan, educated in the United States but now an avowed admirer of Cuban Premier Fidel Castro, had held out against opposition leaders, demands for elections before independence and a change of the voting system from direct election to proportional representation.
JOE'S BAKERY
Open 24 Hours
Night Deliveries
412 W.9th VI 3-4720
The opposition leaders, Forbes Burnham and Peter d'Aguiar, also objected to Jagan's plan to lower the voting age to 18 a plan that would presently benefit Jagan because of the greater proportion of young persons of Indian extraction living in the colony.
D'AGUIAR, after leaving the meeting room, said he was "at least happy that Dr. Jagan not being given the power to lead us into the paths which he wants.
D'Aguiar alleged that Jagan during the talks had made no effort to deny the charges which D'Aguiar made at the opening of the conference that Jagan was in the pay of the Communist powers.
The chief objection of Jagan by the opposition leaders is that as a Marxist they charge he would put an independent British Guiana within the Communist fold.
They have insisted on elections before independence because they believe that Jagan would be defeated.
KU SPORTS
on
DIAL KLWN 1320
7:30 a.m. Daily Sports Shorts
5:00 Today In the Enemy Camp
5:20 Tom Hedrick Sports
HOMECOMING DANCE
Sponsored by the SUA Homecoming Committee
Saturday, Nov. 10, At the Student Union Ballroom 8-12:30 Tickets: $3.00 per couple
MIRIAM MAKEBA
African Folk Singer will appear during the dance
MUSIC BY:
W
Warren Durret
"K.C.'s Own Band" winner of the
Best Band 1961 Award
— ALUMS INVITED —
Page 6
100%
1000
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Nov. 6, 1962
---
FALL BOO
Starts Wednesday, November
PICASSO'S VARIATIONS ON VELASQUEZ' PAINTING "The Maids of Honor," and other recent works. By Jaime Sabortes. Illus. with 59 colorplates and several black and white. Beautiful volume, $11\frac{1}{4}" \times 15\frac{1}{2}", sure to become a collector's item, containing another series of variations on an earlier painting; this volume is a joy, beautifully reproduced, the paintings are bright and restrainedly free, including a few canvases done in the midst of the Variations." Pub.at $30.00 Only $17.95
★ ★ ★
THE GREAT AMERICAN WEST. A pictorial history from Coronado to the Last Frontier. By James D. Horan. 650 illustrations with many in color with text comprising a comprehensive account of the West as it actually was. Pub. at $10.00 Only $4.95
THE GREAT AMERICAN WEST
A Pictorial History from Concord to the Last Frontier
by JANES D. MORAN
THE GREAT
AMERICAN
WEST
A Practical History from
Cowboys as the Great Frontier
by JANES D. MORAN
AMERICAN SCIENCE AND INV History. By Mitchell Wilson. Ow gravings, photos, and paintings. world of America's great scientific have given us the automobile, thesia, etc. Ideal gift for teen-ag Size 91/4" x 121/4". Pub. at $10.00
★ ★
GATES OF FEAR: Great Exploits of By Barnaby Conrad. Profusely drawings. Captures the essence counts of the great matadors Dominguin, others. Great writing etc. Pub. at $7.50
★ ★
THIS WAS ANDERSONVILLE. by Roy Meredith. With 49 rare ings. The incredible, true stor Military Prison and the terrible Union prisoners, packed in its $12.50
★★
MATTHEW BRADY: Historian Horan. Over 500 illus. including restricted Brady-Handy collection raphy of America's legendary $7.50
KANSAS UNION
Tuesday. Nov. 6, 1962 University Daily Kansan
OOK SALE
November 7-8:00 a.m.
ICE AND INVENTION. A Pictorial of Wilson. Over 1200 drawings, end paintings. Tells the story of the great scientists and inventors who automobile, television, radar, anesft for teen-agers and adults as well. Pub. at $10.00___Only $4.95
★★
Great Exploits of the World's Bullrings. Profusely illus. with photos and the essence of bullfighting in acat matadors: Belmonte, Manolete Great writing by Hemingway, Tynan Only $2.98
★★
SONVILLE. By John McElroy. Ed. With 49 rare photographs and drawle, true story of the Andersonville the terrible existence of the 41,000acked in its open stockade. Pub. at Only $4.95
★★
Y: Historian With a Camera. By J. D.lus. including exclusive pictures from indy collection. First authorized biogs legendary photographer. Pub. at Only $3.95
GREAT PAINTINGS OF THE WORLD. A tour of the world's great museums, each volume containing at least 24 hand-tipped color plates, many with gold, and often double-page size, and 65 monochromes including brilliant, enlarged details. Text by the museum director or other outstanding authority — comprising an art education and encyclopedic wealth of fine reproductions. Flexible binding. $ 1 1 \frac{1}{4} " \times 1 5 " $ .
★★★
THE MOVIES. By Richard Griffith and Arthur Mayer. Tremendous pictorial history of motion pictures from prenickelodeon days to the present in a massive $91/4''\times 121/2'' volume containing 1,000 wonderful pictures and 150,000 brilliant words of commentary and captions. Pub. at $15.00 Only $5.95
THE MOVIES
RICHARD CAMPBELL AND WINNIE LAWYER
BOOK
N
STORE
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Nov. 6, 1962
Around the World
Lack of Info Blocks Mars Shot Signal
MANCHESTER, England —(UPI) The Jodrell Bank radio astronomy station has been unable to pick up signals from the Soviet Mars probe because the Russians have not answered a request for transmitting times.
"We have tried several times to pick up signals from the rocket but this is very difficult to do in the absence of the information we requested several days ago," a spokesman for the astronomy station said yesterday.
Bulgarian Communist Chief Ousts Seven Top Officials
VIENNA — (UPI) — Bulgarian Communist Party Chief Todor Zhivkov, fresh from a flying one-day visit to Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev, today announced a purge of seven top-level Stalinist party and government officials.
Premier Anton Yugov was fired and removed from his post on the central committee of the Bulgarian Communist Party. Also purged were former Party Chief Vulko Chervenkov, Ambassador to Peijing.
23 Die in Car-Train Crash
In Yugoslav Macedonia
BELGRade, Yugoslavia — (UPI)
— Twenty-three persons in one passenger car were killed when a train derailed yesterday at Tabanovce, in Yugoslavia Macedonia, according to the Yugoslav news agency Taniug.
The news agency said the other 17 persons in the car were injured. The train's engine jumped the rails as it switched to another track, Tanjug reported. A guard's van and the passenger car piled up behind it.
Man Retires After 56 Years
ST. LOUIS — (UPI) — Theophil Klemme has retired after 56 years with the same publishing firm.
Klemme started as an assistant bookkeeper in 1906 when he was 19 years old and advanced to head bookkeeper and cashier of Eden Publishing House, now owned and operated by the Evangelical and Reformed Church, part of the United Church of Christ.
Vienna Court Looks for Heirs
VIENNA — (UPI) — The Rackersburg District Court sought information today on the whereabouts of the heirs to the estate of Kajetane Countess Wurmbrand-Stupach and Franz Karl Count Wurmbrand-Stupach.
The count died in 1855, the countess in 1863.
The Coast Guard Wants You
Any student interested in the Coast Guard Reserve should contact his local representative.
The representative for this area is Lt. Michael J. McQueney, Shawnee Mission, Kans., or write Commander, Second Coast Guard District, 1520 Market St., St. Louis, Mo.
Israeli Shot by Jordanian
TIBERIAS, Israel —(UPI)— One Israeli settler was wounded by Jordanian gunfire on a farm in the South Sea of Galilee area yesterday. Israeli sources reported.
Christmas Words to Be Aired LONDON — (UPI) — Queen Elizabeth's Christmas message will be pre-recorded for radio and television this year so it can be transmitted locally throughout the Commonwealth.
340 At Civil Defense Meet
340 At Civil Defense Meet MONTPELIER, Vt. — (UPI) — About 340 persons attended a Civil Defense survival training class last night. Average attendance before the Cuban crisis was between 30 and 40.
Greyhound's Owner is Sought LONDON—(UPI)—Officials today are seeking the owner of a white greyhound that arrived at Euston Railway Station.
While en route from the north of England, the dog ate the address label on its cage.
Vatican Uncovers Basilica
RAVENNA, Italy — (UFI)— Vatican archeologists have announced the discovery of a 4th century basilica in the Roman Catacombs.
The underground basilica, measuring 55 by 26 feet, was found in the Catacombs near the Church of "Quo Vadis" on the outskirts of Rome. It contained the tombs of unidentified early Christian martys and fragments of a large marble tabernacle.
Father Umberto Fasola of the Pontifical Commission for Sacred Archeology made the announcement at the recent International Congress of Christian Archeology here. He said experts are trying to discover to which martyrts the church was dedicated.
Moscow — (UPI) The Soviet Union tonight ended its pre-election moratorium on Berlin proposals and opened a new diplomatic drive for a German settlement.
Russia Calls for Berlin Settlement
First Deputy Premier Alexei call for conclusion of a German peace treaty.
Puppet School to Take Tour
ALLENTOWN, Pa. — (UPI) — A novel School for Fuppeteers has been set up by a local department store (Hess's) to train men and women puppeteers to operate a show called "The Mouse Before Christmas," which will go on a nationwide tour of department stores and shopping centers, beginning here Oct. 27.
Among other cities, the puppet extravaganza will appear in Philadelphia; Pittsburgh; Detroit; Grand Rapids, Mich.; St. Louis; Rochester, N. Y.; Indianapolis; Baltimore; Richmond, Va.; Charlotte, N. C., and Montreal, Canada.
(EARLIER TODAY in Berlin Soviet Ambassador to East Germany Mikhail G. Pervukhin again proposed an East German peace treaty that would call for an end to Western rights in Berlin.)
With the resumption of calls for a Berlin settlement it was recalled that Soviet Premier Nikitki Khrushchev had said earlier he would not press the German question until Kosygin, speaking on the eve of the 45th anniversary celebration of the Russian revolution, issued a new after the elections in the United States.
ALTOUGH THE SOVIETS lost no time in returning to the subject of Berlin on the American election day, Kosygin's televised address
See related story page 5
See related story page 5 was strikingly, mild in tone. He did not call for ouster of Allied forces from West Berlin nor make the
usual Soviet threats to sign a separate peace treaty without an East-West settlement.
Instead, he said a German peace settlement can be reached "without affecting the fate of any state."
KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN only at the BIG BUY 23rd & Iowa
Quality Watch Repair
Lowest Prices
DANIELS
Pall Mall Presents~ GIRL WATCHER'S GUIDE
HORN-RIMMED
BOOKSTACKER
Dalin
T
CAMPUS TYPE III
The Bookstacker serves the cause of classical literature in various ways. Perhaps the least of these is in keeping the rows of books properly aligned and the jackets free of dust.
Her most important contribution is in improving the environment for study, enhancing the halls of learning with her own classical form. Many a college man has discovered a previously unfelt craving for knowledge simply because he received his copy of Homer from the hand of a deep-breathing redhead who sighed, "I think Homer is the most!" Yes, it pays to take a good look at the classics now and then.
Among cigarettes, Pall Mall is a classic -famous length, fine tobacco . . . no flat "filtered-out" flavor, no dry "smoked-out" taste. Try Pall Mall and see!
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 NOCT SIGNO VINCES
"WHEREVER PARTICULAR
PEOPLE CONGREGATE"
PALL MALL
$ \textcircled{A} $ A T Co. Product of The American Tobacco-Company "Tobacco is our middle name"
Tuesday. Nov. 6, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Along the JAYHAWKER trail
Considering that the Kansas Jayhawkers are winning football games again this year and have a remote shot at the Big Eight title and a trip to the Orange Bowl, the school spirit across Mt. Oread isn't bad.
Homecoming fervor is beginning to rustle across the campus as the first visible signs of welcoming decorations for KU alumni appear.
Pep rallies will be held this week encouraging those fighting Javhawkers to "Husk some corn and listen to those Cornhuskers wall."
YES, THE SCHOOL SPIRIT will probably reach its height on Mt. Oread this week.
By Ben Marshall
In comparison, the school spirit showed by Kansas State students at the KU-Kansas State debacle last Saturday makes the spirit around here minute to the nth degree.
Our rivals from the "Udder University" haven't won a football game this season. Kansas State has been smeared across the gridiron every Saturday since Sept. 22. Each weekend, save one, they have been beaten badly.
The Wildcats have scored one touchdown all year long, while opponents have crushed the K-State defense for 211 points in seven games.
AND A GROUP of students—evidently apart from the student body—had the audacity to hang K-State's coach Doug Weaver in effigy last week before the KU-Kansas game.
Saturday at Manhattan was inspirational, even to an outsider—a KU fan.
Kansas State students cheered every time the Purple got the ball, completed a pass, or picked up a two-yard gain. It appeared as though every play meant to them the difference between an Orange Bowl trip and second-place spoils.
The Wildcats left the field whipped,
trailing 15-0 at the halftime intermission. As they charged across the field to the ramp that led to their dressing room, several thousand K-State students gave the team a standing ovation, and the Purple band swung into the 'Aaggie Fight Song.'
Tulsa Backfielder Leads in Passing
KANSAS CITY, Mo.—(UPI)—The masterful passing arm of Tulsa's Stuart McBirnie gave the Hurricane backfielder the total offensive lead in the Missouri Valley Football Conference, despite a 21-yard net loss running.
McBirnie, hitting 50 of 106 pass attempts, averaged 5.5 yards a throw and gained 578 yards aerially. The 21-yard loss running gave him a 557-yard net offense record. He also led in punting with 1,239 yards on a 38.7-yard average.
Wichita's Alex Zyskowski, gaining 439 passing and 77 rushing, was second in the league with 516 net offense. Tulsa's Ramiro Escandon gained 485 yards on 49 rushing and 436 passing.
Texas Wild About Football
TEMPLE, Tex.—(UPI) —Football fever grows in Texas.
The Temple Daily Telegram, a central Texas newspaper, published a 1962 wallet-sized booklet containing 17 high school schedules in the Temple area along with this year's Southwest Conference schedule.
IT'S A GOOD thing the students who hanged Doug Weaver in effigy weren't caught, because the students giving their team a standing ovation would have hanged them right on the spot—from the goalpost—for real. The end result?
Kansas State lost again. But they broke the huddle and charged up to the line like they wanted to play football. And they turned in their best offensive performance of the season, netting 14 first downs and 172 yards of total offense.
As Homecoming approaches, maybe we could take a lesson from our neighbors up the Kaw.
And they don't even have a winning team.
The Kansas Jayhawkers were confident they could beat K-State in football over the weekend. The same was true for the cricket team.
By Vinay Kothari
Cricketers Defeat K-State
The Lawrence cricket team defeated Kansas State for the second year in a row with a lead of four wickets and 17 runs at Memorial Stadium Sunday afternoon. Four of the 10 players on the Lawrence team were not out.
The final score: K-State 61 runs, Lawrence 78 runs, and six wickets down.
CRICKET BEARS a faint resemblance to American baseball.
Each team consists of 11 players. It takes 10 out to retire a side.
There are two batsmen 22 yards apart on the ground. Both batsmen protect wickets, three upright sticks supporting a pair of small wood rods known as "bails."
The batsman is out if the bails are dislodged by the bowler, or if the ball hits the stumps and then hits the batsman.
THE BOWLER is little different than a pitcher in baseball. The pitcher throws the ball, but the bowler
bowles the ball by giving full swing to his arm over his shoulder.
One batsman may run to score a run by swapping wickets with the other batsman, provided that he is not thrown out or caught out under baseball—like pop fly and base running rules.
K-State players started their bating first. Luck was against them. Their first player was out in the first over (each "over" consists of six balls).
Most feared bowler of the day was Lalit Kothari, Bombay, India, senior and captain of the Lawrence team. He took four wickets.
Scared, shaky, and unpracticed K-State players fumbled haltingly throughout the game. The whole team was dismissed in 61 runs. This score is below the average score of a good team.
VINAY VALIA of the Lawrence team prevented the opposite team from scoring many runs. He got two wickets and gave up 14 runs.
Pravin Kothari, Bombay, India, and Ramesh Doshi, Rajkot, India, opened the Lawrence team batting. They did not play well. K-State players became hopeful. Ramesh Gandhi, junior, Bombay, India, came second down (he came to bat after two players were out). He hit the ball in all directions and made 41 runs in very short time.
The score mounted to 78 runs.
HENRIK LAMBERT
HEAD OF THE CLASSICS
Only six of eleven players were needed to out-score K-State.
Open or closed, the shirt of top merit is Arrow's "Gordon Dover Club." Comfortable medium-point, button-down collar is softly rolled in the finest Oxford tradition. Placket front and plait in back are right for important occasions: The trimly tailored "Sanforized" cotton Oxford.
the standard high and assures permanent fit. $5.00.
Most fitting accessory is the Arrow Kwik Klip,
the instant knit tie with easily adjustable knot. $1.50.
FOUNDED 1851
ARROW
In the last game at Manhattan, Lawrence defeated K-State with a lead of 74 runs.
Traditionally the Finest for Discriminating Men
MEN'S SHIRT
MEDAL OF HONOR
Top honors go to the Arrow "Gordon Dover Club," classically styled in comfortable cotton Oxford. Button-down collar is softly rolled for a newer, neater but casual look. Trim placket front, and plait in back are all in the best tradition. Come in and see the whole collection now. In white or plain colors.
Weaver MEN'S STORE
$5.00
BALDWIN ART THEATRE
"Rocco and His Brothers" Italian, Original Uncut Version
7:00 p.m., Nov. 6, 7, 8
GEM THEATRE Baldwin, Kansas
ARENSBERG'S
819 Mass.
VI 3-3470
T
Bonnie
square
a
Squaring away a.
your sporting shoe
problems: A kiltied
cutie with a hint of
Highland fling about it.
$8.5
Black Suede or
Black Glow
Tramp
CHARGE ACCOUNTS INVITED
Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday. Nov. 6, 1962
Miriam Makeba Is Small but Volatile
---
Framed in blue, sometimes in fog-orange light, Miriam Makeba—a small candle of a woman alone upstage received a standing ovation at the conclusion of her folk music concert at Ottawa University last night.
Many KU students dotted the standing room only audience which brought Miss Makeba back for an encore and then thanked her with a second standing ovation.
OBVIOUSLY WEARY after the hour and forty-five minute show, Miss Makeba changed clothes quickly and then signed the autograph books of several dozen youngsters.
Then she walked across the Ottawa campus with school officials to attend a reception in her honor. Along the way she discussed her singing, goals, and ambitions.
Speaking in the same shy, often barely audible voice she used to thank her audience for their applause, she said that understanding was her goal.
"I try to tell stories with my songs." Miss Makeba said.
“THE SONGS I SING ARE sometimes happy songs, sometimes they are sad. When I sing each I try to understand the feelings involved and become what the song is,” Miss Makeba said.
From the moment Miss Makeba comes front-center until the spotlights wink the stage dark she is in command.
BUT MISS MAKEBA'S GRAND, forceful style is distinctly her own and however much comparisons suggest themselves they can readily be made inadequate; for she does not merely sing notes, but relies also on the dynamics of her full personality.
Mischief plays in her eyes like wind when she sings a gay Jewish harvest song, for example, but quickly disappears when she turns to an English version of "Love Tastes Like Strawberries."
A native of South Africa she was born in 1922 and has lived most of her life in Prospect Township, Johannesburg.
Miss Makeba will appear briefly at the Saturday night Homecoming Dance in Hoch Auditorium.
BLAYDON-ON-TYNE, England—(UPI) —Victor Poynter, 22, was fined $14 yesterday for buying his bride, Gloria, a beer at their wedding reception in a local pub.
Buys Bride Beer, Gets Fined
The bride was only 17.
GRANADA
NOW SHOWING
OMALTON • ELBA
HESTON • MARTINEIH
* NEWVILLE SHIMESSONS' PRODUCTION *
The Pigeon
That Took Rome
PANAVISSON • A PANAVISSON KILLEGE
GRANADA
MOW SHOWING!
CHARLTON • ELSA HESTON • MARTINEH
W NEWVILLE SHAKELSON'S PRODUCTION
The Pigeon That Rock Rome
PANAVISION • A PHOTOGRAPHY RELEASE
Shows At 7:00 & 9:00
COMING SOON
A ROSS HUNTER
PRODUCTION
"IF A MAN
ANSWERS"
...DON'T HANG UP!
Hang around for the FUN!
STARRING
SANDRA BOBBY
DEE DARIN
MICHELINE PRESTE • JOHN LUND
CO STARRING CESAR ROMERO • STEFANE POWERS
COLOR A Universal-International Picture
AND— WATCH FOR
"EL CID"
GRANADA
THEATRE • Telephone VIKING 3-5788
ROSS HUNTER
PRODUCTION
"IF A MAN
ANSWERS"
...DON'T HANG UP!
Hang around for the FUN!
A ROSS HUNTER PRODUCTION
"IF A MAN ANSWERS"
...DON'T HANG UP!
Hang around for the FUN!
STARRING
SANDRA BOBBY
DEE DARIN
MICHELLE PRESIE* JOHN LUND
CO STARRING CESAR ROMERO - STEFANIE POWERS
The Exhibit COLOR A Universal-international Picture
Jail Bars in Pastel Colors
SAN ANTONIO, Texas—(UPI) Southern Steel Co., a major manufacturer of jail equipment, says 90 per cent of the barred doors and windows it markets are painted in pastel colors.
Sign of the Times?
LONDON—(UPI)—Sign in a dress shop;
"maternity wear for the modern miss."
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results
A TRILOGY OF SHOCK AND HORROR!
AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL presents
EDGAR ALLAN POE'S
TALES OF TERROR
in PANAVISION® and COLOR
STARRING
VINCENT PRICE • PETER LORRE
BASIL RATHBONE SPOCK STAR DEBRA PAGET
"...and there was an oozing liquid putrescence
...all that remained of Mr. Valdemar." --POE
STARTS TOMORROW
-
Hurry; Ends Tonight!
"LADY AND THE TRAMP"
"ALMOST ANGELS"
VARSITY
THEATRE . . . Telephone VIKING 3-1065
NSA Qualification Tests To Be Dec.8
A branch of the U.S. Department of Defense, the National Security Agency (NSA), will give qualification tests here Dec. 8. Students interested in taking the test should apply for an admittance ticket now.
Application blanks for the test can be obtained through the College office or from Clifford Ketzel, associate professor of political science.
This application should be filled out and sent to the Educational Testing Service at Princeton, N.J.
NSA offers a variety of duties for all levels of college graduates with maiors from liberal arts fields.
Educational Testing Service will then send the student a ticket of admission telling the address.
Any person who is a native-born U.S. citizen and who has or is a candidate for at least a bachelor's degree is eligible to take the professional qualification test.
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
*
EXTRACURRICULAR ENTERTAINMENT
OFF CAMPUS
The Unique New National College Magazine
At Nearby Newsstands
At Nearby Newsstands
UDK
Charlie Classified Says
BRING IT BACK You Rascal You!
Special! Rascal Column will help you find your lost articles fast
★ Did you loan it?
★ Misplace it?
Just can't remember who borrowed it?
Try a Rascal Classified
Now through Nov. 12th Special Student Rate. Run your rascal classified 5 times for $1.00. Bring your ad and money to the Kansan Business Office.
JULIUS
1.
Tuesday, Nov. 6, 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 by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion.
Page 11
TRANSPORTATION
Want riders to Wichita and vicinity Fri-
riday. 10 a.m. Return Sunday
11th. Cell VI 3-4229. 11-8
Travel—only a limited number of airline flights still available for Thanksgiving and Christmas Holiday.
Suggest making reservations Now!
First National Travel Agency
746 Mass. VI 3-0152
FOR RENT
Cozy 3 room furnished apartment suitable for single person. Good location, warm bath and entrance, also parking. All utilities paid. $55 a month. 11-12
Single rooms, warm and comfortable, in nice house only 2 minutes from Union for upper classroom or graduate students. $27.50 a month. Phone VI 3-6966. 11-8
Two room well furnished apartment just
$55. 1447 Vermont. Phone VI 3-6218- 11-98
For rent a furnished 1 bedroom duplex
for boys. Call VI 3-118-
VI 3-6661
Four large-room apartment with private bath for 4 or 5 boys. Utilities paid. 3 blocks from campus. $25 each. Phone I 2-93343 or VI 3-7642. Available now.
Partly furnished 2 bedroom house $1/3 block from campus. Fully carpeted, screened porch, wood burning fireplace, fully air conditioned, full basement, large lot. $100 per month. If interested call VI 3-4291. 11-8
Furnished house. Can accommodate up to 19 people. My mobile phone line 11-9 if interested call VI 3-4291.
FOR RENT: extra nice furnished room for RENT. 1½ blocks from campus, two rooms. Call 1346 Ohio. Phone 2-2346 or VI 3-2322. After 6 p.m. phone 2-1031. 11-8
Vacancy in an apartment for a male student. Phone VI 3-6723. Union. Availability 11-8
Dissatisfied with your apartment? Call VI 3-0554 after 7 p.m. for information on renting or moving to Cozy 3 room furnished apartment suitable for single person. Good location. Private bath and entrance, also parking. Tuition fees paid. $55 a month. VI 3-2593. 11-7
FOR RENT. SINGLE ROOMS for men 1½ block from Union. Kitchen privileges, maid's room and linen. Availability: 1224 Oral or phone VT 2-1518. Call or see evenings.
unornished large 4-bedroom house with 2 baths. Parking space. Excellent location. Clean, reasonable, ideal for large family. Phone VI 3-7038. 11-6
ROOMS FOR MEN: Double room only, share with Law student; one-half block from Student Union; private entrance, quiet, telephone and utilities paid. Call VI 3-4092 or see at 1301 Louisiana after 5 p.m. weekdays. tf
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
3 room apartment, private bath. 1 block
away. Please call for more information.
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. $ \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.
FOUND
MISCELLANEOUS
One pair men's eye glasses. Color gray.
To call claim VI 3-1737. 11-6
Need a place for a private party or dance.
Phone VI 3-6376. 11-7
One time ___$1.25/inch
Monthly Rate
Every day ___ $1.00/inch
Classified Display Rates
No art work or engraving allowed
Call KU-376 or bring your ads to 111 Flint Hall
FOR SALE
Banjo: 5 string, Orpheum. $80. See Gene
Bernofsky at 704₁⁴ Mass. after 4 p.m.
TYPEWRITER: Remington Quiet-Ritler,
good condition.
4 p.m. Clinic Ritler 1-12
4 p.m. Clinic Ritler 1-12
YOU OR YOUR HOUSE ought to own a like new Classic 1929 Packard cont. the same phone as you like to have this red car with wire wheels, new white sidewalls, etc. for your phone V1-2-281 on Friday at 6:00 p.m. or after 9:00 p.m. Sunday evening. 11-9
Family heirlooms cut glass-pressed glass-
Haviland-art glass-carnival glass. Brass
banquet lamp and many other items. See
at 1725 Vermont. 11-8
H. H. Scott L.T.-ten FM tuner. Rek-o-
Kut K335 turntable, Shure M212 stereo
arm slash cartridge, Falchid 212 turn-
table, and a dynamik MKMII 60 watt amp.
arm. At lowest speed. Will finance less than half price. Will finance Phone III 8-919. 11-8
Stereo or hi-fi diamond needles for most makes. Half price during November. Don't wait, buy them now at Pettengill-Davis, 723 Mass. tf
Used Rathen TV with AM-FM phonon-
dials guaranteed 11-7 Davis, 725 Mass.
new stereo FM—new portable stereos—new AM-FM radios—new FM radio dis-
tances as low as $2637—new month, Rock Stoneback's, 929 Massachusetts. St.
1960 Vauxhall. Good condition. Phone VI 2-3684. 11-6
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in the newest—Pet Phone VI1-329-Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 pm week days.
4 new 700-1X, 100 level big edge new
200-1X, 150 level big edge new
700-1Xs. All four tires cut to $88.00
installed! No federal tax. Hurry to Ray
Sears' Discount Tire Center - 11-6
Mass. St.
Corvair-Vallant-Lancer Owners! Four lst line new narrow white tubeless tires For $55.00 per $55.00 stalled! Ray Stoneback's Discount Center. 929 Mass. St.
Used G.E. Electric Dryer, GUARANTEED $49.97. Used usher dryer combination. late-model — perfect — cut to $135.00. Hurry to Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. St.
Used TVs $5.00 each! Six set must go on!
Rocky Stoneback's, 929 Mass. St.
11-6
Transistor Radios! 6 transistors now $10.97! AM-FM radios—twin speaker now $45.97! FM radios now $26.97. Ray Stone-back's, 929 Mass. St. 11-12
3-speed Royce Union 26" men's or ladies'
2195 Mastodon 24"
3295 Masson. Used ubles $10.00 each. 11-12
Sports Car Compact Owners Attention!
We have all sizes of Snow treads avail-
able. We offer backpack's Discount
Center, 929 Mass. St., 1,000 new tires at
low discount prices! 11-12
All kinds of house plants. Potted . . .
Including philodendron to be used for
room dividers and in picture windows.
Phone VI 3-4207. tt
TV shopping? Magnavox 24" automatic TV has a 3 year picture tube warranty. Get it from just $149.90. See the magnificent Magnavox at Pettinell-Davis, 723 Mass.
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.
tt
Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, nimeographed and bound for $4.00 per call. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
TYPING PAPER BARGAINS: Pink
typing paper 85c per ream. Yellow
paper only 85c per ream.
per pound The Lawrence Outlook. 1005
Massachusetts, open all day. TTF
2 bedroom house 1/2 block from campus.
Fully carpeted, screened porch, wood
floor. Kitchen with a condition
full basement with a large lot. $10500.
If interested call VI 3-4291.
HELP WANTED
Car hostess and fountain help wanted to work dawns 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. You are eligible if you can work two shifts per week. Contact Tom Dixon, Dixon Drive-In Restaurant, 2500 W. 6th or phone VI 3-7446.
Business School junior who wants to learn discount merchandising on part time extra help basis. Must be able to work 2:30 to 5:30 p.m. daily, and 8:30 to work during Xmas break or work time during Xmas vacation. Dec. 24th. Do not apply unless you can work these hours. Apply in person at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. St. 11-6
TYPING
Fast accurate typing Secretary for MSA at 603 Lawrence Avenue, VI 3-521@ 603 Lawrence Avenue
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, reports, Electric typewriter, Reasonable writer, Typewriter, 2521 Alabama, Ph. VI 3-8568.
Eldowney. 2521 Alabama, Ph. VI 3-8568.
English major and former secretary will type themes and theses on electric typewriter. For neat and accurate work call Mrs. Melisand Jones, VI 3-5267. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPEIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, these, and books; an electric typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Pattli, VI 3-8379.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type
theses, term papers, and themes, neatly
on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs.
Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tt
Experienced secretary with electric type-
er equipment, and telephone
Phone Nancy Cain at VI 3-08248.
Experienced typist. 7 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, first accurate service. Reasonable salary. Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale Rd., VI 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 do typing in home. Fast.
accurate, neat work, Reasonable rates.
Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff
VI 2-1743.
Typist experienced in theses and term papers. Prompt service, reasonable rates, electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Howard Mhlenger at VI 3-4409. tf
Typing — reasonable rates, neat and ac-
crobate. M. Bodin, 825 Greyer Terr. VI · 3-188
M., Bodin, 825 Greyer Terr. VI
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.
Supports 35 manuscripts.
Experience in education and sciences.
Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. VI 2-1546. tf
WANTED
Baby sister wanted for 1 baby girl 8:00
Baby brother wanted for own twin 11:50
Phone VI 3-8810.
GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I study notes.
Completely revised and extremely comprehensive. $4. For free delivery call VI 3-8246. tf
BUSINESS SERVICES
RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. V 3-1267.
LARRY CRUM suggests all kinds of Pancakes. T-Bone steak only 98c. We are open 24 hours a day. "K"-Pancake Grill and Sundries. 14th and Mass. if
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
mentary services. Ola Smitt 1939; M39; Mass. Call V5-3263.
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center. 1218
Conn. Personal service—sectionalized
birds, lizards, masters, chameleons, turtles,
and pigs, etc., plus complete lines.
et supplies. tt
LOST
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
Lost a Woman's reward: round, yellow gold Alton. Reward. Contact 363 S Corr.
Black billfold with white camoe class.
important papers and money. Reward:
Lost Halloween night. Call VI 2-0703
after 5 p.m.
Lost Alpha Delta Pi pin chained to Triangle pin on October 31 in vicinity of Fraser or Room 110. Please contact Nancy Brown at BI 3-7847. $10 reward. 11-6
baggage colored leather tobacco pouch in vicinity of 28 Strong, 2:30 p.m. Tues- flall I 2-0452 or leave with secretary in Psychology Clinic. 11-8
1962 KU class ring with green set in-
tention. Virtually Marilyn Walz. VIII 3-190. Reward. 11-8
STUDENTS
Grease Jobs . . $1.00
Brake Adi. . . . 98c
Automotive Service
Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel
Balancing
7 a.m.-11 p.m.
PAGE CREIGHTON
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd
HOMECOMING
MUMS GIANT BLOOM
Order Early from Jay Janes
or Call for Delivery
941 Mass.
Flower
ALLISON
AT
THOMAS
Flower Shop
ALLISON
AT
THOMAS
VI3-3255
Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Nov. 6, 1962
Smile Is Contagious, But KU Football Isn't
A short, slightly stocky man with a contagious smile tipped back in his swivel chair placing his hands behind his head—preparing to deliver a long, carefully considered observation.
"I think we ought to snuff out college football," he said casually.
Perhaps this is an unrepresentative statement for Frederick Samson, assistant professor of physiology, but it revealed a dimension of the man that the varied science journals neatly stacked in the tall, metal frame cabinet did not.
"KU is becoming a better school year by year," he said, "but building a better football team has not helped its image academically."
"All good schools don't have football tegns," he continued.
"See what a minor role subsidized athletics play in schools like Harvard or Yale?"
Prof. Samson, originally a Bostonian, went to the University of Chicago, a non-football school, because of "its intellectual greatness," he explained.
School spirit should mean that the students are interested in the well-being and the future development of their school as an educational institution, he said.
"But the kind of school spirit we have now is creating a false type of hero image. The high school student is looking more and more to the college athlete as the man he should emulate," Prof. Samson contended.
"KU will become a great school," Prof. Samson added, "when students come here simply because the school has teachers who intellectually stimulate them."
He said that Kansas is exporting
THE LEGENDARY FILM STAR KATHY HANSEN
Mrs. Ralph Reed
1948 Queen to be In Homecoming
Mrs. Ralph R. Reed of Lawrence will represent KU homecoming queens of the past during the 1962 celebration this Friday and Saturday.
Mrs. Reed, the former Ann Cowger of Topeka, reigned at the 1948 KU Homecoming. She and her husband, Ralph R. Reed, holder of A.B. and M.D. degrees from KU, have lived in Lawrence since 1956.
Mrs. Reed will participate in the halftime ceremonies of the Nebraska-Kansas football game when queen Barbara Schmidt of Kansas City and attendants Karen Jo Emel of Colby and Anne Peterson of Clifton are honored.
FAST FINISHED
Laundry
Service
RISK'S
613 Vermont
many good people. But the state can import an appropriate share, he added, if the stress is placed on academics rather than on the football image.
Prof. Samson, who has traveled in Europe, pointed out that athletic competition in Moscow is not between schools, but between cities.
He compared subsidized athletics to a University-supported movie industry.
Taking a different approach, Prof. Samson questioned the theory that football players are healthier because of exercise they receive in playing football.
"When the movie industry or subsidized athletics get too big, the goals of the University are affected." Prof. Samson concluded.
"Football players are more susceptible to infectious diseases and are more liable to get smashed-up joints of one kind or another," he said.
"And if football is so good physiologically, why aren't we doing more for the girls," he quipped.
WASHINGTON—(UPI)—The Air Force said today that Maj. Rudolf Anderson, killed in a mission over Cuba, and Maj. Richard S. Heyser were the two reconnaissance pilots who "obtained the first conclusive evidence of the Soviet missile build-up in Cuba."
Anderson Praised for Fatal Cuban Flight
Anderson and Heyser, presumably flying U2s, took their photographic evidence on Oct. 14.
Heyser was one of the Air Force pilots who accompanied Gen. Curtis E. LeMay, Air Force chief of staff, to the White House last week for a call on President Kennedy. Although he was identified then as one of the reconnaissance pilots, he
Ham Club Meets Thursday in Lab
The first meeting of the KU Ham Club will be held Thursday night at 7:30 in Room 201 of the Electrical Engineering Lab.
Frank Scamman, secretary of the club, announced that the topics to be discussed at this meeting are the transmitter hunt and the relocation of the ham shack.
was not specifically singled out for the Oct. 14 mission.
He said the club will continue to hold monthly meetings throughout the year.
ANDERSON disappeared on another mission on Oct. 27. The Defense Department has refused to confirm Cuban reports that he was shot down and has not gone beyond its original statement that he died in action.
He is the only U.S. casualty of the Cuban crisis.
Apalachicola, Fla. He has been an Air Force officer since Feb., 1951.
Heyser, 35, is a native of Battle Creek, Mich., and his home now is
Gen. Thomas S. Power, commander of the Strategic Air Command, revealed the Anderson and Heyser roles in a statement made at Anderson's funeral today in Greenville, S.C.
In his statement, Power said "It is because of men like Maj. Anderson that this country has been able to act with determination during these fateful days."
Kirsten's
Hillcrest Shopping Center
Sports Wear
Majestic Jr. House of
White Stag Milwaukee
Helen Harper Patty Woodard
Open evenings
Get Lucky Play"Crazy Questions"
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!
(Based on the hilarious book "The Question Man.")
RULES: The Reuben H. Donnelley Corp. will judge entries on the basis of humor (up to $%), clarity and freshness (up to $%) and appropriateness (up to $%), 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:
After the ball is over
THE QUESTION: When may the um-
pire call a strike?
THE ANSWER:
THE ANSWER:
Mein Kampf
THE QUESTION: Hey, whose kampf is this, anyway?
THE JACK OF DIAMONDS
THE QUESTION: What is the most expensive trunk accessory of the Rolls Royce?
THE ANSWER:
HORSELESS CARRIAGE
THE QUESTION: What would you call a goat-drawn cart?
The answer is:
THE ANSWER:
5280 feet
THE QUESTION: How large is the prac-
tice of the average pilotstud?
THE ANSWER:
Don't fire until you see the whites of their eyes
THE QUESTION: Say, Sarge, what's the best way to get a purple heart?
Get Lucky
the taste to start with...the taste to stay with
The question is: IF SOCRATES WERE ALIVE TODAY, WHATWOULD HE ADVISE SMOKERS? Good, smart advice. Of course it makes sense to enjoy the fine-tobacco taste of Lucky Strike. This taste is the best reason to start with Luckies . the big reason Lucky smokers stay Lucky smokers. And this same taste is what makes Lucky Strike the favorite regular cigarette of college students Try it today.
LUCKY STRIKE
IT'S HOASTED
CIGARETTES
L.S.M.F.T.
Product of The American Tobacco Company - "Tobacco is our middle name"
Over the Nation
California
Gov. Edmund G. Brown early today claimed victory over former vice-president Richard M. Nixon in their contest for California governor.
"I now want to tell you that I've been re-elected governor of the state of California," the Democratic governor told a crowd of enthusiastic supporters at 3 a.m. (CST).
Most Democratic leaders said a large turnout would benefit Brown.
There was no immediate comment from the Nixon camp.
Republican Sen. Thomas H. Kuchel appeared to be in far better shape than Nixon. Kuchel was running well ahead of Democratic State Sen. Richard Richards in early returns.
Returns from 12,188 of the state's 31,820 precincts at 12:20 a.m. (CST) gave Brown 728,298, Nixon 627,555. In the Senate race it was Kuchel 439,136, Richards 345,588 with 8,437 precincts reporting.
Edward M. (Ted) Kennedy, 30-year-old brother of the President, last night became the first American to ever be elected to the Senate while a relative was president.
He defeated Republican George Cabot Lodge by a wide margin in what was termed "record" off-year voting. With 272 of Massachusetts's 2,011 precincts reporting, Kennedy led Lodge by more than 70,000 votes.
Massachusetts
The record turnout was caused by the Kennedy-Lodge "Battle of the Dynasties," which began 46 years ago between the two candidates' grandfathers, Henry Cabot Lodge Sr. and John "Honey Fitz" Fitzgerald.
Kennedy will fill two years of the Senate term vacated when his brother ran for the presidency.
Michigan
Although trailing by 110,000 votes shortly before 11 p.m. (CST), George Romney claimed victory over Democratic incumbent John Swainson in the Michigan gubernatorial race.
Romney used a steady stream of outstate Republican votes which cut into Swainson's margin as his basis for victory. Swainson refused to concede.
By midnight, Swainson's lead had been cut to 70,000 votes.
Swainson took a huge lead of almost 190,000 votes when early returns came in from Democratically strong Wayne County (Detroit and area).
An early turnout indicated a 2.8 million vote, the highest ever in Michigan. In heavily populated Detroit the turnout was running about 50 per cent above the turnout in the last non-presidential year.
New York
Governor Nelson Rockefeller and Sen. Jacob K. Javits retained their offices in yesterday's New York elections.
But Rockefeller's victory margin did not appear to be approaching the 800,000 to 1,000,000 vote landslide predicted by his presidency-minded supporters. Democratic candidate Robert Morgenthu, a political unknown supported by President Kennedy and seeking his first public office, showed unexpected strength.
Returns from 8,293 of the state's 12,276 election districts gave Rockeefell2. 2041.952. Morgenthau 1.807.194 at 10:16 p.m. CST.
Rockefeller ran better than expected in the traditionally Democratic city of New York, but he did not do as well as had been hoped in the Republican upstate areas.
Incumbent GOP Sen. Javits defeated Brooklyn lawyer James B Donovan.
Returns from 6,480 election districts gave Javits 1,623,225, Donovan 1,240,099 at 10:07 p.m. CST.
Illinois
A surge of downstate Republican votes for Senate Minority Leader Everett Dirksen cut deeply into the lead of Democratic Congressman Sidney Yates last night.
With 4,792 of the state's 10,285 precincts reporting, the vote was 839,521 for Yates and 770,510 for Dirksen.
Earlier, with 2,335 of the precincts in, Yates led by a 452,483 to 364,613 margin.
Wednesday, Nov. 7, 1962
The Chicago Sun-Times said it would declare Dirksen the apparent winner of the senatorial contest by an estimated 250-thousand votes or more.
Incumbent Democratic Sen. Edward V. Long defeated Crosby Kemper Jr. yesterday in a contest that was not as close as predicted.
Missouri
Returns from 3,736 of 4,403 precincts gave Sen. Long a 523,124 to 333,018 margin over Kemper.
Long, a Clarksville, Mo., banker and farmer, ran on a program supporting the Kennedy administration.
Kemper, a conservative Kansas City, Mo., banker, attacked the administration's policies in most areas and urged a conservative vote There was no gubernatorial contest in the state
(Continued on page 4)
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Daily hansan
60th Year, No.39
Anderson Easy Winner Despite Demo Charges
M. P.
John Anderson . . . wins second term
PETER L. CARTER
W. H. BURNSTEAD
James Pearson . . . retains seat
Frank Carlson . . . re-elected to third term
third term
Carlson and Pearson Win; GOP Leads In House Races
Kansas voters returned Frank Carlson and James B. Pearson to the United States Senate yesterday.
Carlson led the state Republican candidates in votes cast in his easy victory over K. L. (Ken) Smith of Wichita. Sen. Carlson, who will return to Washington for his third term, was one of the first decided Republican senatorial winners in the nation.
Sen. Pearson, in the race to fill the two-year interim term created by the death of Sen. Andrew Schoeppel, defeated Paul A. Aylward of Ellsworth.
With 885 of 2,965 precincts reporting at 10 p.m., Carlson led Smith 94,781 to 48,620. Pearson's margin at 10 p.m. was 72,795-57,471 over Avlward.
SEN. PEARSON was appointed earlier this year by Gov. Anderson to serve until the elections.
Carlson, who led the state ballot in number of votes as expected, said in a statement made at Concordia:
"I am most appreciative of the very fine way in which you, the people of my state, have honored me by this wonderful expression of confidence bestowed upon me.
"I shall continue to do my best to merit this tremendous honor."
AYLWARD, Ellsworth rancher, conceded the election to Sen. Pearson in a brief statement he issued at Witcha.
Three Kansas Republican incumbent members of the House of Representatives had won re-election by 11:00 last night. Indications were that Republicans would also carry the other two districts in the state.
In northeast Kansas—second district—William H. Avery, Wakefield, won over Harry F. Kehoe, Kansas City. Avery, seeking his fourth straight term in Washington, at one time had a nearly two-to-one margin over Kansas City sportsman Kehoe.
FROM THE THIRD district, freshman Congressman Robert F. Ellsworth of Lawrence defeated Bill Sparks, a New Frontiersman from Mission. Sparks, a Harvard-educated lawyer, had campaigned strongly against Ellsworth's Congressional record, a record of strong opposition to the New Frontier.
In the fourth district, dominated by the populous Sedgwick County area, Garner Shriver, Wichita, ran up a substantial margin over Democrat Lawrence J. Wetzel.
AT 11:30 LAST night, J. Floyd Breeding, Rolla, the only Democrat in Congress from Kansas, was more than 10,000 votes behind Bob Dole, Russell Republican, for the seat from the first district.
In the fifth district, Joe Skubitz of Frontenac had a 5,000 vote lead over Wade A. Myers of Emporia as of 11:35 last night.
By Clayton Keller
A hard-hitting campaign by State Rep. Dale Saffels and several embarrassing prison escapes were not enough to overcome Gov. John Anderson's popularity with Kansas voters yesterday.
The 46-year-old Republican governor, and other Republican candidates for state offices, took an early lead and built it slowly to a comfortable victory during the evening. Saffels conceded the election shortly before 1 a.m. today.
SAFFELS, a Democrat from Garden City, gave Anderson a rough campaign, criticizing the governor's administration of the state penal system, mental institutions, and highway program.
Despite the recent prison escapes and the campaign charges directed against him. Anderson's first term was relatively serene.
More important to Anderson's victory was the unity within the Republican party. Thus, Saffels was unable to use the Democratic party's best road to victory in Kansas—a Republican split —as former Gov. George Docking did in 1956 and 1958,
ANDERSON LED SAFFELS by a comfortable 22,000 vote margin, 187,664 to 165,273 with 1,978 of the state's 2.965 precincts reporting
Democrat Jules Doty's charges against Atty. Gen. William Ferguson did not turn the voters against Ferguson. With 1,943 precincts reporting, Ferguson had 184,747 votes to 138,835 for Doty.
Doty charged that Ferguson was holding back details in the case against Jean Neibarger, state printer, who was charged with improper use of state equipment.
Republican incumbent Harold Chase led Democrat Joseph Henkle, 175.048 to 139.655.
REPUBLICANS ALSO held comfortable leads with 1,943 precincts reporting in other state races, none of which produced a heated campaign.
Democrat Andy Gray, who successfully conducted a write-in campaign in the primary election to get his name placed on the general election ballot, trailed Republican incumbent Paul Shanahan. Gray had 140.060 votes to Shanahan's 179.861.
In the race for state treasurer, Republican incumbent Peery ran far ahead of Democrat Kennedy, 170,822 to 143,262.
APPROXIMATELY the same result occurred in the contest for superintendent of public instruction, where Republican incumbent Throckmorton led Democrat Woodworth 173.316 to 135.663.
Elected state insurance commissioner was Frank Sullivan who led Democrat Pierce, 170,136 to 138,971.
Anderson Gratified Bv GOP Victories
TOPEKA — (UPI) — Gov. John Anderson, who tonight was swept into a second term on a Republican can wave, said in a victory statement that he was gratified by the complete GOP victory.
Anderson, who crushed the bid of Democrat Dale Saffels, said, "This constituted a vote signifying unity in the party and approval of the type of administration that the Republican Legislature and officials have given.
"I am, of course, personally grateful for the vote given me and I pledge to carry on my second term to the best of my ability to provide a sound and progressive administration," he said.
Anderson listened to election results at the executive mansion here.
四
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Nov. 7, 1962
Inspection Policy Ironical
The loose ends of the Cuban missile situation are beginning to draw together on a note of irony.
Most of the Soviet offensive missiles that were springing up in Cuba are either back in the crates or soon will be. The JFK brand of brinkmanship has been quite successful on this point.
Although Cuba will hardly be neutralized by removal of these missiles, the offensive threat once posed will be greatly diminished. Khrushchev has by no means decided to pick up all his marbles and go home, but he has decided to back away from the edge of the cliff and think things over. The risks have exploded out of all proportion to the possible gains.
Castro was ignored when the instrumental decisions were being made. While the United States and Russia were playing power politics, Castro could only watch and wait. He could scream as loudly as he cared to, but the persons and countries that counted did not care to listen. The only things of consequence were Russian missiles, Russian technicians and Russian soldiers.
IN A SENSE Khrushchev's fingers have been stepped on. But the bearded man with the big cigar and the loud voice has been trampled. Khrushchev's loss of face seems almost insignificant in relation to Castro's.
Castro has found that there is more to being a Russian satellite nation than economic and military aid. Cuba has lost much of its political identity. It has not yet reached the status of a Latin American East Germany, but it is leaning in that direction.
Finally, after the most critical decisions have been made, Khrushchev has decided to bring Castro into the picture. Perhaps even this belated consideration would not have been made if Castro had been willing to come to terms with acting U.N., Secretary-General U Thant. Castro is worth talking to only because he has created a stumbling block in the path of otherwise smoothly flowing resolution of the Cuban missile question.
THE UNITED STATES demands inspection. Castro says no. Khrushchev apparently has sent Deputy Premier Mikoyan to bring Castro into line with decisions already made in Moscow.
Herein lies the irony. Castro is being forced by Moscow to accept a policy that has been repeatedly denounced by the Kremlin in the past. Inspection has been the final, non-negotiable blind alley that has stymied every attempt to reach agreement on disarmament. Russia steadfastly has refused to permit any effective form of inspection to guarantee good faith.
But what is good enough for Russia evidently is a little too good for a satellite nation like Cuba. Perhaps Russia should have maintained closer contact with Cuba during the crisis, for Castro appears to have forgotten who is making the rules.
The playing of power politics is for those who have the power. Castro does not. Perhaps he has forgotten this also.
Mikoyan will remind him.
Sound and Fury
On University Theatre
Editor:
Professor Beck employed some disquieting terms in the interview reported in the Daily Kansan of Oct. 4. By some intricate reasoning, he explained, I think successfully, why the University Theatre has instituted certain undemocratic practices in its new seating policies. "The public" he was quoted as saying, "including the university campus, wants to see bright, lively, and necessarily expensive productions."
I make no claim to being a representative of "the public," or even of "the university campus," although I have been here for four years. But perhaps I speak for a fairly sizable group of people (or non-people?) in expressing extensive and heartfelt disagreement with Mr. Beck's words (as quoted) and all of their obvious implications.
FIRST, WHAT I want of a university theatre is something distinctly better than New York commercial theatre. A self-respecting and reasonably free theatre is not beyond the means of a university as important as KU. We might reasonably expect uniform seriousness (not solemnity) in any production we see at a university theatre, and this consideration will permit selection of scripts in three categories: a) excellent plays of all times and places (there must be many hundreds of them); b) worthy experimental or amateur plays; c) second-rate plays freshly and brightly reconceived in creative productions. To estimate the proportion of third-rate, or worse plays produced at KU these four years would lead me to pointless argument. There have been far too many; not one seems to me to have been justifiable. And the obligation to rethink the possibilities in any well-worn script, and to come up with something tolerably effective, has often been shirked.
Second, the brightness, liveliness, and expensiveness of most KU productions is beyond dispute. But showy lighting, heavily drilled pantomime, and gorgeous costuming do not make an effective theatre. Nor do numerous busloads of high school students from far-off towns visiting our theatre
THIRD. THE NEW seating policy, whatever its commercial basis, calls attention to a vicious trend in University life, from which the KU Theatre may be less a beneficiary than a prime and spectacular victim. The theatre, like the library, belongs to everybody; a policy which needlessly and spectacularly designates the student body as inferior (if only in privilege) destroys something of the greatest importance in university life. There are more practical considerations. My own experience with balcony seats at the KU theatre has been uniformly depressing. How does a theatre as imperfect as ours hope to promote enthusiasm for theatre in years to come if it condemns all its most open-minded patrons to unsatisfactory entertainment? I suggest that the new seating proposals will speedily congeal an impression already floating vaguely through student minds that an evening at the KU Theatre is worth avoiding at all costs. The new policy would be far more defensible if the acoustics of the theatre were better and if our Speech and Drama people had better success in training actors in clarity and projection. These are
for a lark establish its success, much less its excellence. As larks go, an evening at a KU Theatre production isn't much. I can hardly believe that we are having much success in increasing theatre audiences. Broadway theatre has largely become an expense-account service to clients, an outing for ladies' bridge clubs in the suburbs, a "different" but usually inferior way to occupy a night out. It seems insane to imitate Broadway's notorious financial practices, and pure death to copy its production habits. As for me, I like ingenious, intelligent, "sincere," inexpensive productions. Any university theatre can offer them frequently and almost exclusively, however unavailable they may be to a commercial theatre. "The public," when it sees such productions, is likely to "want" them better than it wants what it presently gets, if only because the inevitable amateurism in a collegiate production is so much harder to bear in a context of meretricious glitter.
two problems which insiders may underestimate.
Fifth, the University Theatre plainly suffers most acutely from the problem of adequate casting—a problem which doubtless has some connection with the autonomy of Speech and Drama. With a talent pool of 11,000 students and some gifted faculty members, the number of candidates for crucial roles must be pitifully small each time a production gets under way. How else can one understand the high frequency of poor casting? I do not know how to dispel the normal feeling of students in, e.g., the Arts College, that theatre work is a normal thing for students in Speech and Drama but a highly abnormal thing for anybody else. But it seems clear enough that only grossly stage-struck students in other schools are likely to have much interest in trying out for an average KU production. The choice of script, to begin with, will all too often promise nothing in the way of time well spent. I must add that this year's scripts are less exceptionable than usual.
MR. BECK KNOWS very well that the KU faculty includes many who, like myself, avoid open quarrels with the Theatre division despite major reservations regarding its operations. In four years I have seen perhaps twenty KU productions and regard myself as intensely apathetic to the whole thing, although I must be a real commercial asset and, in your books, a regular booster. I am not apathetic to the idea of a university theatre, and ours might be a great one. In fact it has come close, at its best, to real distinction.
A candidate for the University of Colorado Board of Regents attacked the Colorado student newspaper recently in terms that remind me of Mr. Beck's (as quoted): "The paper should reflect the views of the campus majority — and it hasn't. I don't think it should try to educate them politically" (Daily Kansan, Oct. 4, page 2). This is not the language of a university, nor, perhaps, was Mr. Beck's.
Edward Ruhe
Associate Professor
of English
letters to the editor
Wage Increase Needed
Editor:
Among the world's most poorly paid workers are the peons of Spain, the coolies of China, and the student workers in the dormitories of KU. I can certainly see why workers in Spain and China are underpaid; the countries are poor and the laborers are illiterate and unambitious. But what about the student help at KU?
I BELIEVE that the administration can afford to pay more money in wages, and that if they did they would get a better quality of labor. Even a small raise in wages could make these student jobs competitive. America has long been known for its reliance on competition to get good results. One problem that this would help solve is the high rate of labor turnover. No one minds quitting or getting fired from an 80-center-hour job.
Let's assume, for a moment, that the administration actually cannot afford to pay out more money in wages. Student wages could still be raised significantly, with no further outlay, by reducing the inefficiency which permeates the student help working schedules.
As an example of this, I reported to work last Saturday morning along with three other workers. The four of us were given a job that two people could have handled easily. The result was that half the time we should have been working, there was no work to do. We had to be there nevertheless, for unexcused absences are rewarded by firing.
**THIS IS ADMITTEDLY** the worst example I can bring to mind, but there are many others. I would say that a conservative estimate of the student labor wasted would be from 10 to 20 per cent. If this waste were irradiated, the student help could get a corresponding wage increase. This letter is being written with one of two objectives in mind. I think that the administration should (1) explain its low wages, keeping in mind the large waste, or (2) do something about these wages. I am waiting for a reply.
Al Piercey
Oslo, Norway, junior
* * *
Not Orthodox Christianity Editor:
This is in reply to Mr. Shobe's letter of Oct. 29. Mr. Shobe declares as an opening statement that Mr. Page began his logical chain (in opposition to legalized abortion) from false premises; that is that a fetus has a soul. Mr. Shobe then goes on to prove dazzlingly that the soul does not exist.
His only substantiation of this bold assertion: "because I don't believe in it."
It is Mr. Shobe's privilege to disbelieve in the existence of an immortal soul, but he goes on to assert with no proof whatsoever that such an opinion is "theologically sound and orthodoxly (sic) Christian." Such a view's being theologically sound would depend upon one's Theos—probably some one of the gods invented by man's imagination would admit to creating Man's nature no more transcendent than that of a dog; Jehovah has never been quoted as upholding the idea.
Then to say that such drivel is orthodox Christianity is too much. There is no sense in using up newsprint to list scriptures refuting this idea. It is simply out of harmony with the entire teaching of the Christ. None of the Apostles taught that man is a "unified (integrated) organism which decomposes in its entirety soon after death." In fact the Apostle Paul repeatedly condemned this doctrine. The view is foreign to the Apostolic Fathers (Christian writers of the second and third centuries.) No theologian from the Roman Church has supported it. The Reformation brought forth many differing opinions, but none so unorthodox as this. This view became widespread only after the Tubingen scholars and the proponents of the social gospel began to whittle away at Christianity in an effort to do away with the miraculous.
Call this heresy anything you please, but do not call it Orthodox Christianity.
Robert A. Barrett Amarillo, Tex., graduate student
UNI UNIT RESIST
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, trieweekly 1908,daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 726, business office
Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Press, 18 East St 50 St, New York 22, N.Y. Mail subscription rates; $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and holidays. Postage and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
NEWS DEPARTMENT Scott Payne Managing Editor
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Clayton Miller and Co-Editorial Editors
Bill Sheldon
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Charles Martinache .. Business Manager
BABY
MOMMA
WEEK
GAME
HOME
FLAT BACK COMMONS CALLA L B-75
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
TO STACKS
LIBRARY HOURS
9-5. 10am.
"THIS IS MORE LIKE IT!"
"LET'S GO SOMEPLACE WHERE WE CAN STUDY—"
Page 3
ASC Acts Against Campus Prejudice
The All Student Council last night took action on a campus discrimination by providing for more frequent minority group ASC appointments.
A second provision in the two-step resolution called for campus organization presidents to air their views on discrimination at Human Rights Committee (HRC) meetings.
The bill, presented by John Young, Salina graduate student, and Rab Malik, Pakistan graduate student, overlapped suggestions made earlier in an HRC report.
- Periodical public HRC meetings.
- The HRC report called for:
- Structural examination of student organizations.
- Scientific student opinion samples on civil rights.
- Cooperation with the city of Lawrence.
- Work with the ASC Current Events committee.
- Declaration of Human Rights of the Associated Students at KU.
Phyllis Wertzberger, Lawrence graduate student, introduced two other resolutions which passed unanimously. One urged Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe to allocate $50 to the freshman, sophomore and junior classes to be used by class officers.
"Last year, class officers had to pay for Jayhawker pictures out of their own pockets," Miss Wertzberger stated.
Jerry Dickson, Newton senior and student body president, said he might veto the resolution. He said the action should have been brought up at the ASC budget meeting.
The second resolution, prompted by the lack of student seats available for the MU-KU game, read: "The ASC and the Athletic Corporation Board should look into and do what is deemed necessary to assure seats for all students who
CRC to Seek CORE Ties
The Civil Rights Council tonight at 7 will discuss possible affiliation with the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) in the Council meeting at the Student Union.
Don Warner, Topeka senior and CRC chairman, said that the discussion is part of an effort by the CRC to decide its future actions.
Other discussion will center on the CRC's future relationship with the All Student Council human relations committee (HRC) and with the Lawrence Human Relations Commission.
Earlier last week a Negro CRC member was refused service at several local taverns and the Lawrence Commission asked to work with the CRC in solving this and other problems in the human relations field.
Warner met with a representative of the Lawrence Commission Monday and said they discussed discrimination in taverns but no specific action came out of the meeting.
Warner said, however, that a tentative plan has been drawn whereby a special committee consisting of members from the CRC, HRC, and the Lawrence Commission, would consult tavern owners.
The plan will be discussed at the CRC meeting and also the 8 p.m. Lawrence Commission meeting.
Warner said several CRC representatives would sit in on the Lawrence Commission meeting.
See Us Before You Buy
Wednesday, Nov. 7, 1962 University Dally Kansan
TYPEWRITERS
NEW AND USED
PORTABLES STANDARDS
ELECTRICS
Sales — Rental Service
have tickets for KU athletic events and to insure student exchange agreements concerning spectator seats."
In other ASC business, John Lettman, Public Relations committee chairman, proposed a speaker's bureau "to spread the image of the ASC" especially during election periods. Lettman said his committee this week will send letters to houses offering the services of such speakers.
LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER
He said the social committee is mainly concerned with the registration of all University social functions with the committee. Registering late or failing to register a function draws a $5-$15 fine upon the living group. A stipulation this year requires the fine be paid one month after it is accessed.
In another committee report Kenneth Keeler, Bartlesville, Okla. senior and social chairman, clarified the function of his committee.
Lettman said it is within the jurisdiction of the Social Committee to place a group on probation if a fine is not paid.
VI 3-3644
735 Mass.
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.—(UPI)
The United Nations General Assembly today censured South Africa for racial discrimination and recommended its isolation from the world community, a move that would mean a rupture of diplomatic relations and a trade embargo.
But South Africa stood firm. South African Foreign Minister Eric H. Louw told the assembly, "We know we are acting in the interests of the Bantu and other non-white population of our country." He said nothing about South Africa leaving the U.N. as had been predicted in some quarters.
U.N. Censures South Africa
Space Craft Power
LITCHFIELD PARK, Ariz.—(UPI)—A device that can provide future space craft with power equivalent to that used by three modern homes is under development at the Gooyear Aircraft Corporation facility here. Ground tests of the big dish-shaped device, called a solar concentrator because it collects energy from the sun, will begin early next year. In actual use, it would be packed into a two-part cylinder, shot into space and unfolded. Plastic foam would give it the required rigidity.
ASC elections committee chairman described first day turnout in campus elections returns "disturbingly low."
ASC Voting Turnout Is Light
John Stuckey, Pittsburgh junior and elections committee chairman, estimated that 688 students voted yesterday.
In the Vox primary, 183 students voted, 195 in the UP primary, and 244 cast their ballots in the race for freshman class president.
"This is a disturbingly low turnout for an all campus election," Stucky said.
He attributed the low voter turnout to the lack of campus issues to interest voters, lack of conflicts in individual ASC seat contests, and the lack of publicity of the elections.
Stuckey pointed out that none of the Vox Populi candidates will be eliminated in the election. In the UP primary, there is competition between candidates in only three of the ten districts being voted on.
In a debate held at the SUA
Joy Bullis, Davenport, Iowa, sophomore, explained that the UP platform calls for the establishment of a committee that will insure that only committee chairmen who are interested and qualified will be chosen.
sponsored elections party, party leaders rehashed arguments for and against a proposed merit committee to recommend chairmen for the ASC committees.
Brian Grace, Lawrence junior and Vox executive vice-president, defended the present ASC committees saying, "If all 28 ASC committees were functioning right, we'd be professional politicians, not students. We have to go to school."
Barrel of Chicken 25 pieces,10 hot rolls $5.00 BIG BUY
Now is the time
For Your Child's Christmas Portrait
Children are our speciality Call now for an appointment
RANCH HOUSE STUDIO
Burch Higgins, Photographer
VI-3-4575
780 Lincoln
JOE'S BAKERY
Open 24 Hours
Night Deliveries
412 W. 9th VI 3-4720
D&G
AUTO SERVICE
VI 2-0753
1/2 blk. E. 12th & Haskell
WHY SHOULD YOU BUY STEREO COMPONENTS from
AUDIOIRONICS RADIO TV PARTS-PA SYSTEMS-HIGH FIDELITY
Regardless of the advertisements, you cannot buy a genuine high-fidelity system in every department, appliance, or furniture store. Not everything called and labeled ul-fi really is; in fact, very few of the units sold as such even begin to meet the minimum technical standards necessary to reproduce all sound types accurately. Some are original, it can be painful when listened to for long periods of time. Just as your eyes become fatigued and produce a headache when forced to work in poor light, so your ears will become fatigued and produce a headache when subjected to poor sound, particularly at loud levels and for long periods of time. A family has plunked down several hundred dollars for a hi-fi and instead has bought itself a very expensive generator of irritation and headaches.
When the market seemed large enough, the big electronic and appliance manufacturers (who incidentally with one or two exceptions, contributed nothing whatever to the development of high fidelity) began to rush into the field with mass-produced packages that were poor excuses for the ideas developed by pioneers. In most cases they did not even bother to copy the designs used by other manufacturers, so they stood, they merely threw in two or three more poor speakers and added several more knobs and tubes to the radio consoles they had been selling all along.
Many of you will find this hard to believe because these packages carry the labels of famous names, and are advertised in big magazines and newspapers, whereas you probably never heard of the names that stand for real quality—Acoustic Research, KLH Altec-Lansing, Dynaco, ACRO, Heath, Lansing, Mercury, Mercury, and Weathers to name a few. (The rest are listed in the Who's Who in High Fidelity.)
Curiously enough genuine high-fidelity components are not only better in design, materials and workmanship, they are no more expensive than their imitations put out by the big brand names. This seems to fly in the very face of the economic laws. We have come to accept that the mass producer is supposed to turn our own equipment at lower price. In this case we cannot for several good reasons. For one, a high percentage of the cost of a name-brand hi-fi goes into the cabinet.
This is the first in a series of advertisements explaining the decided advantages of stereo components over commercial "packaged" units. We at AUDIOTRONICS are proud of the lines we handle. Come in to see and hear them soon. Ask for David, Curt, or Fred. We'll be happy to be of service.
AUDIOTRONICS RADIO & TV PARTS-PA SYSTEMS-HIGH FIDELITY
928 Mass.
VI 3-8500
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds
Available
THURSDAY, NOV. 8
KU STUDENT DIRECTORY
At the Information Booth-At the Book Store
35c
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, Nov. 7, 1962
Over the Nation
(Continued from page 1)
Texas
Texans voted in perhaps record numbers yesterday to elect Democrat John Connally governor by a wide margin over Republican Jack Cox.
At 9:45 p.m., the Texas Election Bureau showed Connally with 103,922 votes and Cox with 72,202 in the hardest fought race in years.
Political observers credited Connally's sweep to the large turnout of voters. Republicans had hoped that complacency among Democrats would hold down the vote and elect Cox.
The previous record vote in an off-year election was a total of 789,000 ballots in 1958.
Both gubernatorial nominees were classed as conservatives. Connally called himself a moderate and Cox has been termed a Gold-water Republican.
Oklahoma
Oklahoma voters shattered a 55-year-old tradition last night in electing Henry Bellmon governor—the first Republican to hold that office since Oklahoma became a state.
Bellmon, a middle-of-the-road Republican, defeated Democrat W. P. (Bill) Atkinson in a hard-fought race.
In the Oklahoma senatorial race, Democrat Mike Monroney won a third term, defeating Republican B. Hayden Crawford. Crawford had campaigned on a "turn right" platform, and had endorsed the conservative views of Sen. Barry Goldwater, Republican from Arizona.
Ed Edmondson, Democrat from Oklahoma's second district, was elected to the House of Representatives.
Pennsylvania
Republican Rep. William W. Scranton won the race for the Pennsylvania governorship last night and Democrat Joseph S. Clark retained his U.S. Senate seat.
Retired his U.S. Senate Seats.
Scranton, the freshman Congressman who ended eight years of Democratic control in Pennsylvania, was leading Democrat Richardson Dilworth by 66,174 votes at 9:35 p.m.
Clark edged ahead of his Republican opponent, U.S. Rep. James E. Van Zandt, at 8:24 p.m.
Scranton and Dilworth were fighting for the governor's seat vacated by David L. Lawrence, long-time power in the state Democratic Party.
Scranton showed exceptional strength in Democratic strongholds, notably in Philadelphia—where he is a former mayor.
Colorado
Republicans won over two Democratic incumbents in Colorado last night as John Love was elected governor and Peter Dominick was elected Senator.
Colorado is normally a Democratic stronghold.
Love beat out incumbent Gov. Steve McNichols who was bidding for an unprecedented 10 years in office.
Dominick beat out incumbent Sen. John A. Carroll.
Love based his campaign on a pledge to reduce the state income tax by 15 per cent. Dominick called for curbing federal power to "return the government to the people" and for harsh measures against Communism around the world. He urged a blockade of Cuba months before the administration ordered one.
Boy Dies After Fall
WASHBURN, Iowa — (UPI) — Allen Williams, 12, died yesterday when he broke his neck in a fall from horizontal bars on the playground at Washburn Elementary School.
ORDER
Personalized
Greeting Cards
BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass.
Don't Let Them Miss
Homecoming Guests?
Special Alumni and Guest Performance
PAINT YOUR WAGON
University Theatre MURPHY HALL — 9:00 P.M.
Admission: $2.40, $1.80, $1.20
(IDs and Coupon Books do NOT admit)
Phone VI 3-2700, Extension 591
One of the strongest critics of the Kennedy administration, veteran Republican Congressman Walter Judd, was defeated last night.
Judd Defeated In Bid For 11th House Term
Donald Fraser, 38, upset Judd in Minnesota's 5th district, the city of Minneapolis, race.
Judd was seeking his 11th term to the House.
LONDON — (UPI) — Former Czech diplomat Josef Josten, a refugee from Communism, said today he is selling bits of Berlin barbed wire encased in plastic as paperweights. He said they will remind purchasers of the Berlin wall and the nature of Communism
Paperweights Are Reminders
Record Registration Reported for Rush
The finest words in the world are only vain sounds if you cannot understand them-Anatole France
A total of 798 women have registered for formal spring rush, conducted by the 13 social sororites on campus. The figure represents an increase of 73 over the number registered last year.
Two reasons were given for the increase: there was no fall rush this year, so transfer students are going through spring rush, and enrollment is up.
All those who make a 1.0 grade average, as required by the Panhellenic Council, will participate in rush activities.
We Rent Most Anything
ANDERSON RENTAL 812 N. H.
Roller Coaster
EVERYONE'S ON THEIR WAY TO
Sandy's
Thrift & Swift Drive-in
ACROSS FROM HILLCREST
Hamburgers
15c
French Fries
10c
THE CRACKER BARREL CO.
CUTTERS OF TRADITIONAL THROWSING
CUTTERS OF TRADITIONAL TROUSERS
American traditional slacks for the University man ___ priced from $15.95-$18.95
diebolt's
I should fancy that the real tragedy of the poor is that they can afford nothing but self-denial.—Oscar Wilde
Get Your U. S. ROYALON Eskiloos
New "Cold Weather Shoes"
You Can Wear Rain,
Snow or Shine!
- Really water proofed
- Wipe clean with water
You'll wear your Eskilos everyday, everywhere! They're light as shoes, yet lined with warm fleece. They're chic as shoes, yet never need polish. The secret is Royalon—a miraculous, soft and comfortable new "U.S." material that doesn't crack in the cold or stain in the slush and can be wiped clean as new with water! So, don't wait for the weather. Come in today and get your new Eskilos—get ready for the nicest winter in your life! All narrow and medium widths for best fit.
$12.95
CAVALIER. Wear it up or turn down. Black.
FROSTGUARD. Has a turned down cuff. Rich Ivory or Black.
Other Patterns in Leather
Snow Boots from 7.95 to 12.95
McCoy's
813 Mass. VI 3-2091
Betas,DU's Battle In Intramural Finals
Beta Theta Pi and Delta Upsilon will play today for the Fraternity "A" Hill football championship in intramural touch football. Kickoff time is 4 p.m. at the intramural fields.
The two teams advanced to the championships by winning in the second round of the Fraternity "A" Hill playoffs yesterday.
091
THE BETAS, who are looking for their fifth consecutive Fraternity "A" Hill football title, were last defeated in playoff action by a DU team in 1956. In 1957, the Betas did not compete in the playoffs.
Beta Theta Pi slipped by Phi Delta
Theta, 3-6, while Delta Upsilon was
whipping Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 16-0.
In the 13-6 Beta win over the Phi Delts, defense eventually proved to be the deciding factor in the outcome of the game. The offensive play of both teams was sporadic.
The Betas then started their initial scoring drive, moving 55 yards in nine plays for the touchdown. The score came on a five-yard pass up the middle from Beta quarterback Morgan Metcalf to blocking back Keith Kreutziger. The conversion was good on a fake kick, when Metcalf passed to Jim Emerson, and gave the Betas a short-lived, 7-0 lead.
The Betas could not put an effective offense together against the tough Phi Delt rushers until midway through the second period.
TWO PLAYS later, the Phil Deltis came roaring to score. Phi quarterback Del Campbell rolled out and passed 40 yards into the Beta end zone to end Mike Holland, who had slipped through the Beta secondary.
The extra point attempt failed, however, when Kreutziger, a Beta rusher on defense, knocked down Campbell's pass.
The third period was another battle of the defenses, until the Betas split the Phi Delt secondary with less than a minute left in the quarter.
At that time, Metcalf launched a 50-yard aerial to end Dave Phillips, who was caught at the Phi 10-yard line. Two plays later—the last play of the period — Metcalf riffed an eight-yard pass up the middle to Emerson for the score. Bob Swan's conversion attempt was blocked, and the Betas held a 13-6 margin at the end of the third quarter.
TWO PLAYS LATER, it looked like a Phi Delt repeat — a quick comeback after a Beta touchdown.
Keith Abercrombie, a Phi Delt blocker, took a pitchout from Campbell and completed a 40-yard aerial to end Gary Ace on the Beta four-yard line.
But then the stubborn Beta defense held. Five plays and three penalties later, the Phis had been moved back to the Beta 30, where they lost possession of the ball on downs.
The ball exchanged hands one more time, but neither team could show another consistent offensive attack.
The DU victory was their sixth straight this season without a loss.
DELTA UPSILON fought its way into the Fraternity "A" finale as they blitzed for all their points in the second quarter, defeating Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 16-0.
Pinpoint passing by Tom Hamill paced the DU second-period rout. Scoring on two long drives and a safety, Delta Upsilon was never
STUDENTS
Grease Jobs . . $1.00
Brake Adj. . . . 98c
threatened after this decisive quarter.
End Gene Shofner caught an 18-yard Hamill aerial for the first score. Four plays later, SAE quarterback Jim Meyer dropped the center snap in his own end zone, giving the DU's two more points.
Automotive Service
Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel
Balancing
7 a.m.-11 p.m.
THE FINAL SCORE culminated a 56-yard drive. Guard Mike Berkley teamed with Hamill on the 23-yard scoring pass. Phil Harrison booted both extra points.
In other playoff action today, the Independent "A" Hill crown will be sought by the Hot Dogs and JRPF (Joe's Rough Boys and Friends), a Joseph R. Pearson Hall team.
***
PAGE CREIGHTON
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd
THE HOT DOGS, who posted an undefeated season, beat JRPF 19-0, in regular season play. JRPF was runner-up to the Hot Dogs in the Independent Division I race.
The winner of this contest will
meet the winner of the Beta-DU match tomorrow afternoon for the intramural touch football Hill championship.
The second round of the Fraternity "B" Hill playoffs in intramural touch football will also be played today.
In Fraternity "B" action, Beta Theta Pi will meet Phi Gamma Delta #2 in the upper bracket, while Alpha Tau Omega will meet Phi Gamma Delta #1 in the lower bracket.
These four teams advanced to the semi-finals as a result of opening-round victories Monday.
The winners in these two contests will meet for the Fraternity "B" title tomorrow afternoon.
The Beta "Bees" bombed Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 33-0; Phi Gamma Delta #2 squeezed by Delta Upsilon, 2-0; Alpha Tau Omega edged Sigma Chi, 19-13, and Phi Gamma Delta #1 beat Delta Tau Delta, 27-0.
KU SPORTS
on
Wednesday, Nov. 7, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 5
DIAL KLWN 1320
7:30 a.m. Daily Sports Shorts
5:15 Today Football Forecast
5:20 Tom Hedrick Sports
LARGE BEAUTIFUL
MUMS
for HOMECOMING
Yellow, Bronze, White with
KU DECORATIONS
Only $1.50
Boxed and Delivered Saturday Morning, Nov. 10th
ORDER BY PHONE NOW! Call VI 3-6111
OWENS
Flower Shop and Greenhouse 15th and New York
TYPEWRITER
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
Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts. Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals
Balfour
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
AL LAUTER
Fraternity Jewelry
Patronize Kansan Advertisers—They Are Loyal Supporters.
HOMECOMING DANCE
Sponsored by the SUA Homecoming Committee
SATURDAY, NOV.10 8-11:30
MIRIAM MAKEBA
African Folk Singer will appear at a concert at Hoch Auditorium from 11:30 to ?
Tickets: $1.50 per person (Includes Both Dance and Concert)
Music By WARREN DURRET
K. C.'s OWN BAND
winner of the "BEST BAND 1961 AWARD"
Tickets Sold at:
Information Booth - Mon.-Sat.
Student Union
or
Buy Ticket at Door of Dance or Concert
ALUMS INVITED!
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday. Nov. 7. 1962
KU P-T-P Program Will Be Evaluated
The chairman of KU People-to-People said yesterday his committee is re-evaluating its efforts to strengthen and expand its program.
William Schaefer, Shawnee Mission junior, said although the number of students in P-t-P is spiraling, enthusiasm about the program has "leveled off."
He estimated 225 KU foreign students and 500 American students
see P+P members. $ \textcircled{4} $
Schaefer listed five main problem areas for P-t-P:
- Foreign student participation in planning programs;
- American student involvemen
- Communication with students and Lawrence citizens;
- American student involvement,
- Coordination and organization of the brother-sister program; and
- Ideas for Happy Hour programs.
"At the same time," he said, "People-to-People has taken giant steps forward. It has created an atmosphere of interest in international affairs and foreign students as well as lowered the barriers between American and foreign students. Also P-t-P has brought the university closer to area residents."
SCHAEFER said new programs created this year to expand P-t-P include;
- Cooperation with the American Field Service to bring area high
KU Foreign Students Need Vacation Homes
People-to-People is looking for students who will board foreign students in their homes over Thanksgiving vacation.
Those who are interested in having a foreign student in their homes during the vacation — or for Thanksgiving dinner only— should contact the P- t-P office in the Kansas Union by Saturday.
Students are asked to give a preference as to the nationality of the student they would like to invite.
school foreign students to KU for a weekend;
- Sports committee to encourage understanding and participation by American and foreign student in both American and foreign sporting events:
- Travel bureau to orient students who plan to travel abroad;
- Forum committee for informal American and foreign student discussions:
- Student English tutors for foreign students; and
- Rural hospitality committee to arrange weekend visits for foreign students with families in small Kansas towns.
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
Complete recording facilities for your Homecoming display. 331/3 or 45 R.P.M. Discs made for Automatic Record Players
County Race GOP Sweeps
Headed by hometown candidate for Congress, Republican incumbent Robert Ellsworth, the Republican state ticket rolled over Democratic opposition in Douglas County.
According to unofficial vote totals in 29 of the 35 county precincts. Rep. Ellsworth polled 5,245 votes to 1,122 for Democratic opponent Bill Sparks.
Audio House HIGH FIDELITY
ELLSWORTH swept all 29 county precincts polled. Other Republican candidates did almost as well.
Gov. John Anderson Jr. lead easily, polling 4,598 votes to 2,528 for opponent Dale Saffels.
Republican incumbent Sen. Frank Carlson rolled up a $2\frac{1}{2}$ to 1 margin over opponent K. L. (Ken) Smith, behind 5,070 votes to 2,005 in the unofficial count.
REPUBLICAN _ INCUMBENT Sen,
James B. Pearson lead Democratic
challenger Paul Aylward 4,443 votes
to 2,558 in the race for the late
Andrew Schoeppel's unexpired term
in the U.S. Senate.
KU Group to Okla. For Alumni Meeting
909 New York VI 3-4916
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe along with 14 other school officials will journey to Bartlesville, Okla. tomorrow for an alumni meeting.
The KU group and their wives will leave the campus by bus after a luncheon.
At Bartlesville Dr. Wescoe will moderate a panel composed of Marilyn Stokstad, acting director of the KU Art Museum, George Woggoner, dean of the college of liberal arts and sciences, Francis Heller, associate college dean, and Keith Lawton, vice chancellor for operations.
I lay it down as a fact that, if all men knew what others say of them, there would not be four friends in the world.—Blaise Pascal
One of four existing reproductions of the Mercator map projection is part of a display now in the lobby of Watson Library.
Common sense is not so common. Voltaire
The map display will continue through mid-January.
"We like to feature a variety of things," Eleanor L. Symons, of the library preparation department said Monday night.
Rare Mercator Copy Here
The original of the Meractor map in the Watson display was published in 18 sheets in 1569. The projection was named after Geradus Mercator, the Latinized form of the navigator's real name, Kremer.
The map enabled a navigator to derive a true compass direction
Engineering Council To Issue Applications
The engineering council will begin accepting applications next week for chairman of the Engineering Exposition committee and chairman of the publicity committee.
Applications may be picked up in the engineering office in Marvin Hall after Tuesday and are due Nov.12. The Exposition will be in April.
Kansas Approves New Voting Rules
Kansas voters yesterday approved amendments to the Kansas constitution that will change residence requirements for voting and allow state legislators to set their own salaries.
The salary amendment cancels the system under which any salary changes had to be approved by constitutional amendment.
The new residence requirement allows residents to vote for President and Vice-President if they have lived in the state for 45 days. But new residents cannot vote for Congressional or state representatives.
In the past, voters had to reside in the state six months and in their voting district for 30 days preceding national, state and local elections.
With 1,677 of 2,965 districts reporting at midnight, 111,410 had voted yes on the salary proposal and 78,380 had voted no. The residence amendment had received 154,943 yes votes and 35,385 no votes.
State Farm Insurance
Paul E. Hodgson Local Agent
Off. Ph. VI 3-5666
Res. Ph. VI 3-5994
530 W 23rd.
Lawrence, Kan.
.
NOW SHOWING
simply by laying down a straightedge anywhere on the map and calculating the vertex, the angle between the straight 1-1 edge and a meridian of longitude.
SHOCK AND HORROR!
AMERICAN INTERNATIONAL presents EDGAR ALLAN POE'S
TALES OF TERROR
in PANAVISION and COLOR STARRING
VINCENT PRICE-PETER LORRE
BASIL RATHBONE DEBRA PAGET
Few originals of such large maps have survived. Only four copies remain of the Mercator map.
Shows At 7:00 and 9:00
Another map, the Portugalise Monumenta Cartographica, published in Portugal to commemorate the 500th anniversary of the death of Prince Henry the Navigator.
- COMING NEXT -
TOLD WITH VOLCANIC POWER AND PASSION!
ROCK HUDSON
BURL IVES
GENA ROWLANDS
THE
SPIRAL
ROAD
Eastman COLOR
COSTARING
GEOFFREY KEEN
* A Universal International Picture
The Portuguese map comes in five volumes-KU's library has four—and contains more than 600 plates, 50 in color.
And—Watch For "Black Tights"
Other maps in the exhibition are early map makers' conceptions of the size of the Atlantic and Pacific Ocean.
Portraits of Distinction
VARSITY
THEATRE Telephon VIKING 3-1065
摄影
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
NOW SHOWING
NOW SHOWING
CHARLTON • HESTON • MARTINEH
MEVILLE SLAMSON'S
The Pigeon
That Took Rome
PANXOSON • A PRODUCTION RELEASE
Shows At 7:00 & 9:00
COMING NEXT
A ROSS HUNTER
PRODUCTION
"IF A MAN
ANSWERS"
...DONT HANG UP!
Hang around for the FUN!
BEARING
SANDRA • BOBBY
DEE • DARIN
MICHELINE PRESLE • JOHN LUND
CO-STARRING CESAR ROMERO • STEFANE POWERS
A Eastern COLOR. A Universal-International Picture
SOON
"EL CID"
Grandada
THEATRE...Telephone VI3-578A
CHARLTON • ELAM
HESTON • MARTINEH
MELVILLE SHWELSON'S
The Pigeon
That Took Rome
PANKUSSON • INVANGENT RELIANCE
A ROSS HUNTER PRODUCTION "IF A MAN ANSWERS" ...DONT HANG UP! Hang ground for the FUN!
STARRING SANDRA BOBBY DEE DARIN MICHELINE PRESLE * JOHN LUND COSTARNCESAR ROMERO • STEFANE POWERS in California COLOR A Universal International Picture SOON "EL CID" Granada THEATRE•Telephone VI 3-5788
SOON
"EL CID"
Granada
TREATRE···Telephone VL3-5783
h.i.s
SAGA JACKET
EXCITING FASHION STORY BY H-I-S
This 27" Saga Jacket is the leading contender for the men's fashion Academy Award! Crafted of imported Heeksuede front and back, the Saga has knit sleeves, collar and framed inserts laminated to foam for lightweight warmth. Pockets are hidden but handy. Fabulous new colors. With full Orlon pile lining or Rayon lined. $19.95
Town Shop
THE Town Shop DOWNTOWN THE University Shop ON THE HILL
Shop
ON THE HILL
Wednesday, Nov. 7, 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 reported before second insertion.
FOR SALE
1960 Renault Dauphine. 10,000 mile miles. Radio and heater. White side wall other extras. Extremely clean throughout. 720 Arkansas St. or VI 2-2741. 11-13
1955 Ford Customline; radio, heater.
1965 Ford Explorer; tires included.
VI T-505 after 6 p.m.
11-20
Banjo: 5 string Orpheum. $80. See Gene
Bomfosky at 70412 Mass. after 4 p.m.
TYPEWRITER: Remington Quiet-Riter.
TAPEWRITER: P. clark.
70413; Mass. after 4 p.m.
11-12
YOU OR YOUR HOUSE ought to own b like new Classic 1929 Packard con- tinent. You'll love it and we like to have this red car with wire wheels, new white sidewalls, etc. for phone VI 2-2581 on wireless 6:00 p.m. or after 9:00 p.m. Sunday evening 11-9
Family heirlooms cut glass-pressed glass-
Haviland art- glass-carnival glass. Brass
banquet lamp and many other items. See
at 1725 Vermont. $11.0
H. H. Scott L.T.-ten FM tuner, Rek-oKut K335 turntable, Shure M212 stereo arm slash cartridge, Falchild 212 tumper and a dynakit MK30 60 watt amp. All gears need less than half price. Will finance, Phone VI 3-8919. 11-8
Stereo or hi-fi diamond needles for most makes. Half price during November. Don't wait, buy them now at Pettengill-Davis, 723 Mass. tf
Used Ratheon TV with AM-FM phonograph for $69.95 guaranteed. Pettengil-Davis, 723 Mass. 11-7
new stereo FM—new portable stereos—new AM-FM radios—new FM radio dis- month, as low as $25 a month, at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Massachusetts. St. 11-20
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.
3-speed Royce Union 26" men's or ladies'
923 Mass. Used bikes $10.00 each. 11-12
75
Transistor Radios! 6 transistors now $10.97! AM-FM radios—twin speaker now $45.97! FM radios now $26.97. Ray Stone-back's. 929 Mass. St. 11-12
Sports Car Compact Owners Attention! We have all sizes of Snow treads avail-
center. 929 Mass. St. 1,000 new tires at low discount prices! 11-12
TV shopping? Magnavox 24" automatic TV has a 3 year picture tube warranty. Magnavox 20" television from just $149.90. See the magnificent Magnavox at Pettigrew-Dillas, 723 Mass.
Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.00 per call. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
Printed Biology Study Notes: 70 pages.
Provides extensive diagrams and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the
Lecture Manual. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery.
$4.50. **tf**
TYPING PAPER BARGAINS: Pink typing paper . 85c per ream. Yellow typing paper . 90c per ream per pound. The Lawrence Outlook. 100s Massachusetts, open all day Saturday, tf
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
Need A Deepsea Diver?
PUBLIC ARCHIVES
Read the Classified Ads
HELP WANTED
Car hostess and fountain help wanted to work days 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. You are eligible if you can work two shifts per week. Contact Tom Dixon, Dixon Drive in Restaurant, 2500 W. 6th or phone VI 3-7446. 11-12
FOR RENT
Single rooms, warm and comfortable, in nice house only 2 minutes from Union for upper classman or graduate students. $275.0 a month. Phone VI 3-6696. 11-8
Cozy 3 room furnished apartment suitable for single person. Good location: near beach and entrance, also parking. All utilities paid. $55 a month Pharm. X 3-2593. 11-12
Four large-room apartment with private bath for 4 or 5 boys. Utilities paid. 3 blocks from campus. $25 each. Phone I 2-9343 or VI 3-7642. Available now.
For rent a furnished 1 bedroom duplex
for boys Call VI 3-118-11
VI 3-6661.
Partly furnished 2 bedroom house 1/2 block from campus. Fully carpeted, screened porch, wood burning fireplace, fully air conditioned, full basement, large lot. $100 per month. If interested call VI 3-4291. 11-9
Furnished house. Can accommodate up to 10 people per room. IH interested call VI 3-4291.
FOR RENT: extra nice furnished room for men, 1½ blocks from campus, two bedrooms, 346 Ohio. Phone: 2146 or VI 3-2322. After 6 p.m. p
Vacancy in an apartment for a male student now. Phone VI 3-6723. Union. Availability 11-8
Dissatisfied with your apartment? Call VI 3-0554 after 7 p.m. for information. Call Cozy 3 room furnished apartment suitable for single person. Good location. In good rent and entrance, also parking. All utilities paid. $55 a month. Phon VI 3-2593. 11-"
Attractive furnished apartment for one woman for $65 a month. Utilities paid and garage available. Phone VI 3-1209 or see at 1633 Vermont. 11-7
FOR RENT. SINGLE ROOMS for men 1½ block from Union. Kitchen privileges, laundry room, phones, kitchen 5th. 1234 Oreed or phone VI 21-1518. Call 123 or see evenings.
ROOMS FOR MEN: Double room only, share with Law student; one-half block from Student Union; private entrance, quiet, telephone and utilities paid. Call VI 3-1092 or see at 1301 Louisiana after 5 p.m. weekdays. tf
3 room apartment, private bath. 1 block
along street. Two bedrooms. paid. Come and see. 1142 Indiana. tf
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
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.
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results'
TRADING POST
7041/2 Mass. Ph.VI 3-2012
Located 1 door South of K.P. & L.
in basement.
Platform Rocker ... $ 6.00
Corner Desk ... $ 8.50
Duncan Phyfe drop leaf table
and two chairs $34.50
Piano swivel stool ... $ 8.00
Baby Bed with mattress ... $10.00
7-drawer Desk ... $16.00
10 x 12 cotton rug ... $19.00
Roll around utility table ... $ 3.50
Ironing board ... $ 1.50
Big 3-drawer desk ... $10.00
Full sized bed with springs
and mattress $17.50
21" Console TV ... $22.00
TRANSPORTATION
R.C.A. high fidelity console
record player ... $42.50
New table model radios,
choice of colors $9.50 (ea.)
Want riders to Wichita and vicinity Fri-
riday. Go to the Return Sunday
11th. Call VI 3-4229. 11-8
We invite you to come in and look around. Remember a few steps down gives you a big step up in savings.
Travel-only a limited number of airline flights still available for Thanksgiving and Christmas Holiday.
TYPING
Suggest making reservations Now!
First National Travel Agency
746 Mass. VI 3-0152
Fast accurate typing. Secretary for $1; *
Astronomy professor. VI 3-822; *
at 703 Lawrence Ave.
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, reports, books. Electric typwriter. Mrs. McEldowney, 2521 Alabama. Ph. VI 3-8568.
English major and former secretary will type themes and theses on electric typewriter. For neat and accurate work call Mrs. Melsland Jones, VI 3-5267. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, these, and research articles; electric typewriter, Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti. V1 3-8379. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tf
Experienced secretary with electric type-
er equipment, and Master of Science,
Phone Nancy Cain '61 at V I 3-0824, iff
Experienced typist. 7 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Barlow, Bailow. 2047 Yale Kd. 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 do typing in home. Fast, accurate, neat work, Reasonable rates. Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff VI 2-1749. tf
Typtist experienced in theses and term papers. Prompt service, reasonable rates, electric typewriter. Call Ms. Howard Mehlinger at VI 3-4409. tf
Typing — reasonable rates, neat and acc-
cruent.
Mrs. Bodin, 825 Greecer Terr.
Efficient typist. Would like typing in her
thesis, letters, calls anytime at VI 2-2641,
thesis, letters. Call anytime at VI 2-2641.
Manuscripts, theses and
Also dissertations typed on
thesis papers in experience in education
Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. VI
IRVING GRANZ presents
AMERICA'S NO. 1
RECORDING STARS
AN EVENING WITH
the
Kingston
TRIO
EXTRA ADDED ATTRACTION
WANTED
MIRIAMMAKEBA
The most exciting new singing talent to appear in many years.
—Time Magazine
SATURDAY, NOV. 10
Indian and Lincoln pennies, any American gold. Also wanted, British, Canadian, Mexican and Russian coins American Coin Mart, 1015 Mass. I 2-0219. 11-13
8:30 p.m.
MISCELLANEOUS
Municipal Auditorium K. C., Mo.
Tickets—2.50, 3.00, 3.50, 4.00
On Sale
Need a place for a private party or dance.
Phone VI 3-6376. 11-7
Auditorium Box Office
BUSINESS SERVICES
English tutoring 1/2 block from Corbin
English comes to 1127 Ohio
nighting 5:36-7.00
RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. tf
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
GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I study notes
Completely revised and extremely com-
prehensive. $4. For free delivery call
VI 3-8246. tf
DRESS MAKING and alterations. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith, $939^{1}$ Mass, Call VI 3-5263. 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. tf
LOST
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center. 1218
Conn. Personal service—sectionsalized
amsters, chameleons, turtles,
guinea pig containers, plus complete lists
pet supplies. **¹**
Black billetfoil with white cameo clasp.
Important papers and money. Reward.
Lost Halloween night. Call VI 2-0703
after 5 p.m. 11-7
1982 KU class ring with green set in-
tension. Matlanin (Malvin) V3-3190. Reward. 11-8
PATRONIZE YOUR
• ADVERTISERS •
roll-sleeve shirt with a slim new look!
2.98
Ship'nShore
Trim and tapered, from narrow gentry collar to slim placket. Easy-care all cotton in white, pastels, new rich hues. Sizes 28 to 38.
Special Purchase Sale
fall woolens
- Tweeds ● Plaids ● Flannels
- 56-60" Wide Ready-to-Sew
Values to
$4.98 Yard
$199 yard
McCalls-Simplicity Vogue
Paris Originals — Couturier — Special Designs
terrill's LAWRENCE KANSAS
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Nov. 7, 1962
No Apparent Shift In House, Senate
i Compiled from UPI
a By Zeke Wigglesworth
It was apparent on the basis of late-evening returns last night that the Democratic Party had retained control of the Senate and House of Representatives.
And by 12:30 this morning, in an election marked by a new record voter turnout for an off-year election, Democrats had won control of 254 of the 435 disputed House seats and were heavy favorites in 9 others. Republican candidates had secured control of 163 seats.
In Senate races, the GOP had won nine Senate seats and was leading in four others. The Democrats had captured 18 seats and led in 7 others.
In the tightly-fought guille- elected 11 and were leading in 9 others. The Republican hopefuls had captured 11 also, and were leading in three.
ALTHOUGH IT WAS clearly a Democratic victory, the election gave the GOP enough courage to rattle sabers at the Democrats.
William E. Miller, chairman of the Republican National Committee, said that "Republicans everywhere have a right to be proud of the accomplishment of our party this day." He said the GOP showing in the South was "nothing short of miraculous."
THE REPUBLICANS FORESEE a shift in their House power significant enough to give them a "whip hand" on many legislative proposals during the next two years.
(The Republicans nailed down nine House seats in the South—more than at any time since Reconstruction days. Prior to yesterday's balloting the GOP high point in the 11 states of the old Confederacy this century had been the seven they had held since 1954.)
(Some of President Kennedy's controversial bills were passed or defeated by slim margins during the 87th Congress.)
Even with the Democratic victories, the possibility still exists that conservative Democrats will team up with Republicans to defeat the New Frontier's legislative proposals.
The Republican high command conceded well before midnight that the GOP would fall short of procuring the 44 new seats they needed to win a majority control of the House.
ON THE BASIS of mid-evening returns, Albert E. Hermann, campaign director for the Republican National Committee, said he expected to pick up between 10 to 20 House seats.
Just before 10 p.m. Chairman Miller predicted that the GOP would win 8 to 10 governorships, 20 House seats and would be able to hold its own in the Senate. By 12 last night, it appeared that the new Senate will closely resemble the last one. Democrats were holding their own, but that was about all.
The Republican Party has been trying to regain control of Congress since they lost it in 1954.
NO FIRM PATTERNS had been established by early evening, particularly in heated races involving nationally-prominent candidates like Nelson A. Rockefeller, Richard M. Nixon, and Edward M. (Ted) Kennedy, the President's brother.
Generally good weather across the United States aided the record turnout, which is the highest since the off-year election in 1958. The vote was expected to be 50 million over the 50 states. Democrats had said in advance that a large turnout of voters would aid their election chances.
The President's handling of the Cuban crisis and a number of hotly-wagged state level races aided the voter turnout.
JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass.
OPEN 24 hrs. a day
BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY
Kansas Victory Party Is Calm
In Kansas last night it was hard to find the hoots and hollers that usually accompany a political victory.
Such was the case in Lawrence.
About 55 persons, including a few democrats, who stopped by for the free liquor, gathered quietly in the ballroom of the Eldridge Hotel at 8 p.m. for the victory party of Congressman Bob Ellsworth.
Ellsworth did not arrive until almost 11 p.m. and those who stayed for his arrival gave him a polite cheer to the accompaniment of radio music.
SMALL GROUPS CLUSTERED quietly about the room watching the three portable television sets which had been set up for the event. The only race which seemed to enthuse anyone was the see-sawing results in the Nixon-Brown conflict.
One man, who got tired of waiting for Ellsworth grabbed a bottle of bourbon and said as he left. "Hell, we knew who was going to win last month. Don't know why they even bother to celebrate any more."
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
Jack Fiscus $ ^{*} $ says...
All Premium Payments Are Refunded as an Extra Benefit if death occurs within 20 years after you take out The Benefactor, College Life's famous policy, designed expressly for college men and sold exclusively to college men because college men are preferred risks. Let me tell you about all 9 big Benefactor benefits. No obligation. Just give me a ring.
*JACK FISCUS
Area Director
P. O.Box 272 LAWRENCE, KANSAS VIking 2-3206
representing THE COLLEGE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA
GENEVA — (UPI) — The United States told the Soviet Union again today it is not "irrevocably wedded" to the idea of on-site inspection of underground nuclear tests if the Russians can prove that such inspection is unnecessary.
...the only Company selling exclusively to College Men
U.S. Nuclear Stand Is Flexible
But, American delegate David E. Mark told the test ban sub-committee of the 17-nation disarmament conference, the Russians must show more willingness than they have to date.
The three-nation sub-committee (Britain, the U.S., and the Soviet Union) met for three hours today, its 42nd meeting. No progress was made toward a test ban and the next meeting was set for Nov. 13, day after the main conference is scheduled to reopen here.
Sick Geraniums?
COLLEGE STATION Tex.—(UPI)
— If your geraniums are the victims of a strange germ, the Texas A&M extension service suggests a check for the hard-to-diagnose verticillium wilt disease.
Dr. Harlan Smith, plant pathologist, said the disease is often confused with bacterial rot and plants are thus treated for the wrong condition.
Mark, sitting in for Ambassador Charles C. Stelle told the Russians at today's session the United States and Britain do not want to postpone signing a test ban treaty "until the indefinite future when science has made national verifications systems fully reliable."
He said the West wants a treaty immediately which would have built-in controls while at the same time permitting modifications "when technical conditions so warrant."
Crushed Ice
Ice Cold 6-pacs
of all kinds
PARTY SUPPLIES
Having a Party?
LAWRENCE ICE CO.
6th & Vt., VI 3-0350
BALDWIN ART THEATRE
"Rocco and His Brothers" Italian, Original Uncut Version
GEM THEATRE
7:00 p.m., Nov. 6, 7, 8
Baldwin, Kansas
∞
Should you join us now,you will be coming
At Western Electric, in addition to the normal learning-while-doing, engineers are encouraged to move ahead in their fields by several types of educational programs. Western maintains its own full-time graduate engineering training program, seven formal management courses, and a tuition refund plan for out-of-hours college study.
There's no place at Western Electric for engineers who feel that college diplomas signify the end of their education. However, if a man can meet our quality standards and feels that he is really just beginning to learn . . . and if he is ready to launch his career where learning is an important part of the job and where graduate-level training on and off the job is encouraged - we want and need him.
Learning never stops for engineers at Western Electric
This learning atmosphere is just one reason why a career at Western Electric is so stimulating. Of equal importance, however, is the nature of the work we do. Our new engineers are taking part in projects that implement the whole art of modern telephony, from high-speed sound transmission and solar cells to electronic telephone offices and computer-controlled production techniques.
to Western Electric at one of the best times in the company's history. In the management area alone, several thousand supervisory jobs are expected to open up to W.E. people within the next 10 years. And our work of building communications equipment and systems becomes increasingly challenging and important as the communications needs of our nation and the world continue to increase.
Challenging opportunities exist now at Western Electric for electrical, mechanical, industrial, and chemical engineers, as well as physical science, liberal arts, and business majors. All qualified applicants will receive careful consideration for employment without regard to race, creed, color or national origin. For more information about Western Electric, write College Relations, Western Electric Company, Room 6206, 222 Broadway, New York 38, New York. And be sure to arrange for a Western Electric interview when our college representatives visit your campus.
Western Electric
MANUFACTURING AND SUPPLY
UNIT OF THE BELL SYSTEM
BELL SYSTEM
Principal manufacturing locations at Chicago, I., Kearny, N. J.; Baltimore, Md.; Indianapolis, Ind.; Allentown and Lauderdale, Pa.; Winston-Salem, N. C.; Buffalo, N. Y.; North Andover, M. Omaha; Muskegan, N. B.; Kansas City, M. Columbo; Ohio; Oklahoma City, OKa Engineering Research Center, Princeton, N. J. Teletype Corporation, Skokie, Ill., and Little Rock, Ark. Also Western Electric distri bution centers in 33 cities and installation headquarters in 16 cities. General headquarters: 195 Broadway, New York, N. Y
Daily hansan
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
60th Year. No. 40
Indian-Chinese Fight Resumes
NEW DELHI—(UPI)—Heavy fighting has broken out between Indian troops and the invading Communist Chinese on two sectors of the Northeastern front, it was announced officially today.
The report of the new fighting came shortly after Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru told a cheering parliament India has accepted the challenge of the Red invasion "with all its consequences." He said India would not negotiate with Peiping until its forces were driven or pulled out of the high mountain border regions.
IN THE EASTERN PORTION near the Burma border, continuous fighting was reported, with at least 15 Chinese killed or wounded in one clash.
A defense ministry spokesman said that in one engagement near the town of Jang "Some Chinese were killed."
Thursday, Nov. 8, 1962
The new clashes marked the first serious outbreak of fighting in the undeclared border war since Oct.28 when the Chinese took Damchok and the Jara La Pass in the northwestern portion of the front.
The spokesman said snipier fire still was being exchanged near the administrative center of Walong in the extreme eastern NEFA area when the last report was received last night.
HE SAID ALL THE fighting occurred yesterday and Tuesday. In the vicinity of Walong, he reported five separate outbreaks of fighting.
In one, he said the "Chinese attacked one of our positions in the outskirts of Walong in the early hours of yesterday morning. Our troops successfully repulsed the attack."
In the second, he said "Chinese aggressors attacked another of our positions in the vicinity of Walong. Our troops repulsed the attack, although some sniping was still going on when the last reports came in."
"IN ANOTHER INCIDENT in the same area the Chinese had established themselves on the flank of our positions," the spokesman said. "Our troops went into the attack and cleared this position, throwing back the Chinese aggressors. In this action, the Chinese suffered a number of casualties."
The spokesman later stated the Reds suffered 15 killed or wounded at this point.
Again, the spokesman said, "One long range Indian patrol went behind the Chinese positions in the vicinity of Walong and embarrassed them for several hours during the night of November 6."
"Another patrol in the Walong area encountered some Chinese and after an exchange of fire the Chinese aggressors withdrew."
THE FIVE SEPARATE actions in the vicinity of Walong indicated the Communist Chinese were particularly sensitive about this spot. They appear to be stepping up their activities in this region which forms the gateway to the lush Assam Plains and the Digboi oil fields.
According to former British officials who know the area, Walong is located about 16 miles south of the disputed McMahon border line and is a much better entry point into Assam and the northern heart of India than through Towang on the western side of the NEFA.
Weather
Generally fair this afternoon, tonight and tomorrow. Colder southeast and extreme east this afternoon but warmer tomorrow. Lows tonight 25 to 30 and high tomorrow in the 60s.
ASC Committee Schedules Work On Civil Rights
The Human Rights Council (HRC) of the All Student Council (ASC) has adopted a six-step plan calling for HRC cooperation with the Lawrence Human Relations Commission.
Frank Thompson, Iola junior and HRC chairman, said that a meeting had been held with the Lawrence HRC. A five-member committee of HRC members from both groups plans to talk to Lawrence tavern owners who have reportedly refused service to Negroes.
THOMPSON MADE this report outlining HRC activities for the year at an ASC meeting Tuesday.
A second step provides for a survey of every student organization to determine whether participation within certain organizations includes members of minority groups. In addition, the HRC plans to discuss solutions to rectify discriminatory practices with student organization presidents.
ASC MEMBERS Rab Malik, Pakistan graduate student, and John Young, Salina graduate student, supported a similar action in a two-point resolution presented to the ASC.
Malik, who has conferred several times with Thompson, said in a telephone interview:
"You do not see members of minority groups participating in KU organizations. Minority members do not express their opinions in public. But I have talked privately with several of these persons who are dissatisfied with conditions."
A third step deals with the possibility of several debates on discrimination.
THOMPSON SAID the HRC is considering a debate on fraternity and sorority discrimination. Possible participants will be representatives of the HRC, Civil Rights Council, and Interfraternity Council.
Thompson said he had talked with several fraternity presidents on action taken toward the elimination of discriminatory clauses in their constitutions.
A second debate is being planned
(Continued on page 12)
Less Votes Cast In New Poll Plan
Fewer students voted in this year's campus primary under a new multi-poll system than previously when the polls were located only in Strong Hall.
IN THE FRESHMAN class president race, one candidate was eliminated leaving three contestants for next week's election. In other freshman office races, two candidates will move into the coming general election.
Despite the low turnout, John Stuckey, Pittsburg junior and ASC elections chairman, said he anticipates a near record vote in the general elections next Tuesday and Wednesday.
Students cast 1140 ballots this year as compared with 1189 for 1961-62 primaries.
Balloting was heaviest in Strong Hall with 694 votes. Students cast 291 votes in Murphy Hall and 155 in the Kansas Union.
In the ASC race, the University
All 20 of Vox Populi party's primary candidates will run in the general election.
Party will run 15 candidates next week. Two candidates were dropped in this week's election.
Stuckey reported that there were five write-in candidates—three for freshman class president, one for Small men's residence halls and one for the married students district.
In the primary, UP pulled more votes than Vox. UP cast 493 ballots compared to 468 for Vox. A total of 442 freshmen voted.
See page 9 for election results break down.
One write-in candidate, Sandra Donley, Lawrence junior, will be the only UP candidate for the married student district. She received one vote. Originally, UP did not run a candidate for that district.
In the Professional fraternity and cooperative district, Vox candidate, Danny Johnson, New York, N.Y., junior, received one vote. His UP opponent, Art Ogilvie, Kansas City, Mo., senior, received no votes.
THE VOX CANDIDATE for the married district, James A. Riley, Lawrence senior, received three votes.
Bob Stewart, UP Greek co-chairman and Bartlesville sophomore, said, however, that Ogilvie will run in the general election.
Both UP and Vox will have candidates in the general election from all 10 University voting districts. The districts are fraternities, Sororites, large men's dormitories, large women's dormitories, small men's dormitories, small women's dormitories, freshman women's dormitories, professional fraternities, co-operatives, unmarried and unorganized students, and married students.
Eleanor Roosevelt Dies in New York
NEW YORK—(UPI)—Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt, America's most famous First Lady, is dead.
Mrs. Roosevelt, 78, widow of the nation's 32nd president, sucumbed at 5:15 last night in her Manhattan townhouse from complications resulting from a two and one-half year fight against anemia.
Mary Joan G.
Many Memories Of Mrs. Roosevelt
When Franklin D. Roosevelt died at Warm Springs, Ga., the then Vice-President Harry S. Truman, visited Mrs. Roosevelt at the White House.
"Is there anything I can do for you?" The nation's 33rd President asked.
"Is there anything I can do for you?" she replied. "For you are the one in trouble now."
Truman has said he would never forget the remark.
- * *
Mrs. Roosevelt won the admiration of one of her bitterest adversaries, the late Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Vishinsky.
She had engaged in a bitter debate with the Russian when she was a delegate to the United Nations, ending it by saying:
"I hope the day will come when you and I are on the same side of a dispute, for I admire your fighting qualities."
"And I yours," Vishinsky replied.
. . . . .
U. S. Labor Secretary W. Willard Wirtz recalled today how he and an aide set out to "prompt" Mrs. Roosevelt for a television appearance and wound up drinking coffee when she had all the answers.
Wirtz said he went to Mrs. Roosevelt's apartment in 1956 during the presidential campaign of Adlai E. Stevenson and former President Dwight D. Eisenhower. He and the aide were to prepare her for questions she might be asked in a forthcoming television news show.
"We pretended she was on the program and gave her a question," Wirtz recalled. "Her answer was so completely right that we could add nothing.
"We fired another question at her and again her answer had wonderful perception—with things in it we didn't know. Finally, after the fourth question, we all leaned back and laughed. We couldn't help her. We just sat and drank coffee."
Members of the family later announced funeral services will be conducted Saturday at the St. James Episcopal church in Hyde Park, N. Y., longtime home of Mrs. Roosevelt and the late President Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Interment will be in the rose garden at Hyde Park. The family said she would be buried next to her husband "in accordance with their joint wishes." Mr. Roosevelt died April 12, 1945.
Mrs. Roosevelt was hospitalized Sept. 26 for treatment of a persistent lung infection and anemia. Four weeks later, on Oct. 18, her doctors allowed her to treat Columbia- Presbyterian medical center here for treatment at home.
MRS. ROOSEVELT'S daughter Mrs. Anna Halstead of Birmingham, Mich., and two sons, John and Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr., were at her bedside when she died. Doctors had been summoned earlier because of indications of heart failure.
Physicians said last night they knew then Mrs. Roosevelt was dying and wanted to make her last days as comfortable as possible.
The family said a memorial service would be conducted "within the next two weeks" at the cathedral of St. John Divine here.
IN THEIR STATEMENT, they said it was discovered two and one-half years ago that Mrs. Roosevelt "was suffering from a complicated type of anemia."
She received a checkup in September, 1961, and underwent further treatment last July. Mrs. Roosevelt then went to Hyde Park, 60 miles north of New York City on the Hudson River, for a brief vacation and it was felt her condition was improving.
But she was forced to enter the hospital when she began running a slight fever. On Oct. 25, doctors in residence at Mrs. Roosevelt's home diagnosed a non-contagious form of tuberculosis.
Right up until her final illness, she never slowed her pace. She usually made about 50 speeches a year, with the proceeds going to charity.
BUT MRS. ROOSEVELT was interested in more than public achievements.
"I treasure the love of my children, the respect of my children and I would never want my children or my grandchildren to feel that I had failed them," she said at a dinner in honor of her 70th birthday.
Dag Hammarskjold, the late secretary general of the U.N., praised her work with the world organization and said she deserved thanks for "being herself."
"Millions of people all over the world think of Mrs. Roosevelt as being their friend," he said.
(Continued on page 12)
Bitter Nixon Quits Assails California Press
LOS ANGELES — (UPI) Shriveled balloons, stale cigarettes and discarded campaign posters today was all that remained of Richard M. Nixon's bid to lead the Republican Party from the California governor's chair.
The former vice president was taking a "long holiday" from politics. He ended a career which led the Whittier, Calif., "poor boy" to within percentage points of being President of the United States.
Nixon made it clear that he was stepping down both as state and national leader of his party.
"I look for the Republican Party to be revitalized in California under new leadership, not mine," he said. He predicted new national leadership would come from Republican
And he ended it with a speech unprecedented in American politics.
governors elected Tuesday in New York, Pennsylvania, Michigan and Ohio.
Perhaps it was something the strong-jawed, dark-haired Republican had always wanted to say but couldn't.
"Just think how much you're going to be missing . . . You won't have Nixon to kick around any more." Nixon chided the press. "I think that it is time that our great newspapers have at least the same objective, the same fullness of coverage that television has."
With repeated protests during the press conference that he was not bitter, Nixon jammed his hands in his pockets and reared back with
(Continued on page 12)
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Nov. 8, 1962
'What's Goin'on Here?'
It was really embarrassing.
A foreign student asked a fair and logical question, and the best I could do was stand there displaying my best egg-on-the-face expression.
IT WASN'T THAT he phrased the question with ridicule calculated to be critical of an American tradition. His curiosity was aroused and he simply looked to a native American son for an explanation.
He asked. "What are they doing?"
That's all. He didn't ask, "Why," he just asked, "What." A fair question—it deserved an honest answer that should carry a logical explanation.
BUT, TELL ME, what explanation can be made for the crowning of a Homecoming Queen that is staged on the front steps of Strong Hall with all the savoir faire and finesse of a used-furniture auction?
Of course, being a stranger to American customs, the student didn't realize that it was peculiar for such a high honor to be bestowed before an audience of approximately 200 transient class-goers, half of whom could neither see the 10 candidates nor hear the master of ceremonies.
And for the girls, condolence. This crowning moment of exhilaration or disappointment (three winners, seven un-winners) offered all the opportunity for grace of a field hockey match.
BECAUSE THE CEREMONY WAS held between classes,the candidates were dressed in their goin'-to-school togs.Not that they look bad in their school clothes—no, siree, not bad at all. But for the love of Pete,who ever heard of a Queen being forced by circumstances to begin her reign in a pair of bobby sox and a skirt and sweater?
But that's quibbling—to make a plausible explanation of Homecoming to a student not acquainted with American traditions and ceremonies it is necessary to deal with elements more basic to the phenomena.
So I told him that Homecoming is the occasion celebrated annually at colleges and universities where all the alumni come back to visit once again the hallowed halls where they were intellectually outfitted to meet the demands of a cold, cruel world.
MY FOREIGN STUDENT friend seemed to accept this part of the explanation, so I was heartened to become more definitive on Homecomings by added certain other details of the phenomenon.
I told him how all the fraternities, sororites, and dormitories spend hundreds of dollars and
many, many hours building crepe paper yard decorations and floats, and by that time it was clear that, once again, he was wondering, "What are they doing?"
Well, having gone this far, I went on to tell him about how everyone dresses up and goes to the football game and, not wanted to leave out important detail. I added that lots of the people take whiskey or vodka or some other kind of booze to the game so they will be able to get swacked out of their gourd (as, drunk out of their mind). I told him that this is an important part of Homecoming.
Well, as you might imagine, by this time he had given up; but then I began to wonder, "What are they doing?"
WELL, I WENT BACK to the start where we crowned the Queen on the steps in front of Strong Hall, and with this dignified ceremony in mind, I tried to look at the whole grand picture.
First of all, it can be said that Homecoming is the time when a very attractive and charming girl is chosen to reign as Queen.
But aren't there hundreds of other equally attractive and charming girls at KU who did not even have a chance to be considered for the honor because they are outside the inner-circle of politics which controls the selection of a girl to represent the entire University?
Well, that's quibbling again—let's move on.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
THERE'S NO ARGUMENT against the idea that it's fine for the alumni to come back to the alma mater once a year. That's the basic excuse for the attendant sideshows.
As for yard decorations and floats, well I guess it's their time and money. They can expend both without license or sound reason if they desire.
But couldn't the time and money be better invested in establishing a works which would be a lasting monument to their devotion, sweat and sacrifice?
AS FOR THE FOOTBALL GAME and the boozing, I'm at a loss. The game is fine, but the boozing and sometimes—attendant fighting defys explanation.
So, my bewildered friend, here it is: Homecoming is the time when a girl is crowned Queen; organized houses spend great amounts of time and money erecting crepe paper monuments; the alumni make their annual pilgrimage, and everyone goes to the football game and gets swacked and looks for fights.
Think not? Then just look around this week-end and ask yourself, "What are they doing?"
the took world
Here is one of the forgotten novels of American literature. Cooper, Hawthorne and Melville have crowded it aside, yet it should be studied first of all as an example of the Gothic (Elsie is right out of Poe) and second for its comments on predestination and Puritanism.
ELSIE VENNER, by Oliver Wendell Holmes (Signet Classics, 75 cents).
It admittedly is a fuzzy story. Elsie Venner is a girl whose mother was bitten by a snake, and Elsie has strange, snakelike characteristics (though she also is strikingly beautiful). She alone has the power of calming the snakes who live on The Mountain, and her stare is known to turn schoolmasters wild.
The story is by turns fantastic and funny. One feels little compassion for Elsie, and one wonders about the theme, because Holmes, an arch-critic of predestination, seems to believe the nonsense of the central theme.-CMP
THE FARM, by Louis Bromfield (Signet Classics, 75 cents).
* * *
It is difficult to class "The Farm" as a novel. What it does is to set forth the changing patterns of life on an Ohio farm, through four generations, starting with the dreaming yet realistic Colonel MacDougal, a primitive lover of the land in the tradition of Jefferson and Rousseau, and ending with Johnny, who tells the story, a young man who realizes that the land has given way to the forces of industrialism.
The book is almost primitivist in its approach to the soil. Bromfield was convinced that in nature, in the simplicity of life on the land, man's best could be realized. His villains are the materialistic New Englanders of the Protestant ethic, bringing their grasping ways to the virgin land of the Western Reserve.
It is slow-moving, with scarcely nothing happening, yet it is full of exceptional portraits, and it deserves study in the important field of the literature of agrarianism—CMP
Letters
Amidst the current interest in the Peace Corps, let us remember the exciting opportunities for service in this country and overseas long offered by the churches to people with skills in medicine, agriculture, education, social work, and many other fields. The modern missionary movement has modified its approach, but it still offers the double opportunity for humanitarian service and for evangelistic witness. Such opportunities exist for short periods of two and three years, as well as for a lifetime.
Churches Serve Overseas Editor:
Mr. Wiggins in his enthusiasm did an injustice when he rated the concern based on religious motivation in the same category as interest in people for reasons of economic exploitation, military alliance, or political power. Humanitarian service by itself is valuable, but can there be a higher motivation than the desire for the well-being of the whole man, for his spirit as well as his body and mind?
The experiences of the Peace Corps in the selection, training and utilization of its volunteers will add to the large body of such knowledge built up by years of missionary and other private programs and by government activities. It drew its procedures from this past experience, and is one more link in the chain.
Placed in its context, the Peace Corps is seen as one of several worthwhile possibilities for service to be investigated.
Moma Millikan
Lawrence
1953 KU graduate
WELCOME STUDENTS
"PROBABLY THE BIGGEST PROBLEM FACING YOU YOUNG STUDENTS IN COLLEGE TO-DAY IS: WHERE TO FIND A PARKING PLACE FOR YOUR CAR?"
Food Crisis Won't Bring Red Regime's Downfall
By Scott Payne
Note to those who think that reports of famine in Communist China presage the imminent downfall of the Red regime: Forget it.
It just won't happen.
Chinese history is studded with rebellion and overthrow of rulers. In the past year, all the symptoms of an approaching explosion within China have been evident.
Refugees have been streaming into Hong Kong. Macao officials have reported hearing explosions in Kwantung Province that indicate the presence of saboteurs. Stories of brutality, starvation and unrest have followed the floods of Chinese leaving the mainland.
THESE SIGNS have so worked on Chiang Kai-shek, Formosa's Crusader Rabbit, that he recently renewed his perennial prediction of the "Holy Expedition" across the Formosa straits. But the old man is living in a dream.
Last year, the Chinese people were approaching a rebellious mood. But the Peking government saw what was coming and acted. The regime junked Party Chairman Mao Tse-tung's "Great Leap." This was an ambitious program similar to Premier Stalin's first five-year plan.
The "Great Leap," which was to overtake western economy within 15 years, was a chaotic drive for more of everything. It kept millions of peasants working 18 hours a day working crude steel smelters and digging faulty irrigation ditches.
BUT WITH SIGNS of widespread unrest, China's communal system was reformed rapidly. Working hours were reduced. The government introduced the profit motive to encourage peasant initiative. Small plots of land have been doled out to millions of peasants.
The regime also dropped the sweeping birth control program that it initiated in 1957. Only recently have the government-controlled newspapers begun to issue warnings against early marriages and "too many children." The
B
Chinese press also is printing detailed instructions on the use of contraceptives.
The major consideration in Mao's new economic arrangements is, of course, in the area of food production. At the beginning of the "Great Leap," minor increases were noted in food production.
BUT FOR THE last four years, China has undergone natural disasters which have been catastrophic. Rain and high wind has destroyed wheat crops in some sections of the country, while drought has ruined rice growth in other areas. Flagues of insects have consumed millions of tons of grain.
Because of the food shortage, it has been necessary to reverse the traditional economic Communistic production priorities. The emphasis now is first upon agriculture, then light industry. Heavy industry will have to wait.
Mao Tse-tung and his regime are now fighting the battle of the minimum—simply to feed the Chinese population. If the new, decentralized agrarian system works, two or three good harvests should see the Feking government ready for another "Big Leap." Such an effort, with the active support of 500 million well-fed men and women, probably will surpass all expectations—and fears.
If China's poor showing in agriculture continues, it will be years before problems caused by food shortages can be overcome. Even at this rate, however, the "Great Leap" made relatively significant strides in industrialization of China, which was no more than a feudal state in 1939. But the government expects the new economic arrangement to work.
OBVIOUSLY, MAO is counting on the enthusiastic support of the masses of the Chinese people. Equally obvious, he has the support he needs. The Mao regime could not hope to dictate to the Chinese masses if they opposed his will. Even the modern $2\frac{1}{2}$ million-man Communist Chinese army could not stop the explosive, savage anger of 600 to 700 million peasants.
Daily Hansan
University of Kaasas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Telephone VIII 3-2700
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.
Better Life Expected
Thursday, Nov. 8, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Refugees Streaming Into Hong Kong
By Jim Alsbrook
About May 15. Americans were intrigued by the picture of an attractive 19-year-old Chinese girl which appeared in scores of American newspapers.
Her name was Lee Ying. She was not an actress or the wife of a Chinese Nationalist diplomat. She was not a scantily attired pin-up girl. She was in tatters, and she was sobbing disconcertedly. She was kneeling in a detention camp at Hong Kong, awaiting deportation
to Communist China, from which she and thousands of hungry refugees have been fleeing at the rate of 40,000 per month.
THE PLIGHT of Lee Ying is the plight of millions of Chinese who are trying to get to and remain in Hong Kong, a British crown colony on the southeastern China coast facing the South China Sea. There, they know, times are better—even though 15,000 persons sleep in Hong Kong's streets each night, 500,000 live in cardboard-walled
UOK MAP
SERVICE
11-7-62 ZW
KOREA
SEOUL
UOK MAP
SERVICE
11-7-62 ZW
KOREA
SEOUL
SHANGHAI
CHINA
FORMOSA
HONG KONG
MACAO
SOUTH
CHINA
SEA
THE
PHILIPPINES
MANILA
cubicles and straw mat lean-tos, and 80,000 live in tarpaper shacks and on tenement house roofs.
SOUTH
CHINA
SEA
MANILA
THE
PHILIPPINES
Worth Repeating
The immaturity of today's college students is exceeded only by that of the alumni. —William Dailey
Some people think there are only two parties in the United States. One party consists of Republicans, and the other of Democrats, Socialists, and Communists. —John Ise.
In Hong Kong, food is plentiful and wages are at least $1 per day. This enables the resident to buy enough food; but if the person fails to get one of the plentiful jobs there, he can go to any of the 86 private and public welfare agencies and get food until he finds employment.
America has a great advantage over the Communist countries in the kind of system we have, if we will only exploit the advantage. One of the sources of strength of education in a free country is that it can encourage independence and originality of thought. Unfortunately, our public school system in some areas often fails in this respect. Teaching tends to be dull, dry and stereotyped. There is a tendency to avoid "controversial issues," to teach what is "safe" and generally accepted.Justice William O. Douglas
The 398-square-mile crown colony has been enjoying an economic boom since the end of World War II when the Japanese left and a rebuilding program was begun. The impetus of the reconstruction of the area, with stimulated world trade and the beginning of new industries, enabled Hong Kong to reap the benefit of its strategic location, its accessibility to the Chinese mainland, economic reverses in Communist China, and its excellent harbor for ocean-going vessels.
HONG KONG is populated by fewer than 20,000 Caucasians, predominantly British, and about 3,500,000 Orientals, predominantly Chinese. The British foreign office controls the colony through the appointment of a governor, the present incumbent being Sir Robert Black.
An executive council consisting of official and unofficial members assists the governor. About onehalf the unofficial members of the executive council are Chinese. The legislative council is appointed.
The colony police force is controlled and administered by British officials, but most of the policemen are Chinese.
Hong Kong does more business with Communist China than with any other country. The United States is second and Great Britain third in volume trade with Hong Kong.
Despite the economic boom of Hong Kong, however, outside help has been badly needed and inadequate. The government is building 100,000 new housing units a year, but 700,000 residents still have no permanent address.
PRODUCTS WHICH have accelerated the economic growth of Hong Kong are enamel and aluminum ware, rubber-soled canvas shoes, ginger, electric torches, plastics, cement and rope. The British navy finds the port of Hong Kong useful, and other nations use Hong Kong as a listening post for information concerning Red China.
MANY COUNTRIES—including Australia and the Philippines have refused to accept any of the refugees. President Kennedy recently signed a bill permitting 5,000
Freedom of population movement between Hong Kong and Red China —which had existed until recently—has been stopped because the colony simply could not absorb the refugees coming from the mainland.
Seeing the difficulties of the British in Hong Kong, the United States government has given the struggling colony $28 million in surplus food in recent years. The nationalist Chinese have taken thousands of refugees at Formosa and are willing to take more as rapidly as possible.
skilled and educated Chinese to enter the United States. For many years more than 19,000 have been on the waiting list for United States citizenship.
New Shipment—Just Arrived
CULOTTES
The CAMPUS
Jay SHOPPE
12th & Oread
The United States has given $250,000 through the Far East Refugee Program to assist the Hong Kong Technical College and is permitting thousands of Chinese seeking higher education to visit the United States for such training.
Great Britain has attempted to remain on friendly terms with China by voting for Red Chinese admission to the United Nations and by ignoring ideological differences with the Peking regime. This may have postponed to some degree the day when conflict over Hong Kong will estrange Britain and Red China.
and ethnic groups, the distance between Great Britain and Hong Kong, the overwhelming number of Chinese in Hong Kong, the pushing of the Portuguese from Goa and Diu—all these seem to indicate that Great Britain cannot reasonably expect to retain control of this colony indefinitely.
Since the Japanese took Hong Kong so easily in 1941, it is speculated that eventually a strong Communist China will demand and get this colony. Since China is attacking India and apparently is indulging in expansionist policies, the British must anticipate the possible loss of this area.
CAMPUS
Jay
SHOPPE
12th & Oread
THE GRADUAL disappearance of colonialism, the surging of nationalistic aspirations by aboriginal
Whenever it comes, the final result will be the outing of the British from Hong Kong. British tenancy will terminate long before Britain's 99-year lease expires.
Birds on a branch
BIRD TV-RADIO
VI 3-8855
908 Mass.
- Quality Parts
TV-
RADIO
- Guaranteed
- Expert Service
FREEMAN
Carefree comfort . . you'll praise the good looks and comfort fit of this soft chukka boot . . plantation crepe sole and heel . . Sand color.
11. 95
"Bunny Blacks"
Bunny Blacks Royal College Shop 837 MASS.
Royal College Shop 837 MASS.
Page 4 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Nov. 8, 1962
Red Chinese Began First Push In 1950
By Phil Newson UPI Foreign News Analyst
It was 12 years ago, a little later in the year than now, that the Chinese Communists undertook their first great military venture beyond their own boundaries.
It was Korea then. Today, it's India.
But the front line reports trickling down from the Himalayan peaks reveal no great change in Chinese tactics in those 12 years.
THEN AS NOW, the most effective Chinese tactic was the human wave assault which moved relentlessly upon its objective regardless of the cost.
many an American veteran of the Korean Punch Bowl, the Bowling Alley, Pork Chop Hill and the Iron Triangle remembers those Chinese.
They came out of the morning mists like ghostly sleepwalkers, advancing almost shoulder to shoulder. They seemed to come out of the ground itself and, like rice shoots, when one fell another took his place.
The arms they carried were simple ones. They liked the Russian burp gun. It wasn't much more than a barrel with a trigger attached but at fairly close range it sprayed bullets with deadly efficiency.
THE WINTER MONTHS of 1950-51 were not happy ones for the Americans in Korea, fighting a new kind of enemy in miserable terrain, against unfamiliar tactics and 'in bitter cold.
Before the United Nations forces there were to be welded into one of the world's most magnificent fighting machines, costly lessons were to be learned.
The Chinese soldiers advanced like deadly automatons but they had not been trained to improvise nor to take advantage of sudden opportunities.
Bob Gibson was a UPI correspondent who lived through one of those human wave assaults. The vivid dispatch he filed told how one Chinese soldier walked straight through an overrun American machinegun post, simply kicking the gun aside as he continued his slow pace forward.
IN A SURPRISE night attack, the Chinese captured a U.S. artillery position complete with guns and ammunition. Two weeks later when the Americans recaptured the position, the guns still stood with their muzzles pointed north, ready for use and with ammunition still stacked neatly nearby.
This correspondent recalls a Chinese soldier horribly burned by napalm. For two weeks after his fellows had fallen back he had hidden in a Korean pig sty, clinging to life and stolidly ignoring his pain.
This is the nature of the enemy which now faces the outmanned and outgunned Indian fighters in the high Himalayas as the Red Chinese move for domination of the whole of Asia.
American arms are flowing into India to bolster Indian defenses.
INDIAN WOMEN are contributing their gold trinkets.
But neither can make up soon for India's lack of preparedness.
And over the weekend came confirmation of a fact already suspected.
In the hour of crisis, Nikita Khrushchev's proclaimed friendship for India counted for less than kinship in conquest with his Communist allies.
CIA Recruit Tract Is Available Here
Some of the ice that customarily surrounds America's top hush-hush organization is melting.
The Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) has published a 16-page brochure explaining purposes and problems of the organization, as well as the job opportunities within the agency.
Laurence Woodruff, dean of students, said that the CIA has been unable to compete with private business and other governmental agencies in finding qualified personnel.
Woodruff returned Tuesday from a two-day's visit in Washington, D. C. He was asked by the CIA to distribute the booklet and answer questions about the job opportunities in the CIA.
Roy Laird to Discuss Southern Civil Rights
Roy Laird, assistant professor of political science, will discuss "Civil Rights in the South" Friday in a SUA Current Events Forum. He will give the talk at 4 p.m. in the Music Room of the Kansas Union.
...SKY-HI
Randcraft
SHOES FOR YOUNG MEN
RIDERS
Greet the Grenadier ... a boot as modern in concept as a sonic boom ... in complete tune with today's quickened tempo. Young men seeking a change of pace will enthuse at this Rand-craft version of the Boot, '62.
$10.99
REDMAN'S SHOES
815 Mass.
Quality Watch Repair
Lowest Prices
DANIELS
State Farm Insurance
Paul E. Hodgson
Local Agent
Off. Ph. VI 3-5666 530 W 23rd.
Res. Ph. VI 3-5994 Lawrence, Kan.
C
On Campus with Max Shulman (Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf," "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis," etc.)
EAT, SLEEP, AND MATRICULATE
The trouble with early morning classes is that you're too sleepy. At late morning classes you're too hungry. At early afternoon classes you're too logy. At late afternoon classes, you're too hungry again. The fact is—and we might as well face it—there is no good time of day to take a class.
What shall we do then? Abandon our colleges to the ivy? I say no! I say America did not become the hope of mankind and the world's largest producer of butterfats and tallow by running away from a fight!
If you're always too hungry or too sleepy for class, then let's hold classes when you're not too hungry or sleepy: namely, when you're eating or sleeping.
Classes while eating are a simple matter. Just have a lecturer lecture while the eaters eat. But watch out for noisy food. I mean who can hear a lecturer lecture when everybody is crunching celery or matzo or like that? Serve quiet stuff—like anchovy paste on a doughnut, or steaming bowls of lamb fat.
jeans. Instead carry an ember from the dormitory fireplace in your purse or pocket. Place the Marlboro against the ember. Light it quietly. Smoke it quietly. Oh, I know I ask a great deal! I know that one's natural instinct upon encountering Marlboro's fine flavor and filter is to throw back one's head and bellow great, rousing cries of joy. But you must not. You must contain your eestacy, lest you disturb the lecturing lecturer. You can, if you like, permit yourself a few small shudders of pleasure as you smoke, but take care not to wear garments which will set up a clatter when you shudder—like taffeta, for example, or knee cymbals.
And kindly observe silence while lighting your post-prandial Marlboro Cigarette. Don't be striking kitchen matches on your
"But watch out for noisy food."
Let us turn now to the problem of learning while sleeping. First, can it be done?
Yes, it can. Psychologists have proved that the brain is definitely able to assimilate information during sleep. Take, for instance, a recent experiment conducted by a leading Eastern university (Stanford). A small tape recorder was placed under the pillow of the subject, a freshman named Glebe Sigfaoos. When Glebe was fast asleep, the recorder was turned on. Softly, all through the night, it repeated three statements in Glebe's slumbering ear:
1. Herbert Spencer lived to the age of 109 and is called "The Founder of English Eclectic Philosophy."
3. The Archduke Ferdinand was assassinated in 1914 at Sarajevo by a young nationalist named Mjilas Cvetniec, who has been called "The Trigger of World War I."
When Glebe awoke in the morning, the psychologists said to him, "Herbert Spencer lived to the age of 109. What is he called?"
2. The banana plant is not a tree but a large perennial herb.
Glebe promptly replied, "Perennial Herb."
Next they asked him, "What has Mijilas Cvetnic been called?" Replied Glbe, "Perennial Serb."
Finally they said, "Is the banana plant a tree?"
But Globe, exhausted from the long interrogation, had fallen back asleep, where he is to this day. © 1982 Shulman
Glebe sleeps, but you, we trust, are up and about. Why not improve each wakeup hour with our fine product—Marlboro Cigarettes? You get a lot to like—filter, flavor, pack or box.
*
M
A
Open Every Evening
S
Safeway
Key Rexall Drugs
T. G. & Y.
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
Maupintour Travel
Kief's Record & Hi-Fi
Shop Evenings
University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Philosopher Describes Segregation Problems
The White South African believes "white" to be synonymous with civilization, a visiting professor yesterday told the Faculty Forum.
For that reason, Errol Harris professor of philosophy said, the white South Africans are practicing absolute racial segregation to avoid the misecenation they believe will result from desegregation.
PROF. HARRIS SAID the policy of complete racial segregation is legally entrenched and that the country's white population -25 per cent of the total-regards segregation as the only way to preserve itself.
If racial barriers collapse, he said, South African whites fear that social barriers also will fall. The result would be miscgeanation and the end of the country's white race—the end of civilization.
He said this fear was much the same fear to be found generally in the South—in Alabama and Missouri in particular.
"BUT IT IS THE ONE solution which cannot succeed because it has no supporters," he added.
The solution would be establishment of a multi-racial government. Prof. Harris suggested.
He said that in South Africa a liberal is defined as an individual believing in an end to complete segregation, but observed that Negro Africans have lost patience with the liberals and doubted that the two might work together.
ASKED AFTER his talk why Negroes didn't simply go on strike or adopt other passive resistance measures. Prof. Harris said that laws with strict penalties make strikes illegal.
"The liberals in South Africa are faced with complete frustration and that is why liberals are leaving the country," Prof. Harris said.
Prof. Harris said the policy of "separate development" is continued despite the fact that Negro labor supports the economy.
No Trouble With JJJ
NEW YORK — (UPI) — Man steady hotel guests have difficult remembering the name of their fa vorite bellhop.
That's not the case with a popular bellhop at the Hotel Edison. His name is Joseph Joseph Joseph and he's been there 20 years.
TRADING POST
704 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. Ph.VI 3-2012
Located 1 door South of K.P. & L.
in basement.
Platform Rocker ... $ 6.00
Corner Desk ... $ 8.50
7-drawer Desk ... $16.00
Baby Bed with mattress ... $10.00
Duncan Phye drop leaf table and two chairs ... $34.50
10 x 12 cotton rug ... $19.00
Piano swivel stool ... $ 8.00
and two chairs ... $34.50
Roll around utility table ... $ 3.50
Full sized bed with springs
and mattress $17.50
Ironing board ... $ 1.50
Big 3-drawer desk ... $10.00
21" Console TV ... $22.00
R.C.A. high fidelity console
record player ... $42.50
New table model radios,
choice of colors... $9.50 (en.)
Thursday. Nov. 8, 1962
KU's Roy Roberts distinguished
We invite you to come in and look around. Remember a few steps down gives you a big step up in savings.
★★
Humanities Talk To Be Next Week
A philosophy professor who left South Africa because of government-imposed racial segregation will talk on "Analysis and Insight" at the next Humanities Lecture, Nov. 16.
Errol Harris, who is the first Roy A. Roberts professor at KU, will deliver the lecture at 8 p.m. in the University Theatre.
PROF. HARRIS said, "There are only two choices in South Africa for a person who is a 'liberal' on the race question. He can either keep silent, or he can get out. I got out."
A distinguished career as a South African scholar and educator was left behind when Prof. Harris sailed to the U.S.
"If I went back, I suppose I would only face the prospect of going to jail," he said.
At 11:30 p.m. Miriam Makeba — internationally known South African folk singer—will sing in Hoch Auditorium.
KU's Saturday night Homecoming festivities will feature an entertainment doubleheader.
Saturday Night To Offer Variety
Before that, however, Warren Durret's band — recently voted the best in the area — will provide music for the 8 to 11:30 dance in the Student Union ballroom.
The ticket admits the holder to both the dance and the concert with the purchase of the single ticket.
Tickets on sale at the information booth in the Union and on Jayhawk Drive are $1.50.
Tickets may also be purchased at the door of Hoch Auditorium or at the ballroom that night.
FAST FINISHED Laundry Service
613 Vermont
RISK'S
New Smart COSSACK STYLE!
Glov-Ett®
SLIP-ON
COSSACK HIGH TOP
SNO-BOOTS
Genuine
Glove LEATHER
Cozy 100% deep
pile lining, soft
Dynel fur collar
$12.99
Narrow and Medium Sizes 4 to 10
Choice of Colors Black or Otter
REDMANS 815 MASS.
Hungry
for flavor?
Tareyton's
got it!
"Tareyton's Dual Filter in duas partes divisa est!"
says Gaius (Silver Tongue) Cicero, star orator of the Coliseum Debating Team. "I could talk about Tareytons ad infinitum," says Silver Tongue. "And you'll find vox everywhere singing their praises. Here's de gustibus you never thought you'd get from any filter cigarette." Dual Filter makes the difference
---
DUAL FILTER Tareyton
Product of The Auroran Dulceo-Company - Dulceo is our middle name. © 1904
图
University Daily Kansan
Page 6
Thursday, Nov. 8, 1962
Elections Committee Blamed In Late Poll
A member of the All Student Council blames the ASC elections committee for the delay in opening the polls Tuesday.
Holly Thompson, Ottawa sophomore and Vox representative to the ASC, said:
"The delay wasn't the fault of either party. If anyone should be blamed, it should be the elections committee, itself."
The polls were scheduled to open at 8 a.m. Tuesday, but did not open until 10:30.
In an article in the Tuesday Daily Kansan, John Stuckey, Pittsburgh junior and election committee chairman, said the delay was due to the "failure of University Party members to report for election duty."
...MISS THOMPSON, a member of the ASC elections committee, was in charge of the polling district in Murphy Hall yesterday morning.
"By 8 o'clock I had a full set of poll workers—both UP and Vox. At 9:15, when we still had no ballots, I told them they needn't wait any longer. I couldn't locate elections committee chairman," she said.
"The delay in delivery of ballots is not entirely John's (Stuckey's) fault. He couldn't do it all himself. The other ASC members on the elections committee simply would not cooperate with him. They would not work. Perhaps this indicates that students should be more careful of the members they elect to the Council," she continued.
Bob Stewart, Bartlesville sophomore and UP Greek co-chairman, said, "The Kansan article made it appear that the delay of the polls was UP's fault. This is not true."
British Actor to Give A Dramatic Recital
An English actor will present "Bare Boards and a Passion," a drama recital, at 7 tomorrow night in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Hugh Miller, past senior director of the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London, will include readings ranging from Greek tragedy to modern comedy.
Miller has made two previous tours in the United States. Last year he worked as dialogue coach on the film, "Lawrence of Arabia," being made in the Jordanian desert and Spain.
Bill Haynes $ ^{*} $ says...
Stands to reason that a life Insurance policy designed expressly for college men—and sold only to college men—gives you the most benefits for your money when you consider that college men are preferred insurance risks. Call me and I'll fill you In on THE BENEFACTOR, College Life's famous policy, exclusively for college men."
*BILL HAYNES
VI 3-9394
"THERE IS always confusion the first day at the polls," Stewart said. "Much of the confusion Tuesday was due to the initiation of a new voting system."
representing
THE COLLEGE LIFE
INSURANCE COMPANY
OF AMERICA
Stewart gave two reasons for the delayed opening: ballots were not delivered and arranged at the polls on time and not enough poll wokers were there.
Stewart said that UP was not notified until late the night before elections that the party would need four more poll workers.
...the only Company selling exclusively to College Men
"The point is," said Stewart, "that neither party should be blamed. Instead, everyone should jump in and try to make the new system of centralized polls a success."
"In addition to a lack of poll workers, I did not have enough time to deliver the ballots, dean's cards and ballot boxes."
STUCKKEY SAID yesterday after he completion of the primaries,
He added, "Basically, I think the multi-poll system of voting is a good one. I think the polls are placed conveniently for students, but there are some organizational problems that need to be worked out.
DALLAS — (UPI) — Former Maj. Gen. Edwin A. Walker will enter a hospital later today for a court-ordered psychiatric examination to determine whether he is capable of understanding the rebellion, insurrection and seditious conspiracy charges against him.
Walker Enters Texas Hospital
Charles W. Webster, attorney for psychiatrist Dr. R. L. Stubblefield, said Walker would be admitted to Parkland Hospital in Dallas as an in-patient.
The World War II and Korean War hero, who resigned his Army commission to campaign for what he called a "pro-blue" brand of Americanism, was arrested by federal officers at Oxford, Miss., during the anti-integration riots on the campus. He was sent to the federal prison hospital at Springfield, Mo., for mental examination, a move which caused charges that his civil liberties had been violated.
Walker, his mother from Center Point, Tex., and his attorneys met with Webster and Stubblefield yesterday and agreed to begin the long-delayed examination.
Walker now is free on $50,000 bond.
Barrel, 25 pieces --- $5.00
Tub, 15 pieces --- $3.50
Kentucky Fried Chicken
BIG BUY
23rd & Iowa
FASHION FORECA Greet the Cold with Warming Style SNOW BOOTS
Convenient Snap
Tab and Pullon
Styles
Shearling Lamb or Dynel
Modacrylic Fleece Linings
SHOE
Vinyl Uppers—Non-Skid
Ribbed Cushion Crepe
Sole and Heel
Sizes 5 through 10
Open Daily, 9 to 9 Sunday Noon to 5
Harvey's DISCOUNT SHOES 1302 W. 23rd St.
H
Union Darkroom Will Open Soon
The Kansas Union photography darkroom and laboratory opens next week for the first time in three years, SUA officials announced. It was also announced that the SUA will offer photo printing lessons if enough students are interested. The bi-weekly lessons would
begin after Thanksgiving vacation. Students wanting to use the dark-room must get permission from the SUA office. They must supply their own chemicals and printing paper. The laboratory is furnished with new equipment purchased this year by the SUA.
BOWLING is FUN!
BOWLING
is FUN!
Try It This Weekend at
Hillcrest Bowl
9th & Iowa
32 AUTOMATIC LANES
A NEW TENOR!! SERGIO FRANCHI
The exciting young tenor the whole world is talking about.
ITALY'S
BRILLIANT
NEW TENOR
SERGIO
FRANCHI
ROMANTIC
ITALIAN SONGS
LM/LSC-2640
Hear the debut recording by the exciting young tenor the whole world is talking about. It abounds, as does this young man, with the Italian joy of living. Treat yourself to it!
In Living Stereo and Monaural Hi-Fi
on RCA Victor
SPECIAL ORDER SERVICE
BUY WHERE YOU SEE THIS SYMBOL -O we offer the NEW RECORD DEALS SPECIAL ORDER SERVICE making available every record in the great RCA Red Victor Seal catalog. Let us show you how you can always be sure of getting "The Music You Want When You Want It."
Bell Music Co.
825 Massachusetts
---
Thursday, Nov. 8, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Campus Church Drive Holds First Meeting
A crusade to promote student church affiliation begins tonight.
The Campus Crusade for Christ, an interdenominational group being organized for the first time on a Kansas campus, will hold its first meeting at 7 p.m. in the Kansas Union.
Tonight's speaker, John Flack, is a 1956 graduate of English from Princeton University, and he holds a masters degree in theology from the Dallas Theological Seminary. He is said to speak to over 50 schools per year. He will spend about two weeks at KU participating in the program.
John Flack, the national representative of the Crusade, will speak.
John Flack, the national representative of the Crusade, will speak. "There are over 1600 KU students who have listed no religious preference," said Jim Hiskey, the midwest director of the Crusade.
Hiskey is a graduate of the University of Houston. Formerly of Houston, Texas, he is now a Lawrence resident.
protect. Sale Ann Haisley, the marketing director of the Orsadue "Our big mission is to reach the students not active in any religious group. We have no membership as such. We are just trying to get students into churches."
Campus Crusade for Christ is designed to be led by one man on each university campus and organized through students.
It was founded 11 years ago by William Bright, a businessman, shortly after he graduated from the University of Oklahoma. He built his program on the ground that Christianity and consequent salvation were most important items.
Hiskey will be the leader of the group at KU. Charles F. Weinaug, professor of petroleum engineering, is the Crusade's faculty sponsor. Other KU directors include Mr. and Mrs. Stan Ament, staff representatives of the Crusade's national office.
He felt that no one had ever talked to him about Christianity, and that it would have made a difference to him if someone had. So, using a businesslike salesman's approach, he and a group of men went into a fraternity at U.C.L.A. and Campus Crusade began.
Kids Meet On the Wire
HOUSTON, Texas — (UPI) -- Parents who fret about the time their teen-agers spend talking on the telephone have not heard the problems of six Houston families.
Grease Jobs . . $1.00
Brake Adj. . . . 98c
Six youngsters have organized a teen-age band. Since school work keeps them home week nights, the teen-agents have devised their own method of getting together — by telephone.
The band's head man, eighth grader Don Friedsam, will call a member of the band and they test chords and rhythms until a party line or a mother halts the session.
STUDENTS
Automotive Service
Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel
Balancing
7 a.m. 11 a.m.
7 a.m.-11 p.m.
PAGE CREIGHTON
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd
Nativity Displays At Nelson Gallery
Next Saturday at the Nelson Art Gallery in Kansas City, Mo., a display of Christmas nativity scenes will open.
The nativity scenes, some of them 300 years old, range in size from a single carved piece from Peru that fits in the palm of the hand, to a four-by-seven foot Italian work containing 172 figures. The collection comes from the Southwestern United States, Europe and Central and South America.
THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR
Spaces Connect Computer Science More Stories West Hawaii
Arbor Island Leadership
Subscribe Now
at Half Price *
Distributed from
BOSTON
LOS ANGELES
LONDON
CHICAGO
- Objective News Reports
- Constructive Background Material
- Literary and Entertainment News
- Penetrating Editorials
The Christian Science Monitor One Norway St., Boston 15, Mass.
Clip this advertisement and return it with your check or money order to:
1 Year $11 6 mos. $5.50
*This special offer available to college students. Faculty members are also available, when subscribing themselves.*
P-CN
HOMECOMING
MUMS GIANT BLOOM
CHrysanthemum
Order Now or Call For Free Delivery
- We are as near as your phone
ALLISON AT THOMAS Flower Shop
941 Mass.
VI 3-3255
KANSAS
PLAYER OF THE WEEK
Mickey Walker
For the job he did in tying up those Wildcats.
If you don't want to be tied up,be sure to use our speedy and reliable service.
1-HOUR
X
PERSONALIZED
JET LIGHTNING SERVICE
Acme
Hillcrest Shopping Center VI 3-0928
LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
Downtown
1111 Mass.
VI 3-5155
Molls Shopping Center VI 3-0895
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Thursday. Nov. 8. 1962
HOMECOMING
DANCE and CONCERT
Saturday Dance:
UNION BALLROOM
November 10
8-11:30 p.m.
music by
WARREN DURRETT
"K. C.'s OWN BAND"
Best Band 1961 Award
winner of the
PLUS
Concert at Hoch Auditorium from 11:30 p.m. till?
presented by
MIRI
MIRIAM
MAKEBA
AM
MAKEBA
African Folk Singer
Miss Makeeba has performed with Harry Belafonte at Carnegie Hall and with The Kingston Trio
Price: $1.50 Per Person Ticket Good For Both Concert And Dance
Sold at Information Booth at Student Union, or buy a ticket at the door
ALUMS INVITED!
University Daily Kansan
Vatican Council Begins Debating On Its Schedule
Page 9
VATICAN CITY — (UPI) — The Ecumenical Council's day of rest turned into a day of debate today on how fast is fast enough to complete the historic assembly's work.
The 2,500 prelates of the Roman Catholic church are not scheduled to meet in formal session again until tomorrow when they will continue debate on liturgy, the first of 70 topics proposed for discussion.
BUT IN THEIR residences and religious institutes throughout Rome, the pace at which the council is moving seemed the major topic of the day.
After a number of council fathers voiced concern that the work of the council was bogging down in slow-moving Latin debate, Pope John XXIII stepped in.
The rules of the historic assembly were modified on Tuesday to allow the presiding cardinal to close debate on a subject after obtaining the approval of the council by a show of hands.
But last night Rev. Hubert Jedin, an expert on the history of Ecumenical Councils and an eminent German theologian said the new ruling might not be enough to accelerate the proceedings.
"It MAY BE NECESSARY for the different Episcopal conferences to give a spokesman the task of expressing, for all the bishops that make it upon their opinion on a given problem," he said.
Under the present rules each bishop or prelate participating in the council has the right to express his own views on each subject.
When the council meets tomorrow it will resume debate on the breviary—the prayers that every Roman Catholic priest must recite each day. It has been estimated that the recital of the breviary, or divine office, takes about an hour and a half a day.
Pope John made some changes that somewhat shortened the breviary two years ago.
"This was desired by very many bishops, especially out of consideration for the many priests who are daily more burdened by pastoral preoccupations," the Pope said at the time. ___
Seven KU Faculty To Attend Meeting
Seven KU faculty members will take part in the twelfth annual Tax Conference Monday and Tuesday at Wichita.
The conference is sponsored by the School of Business and the Kansas Society of Certified Public Accountants as a service to those engaged in tax work.
Those participating from the Schools of Business and Speech are Wiley S. Mitchell, acting dean, L Martin Jones, assistant dean, Kieth Weltmer, professor, Sherwood W. Newton, associate professor, Phillip B. Hartley, assistant professor, Robert Olverding, instructor, and Frank E. Dance, assistant professor of speech.
Saturday B-School Alum Reception Set
The School of Business Council will hold an open house and reception from 10:00-11:30 a.m. Saturday in Summerfield for School of Business alumni.
Thursday Night CHICKEN SPECIAL All You Can Eat ONLY $1 drink and dessert extra Little Banquet
Campus Election Results
Fraternity
*—Dropped from General Election Ballot
WI—Write-in Candidate
Ample free parking on the Malls
Mike Bush (UP) 71
Mike Minton (Vox) 44
Jim Thompson (Vox) 44
Bob Tleszen (Vox) 21
Robbie M. Macrae (Vox) 31
John Bungum (Rac) 11
Sorority
Joy Bulls (UP) 110
Suzi Rumelms (Vox) 65
Jerrie Sue Trantum (Vox) 58
Connie Kosfeld (Vox) 46
Men's Large Dormitories
Doug Hall (UP) 30
Don Eversmeyer (UP) 14
John Young (UP) 6
John Underwood (Vox) 7
Larry Gever (Vox) 4
Women's Large Dormitories
Pat Wilson (UP) 41
Sandra Garvey (Vox) 12
Cindy Snyder (UP) 8
Linda Ritter (Vox) 4
Men's Small Dormitories
Women's Small Dormitories
Jane Beekenridge (UP)
Marilyn Givens (VM)
Don Pellow (UP)* Dennis Pugh (Vox)
Dan Wanmaker (Vox) 6.
Jack Croughan (UP) 60.
Freshman Women's Dormitories
Sue McKinley (Vox) 1
Martha Yankee (UP) 1
Mike Bauer (UP) 1
Ann Donald (UP) 1
Sandra Lorton (UP)*
Thursday, Nov. 8, 1962
Women's Small Dormitories
Professional Fraternities and Co-ops
Danny Johnson (Vox)
AUFIT (UFT)
Unmarried-Unorganized
Charles Marvin (UP)
Wake Mine
Vincent Fisher (Yox)
Vianna Fisher (Yox)
Married
Jim Riley (Vox) ...
Sandra Donley (UP) WI ...
Freshman Class President
Larry Bast 187
Bill Seal 188
Bruce Bikala 96
Timothy A. Miller* 42
Quentin McGuinn, WI 1
James Girard 1
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Muslim Society Lecture: 7:00 p.m.
Jayhawk Room, Kansas Union, Dr. Cliff-
son, associate professor of political science, gave presentations of his visit to India, Pakistan and Afghanistan.
Allen Crafton, professor emeritus of speech and drama, will explore "Poetry of Many Moods" during the Student Union Activities (SUA) Poetry Hour at 4:30 today in the Music room of the Kansas Union.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
Hour Will Center On Poetry of Moods
Der deutsche Stammtisch, 5:00. Student Union Cafeteria.
"College Life," 7:00 p.m. Student Union, Jon Flack, graduate of Princeton and Theological Seminary, will speak on Christ's claims and the college student.
Society of Medical Technologists, 7:30 p.m., Watkins Nursing Home. Miss Rush Tracy $^{1}$ Issue Culture in Study of Viruses$^{2}$ Prospective medical assistants are welcome.
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses, 7:00 a.m. 11:40 a.m.
St. Stephen's Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford. Re
Foreign Movie at 9:00 p.m. at Hoch Auditorium.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship,
Inter-Mission Millenium Panel discussion on "Christian Living."
IN A
FLASH
A CANCELLED
CHECK TELLS YOU...
• WHO YOU PAID
YOU PAID
It's a legal receipt, good in any court and superb evidence to back up your income tax deductions. For your protection you would be wise to open a checking account before another week goes by.
1ST MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF Lawrence
746 Mass.
J
DIPONT
BETTER THINGS FOR BETTER LIVING ... THROUGH CHEMISTRY
The sculptured knit: very in, very "Orlon Sayelle" ACTIVA TIME
HUNTINGDON'S smashing ski-county sweater: a rich, soft, big-sfit knit of 100% "Orlon Sayelle" *...DuPont's newest luxury sweater fiber. Which makes it rugged, but lightweight, full of bounce. And unusually good-looking. Easy to 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.
* DuPont registered trademark for its bi-component acetic fiber. DuPont makes fibers, not fabrics or clothes. Enjoy the "DuPont Show of the Week" Sunday nights, NU-CV.
MAILLIARD'S SQUIRE SHOP
PRAIRIE VILLAGE
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Available
THURSDAY, NOV. 8
KU STUDENT DIRECTORY
At the Information Booth-At the Book Store
35c
Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Nov. 8, 1962
Along the JAYHAWKER trail
By Ben Marshall
The fortune teller's little crystal ball was cloudy last week, but still it was good for a perfect slate of guesses-four right and none wrong for the second straight time.
The overall "hits and misses" now read 28 right and six wrong for a .824 average.
But if you think the little ball was foggy last week, wait 'til you see the picks for this Saturday's games. Maybe I'll find out last week was just some of that "beginner's luck."
Come on, Swami, let's drag some more good guesses out of that little glass ball.
ARIZONA OVER KANSAS STATE: The southern 'Cats have the advantage. Arizona is tough on defense, despite their 2-5 record. They did not allow Missouri a point during the second half in falling, 17-7, a feat which no other team, except ninth-ranked Minnesota, can claim.
K-State, on the other hand, lost its 15th straight game, the seventh of the season, last week to KU. Employing a new "shotgun" offense, the northern Wildcats enjoyed their best offensive afternoon of the season, netting 14 first downs and 178 yards of total offense.
Nevertheless, the shotgun offense won't shoot down the vengeful southwestern Wildcats. Defense will be the deciding factor as Arizona wins by two touchdowns.
MISSOURI OVER COLORADO:
The Terrible Tigers get a rest this weekend.
This is Colorado's last conference game of the season. After losing to Oklahoma, 62-0, last weekend, Coach Bud Davis should be glad it's over—but bowing out against Missouri could leave a bad taste in his mouth.
CU can threaten Missouri only through the air. Frank Cesarek is runner-up in Big Eight passing with 634 yards, and ends John McGuire and Ken Blair are first and third in receptions.
Cesarek's air-to-air missiles are nothing compared to the bomb that Dan Devine's Tigers will drop on the Buffaloes. Missouri by six touchdowns.
OKLAHOMA OVER IOWA
STATE: Iowa State's offense, spear-
headed by quarterback-tailback
Dave Hopmann, total offense leader
in the Big Eight, and sophomore
fullback Tommy Vaughn, is better
than the OU defense—at least on
paper.
But Oklahoma has a much better line, perhaps good enough to whip the tough Missouri forward wall which it will face next weekend.
The OU pass defense will face a severe test while Hoppmann has the ball, but OU ranks fourth in the nation in that department, yielding only 62.3 yards per game.
Oklahoma by two touchdowns.
ARMY OVER OKLAHOMA STATE: The Cowboys are racked with injuries. Rod Replogle, Mike
Upton, Roddy Cutsinger, and Don Derrick—all starters—are listed as doubtful performers.
O-State will have little to offer the Mules but the Big Eight's leading passer, Mike Miller, who has completed 56 of 124 for 794 yards and six touchdowns.
Army, on the other hand, has lost only one game in six starts, an upset to Michigan. The Mules have done some upsetting, too, as a 9-2 win over Syracuse and a 9-6 win over the East's powerhouse, Penn State, are among the five wins.
This Saturday O-State will lose their fourth in a row, by three touchdowns.
KANSAS OVER NEBRASKA:
This is the real test of the Swami's powers.
Dennis Claridge, second in the conference in total offense, will supposedly sit this game out with a severely sprained ankle. Bill "Thunder" Thornton, who showed flashes of his old form against Missouri last week, also injured an ankle and is listed as a doubtful starter.
And the big question is who is going to be playing in the backfield for Nebraska.
Kansas, on the other hand, will probably miss the services of fullback Ken Coleman, who is nursing another hip pointer.
The Jayhawker offense will make the difference in this game, despite the fact that Nebraska will be out to avenge last week's loss. Sayers, McFarland, Baughman, Leiker, and Crandall, are just too many for the 'Husker defenders to keep their eyes on.
Kansas will win by a touchdown.
FRIDAY FLICKS
Shows at 7 and 9:30
FRASER THEATER
THE STORY OF A LOVE
THAT MADE WONDERIFUL MUSIC
James STEWART
Jane ALLYSON
The GLENN
MILLER
Story
COLOR BY TECHNICOLOR
THE STORY OF A LOVE
THAT MADE
WONDERFUL
MUSIC
James
STEWART
James
ALLYSON
The GLENN
MILLER
Story
COLOR
TECHNICOLOR
The Bets jumped off to an early lead in the first period, marching 60 yards in six plays for the initial score. Key play in this series was a 50-yard aerial bomb dropped on the DU's by Beta quarterback Morgan Metcalf, when he threw to center John McCormick on the DU 20-yard line.
Fraternity "A" Hill champions Beta Theta Pi will play Intramural "A" Hill champions JRPF (Joe's Rough Boys and Friends) today for the intramural touch football Hill Championship. Kickoff time is 4 p.m.
Beta Theta Pi won its fifth consecutive Fraternity title with its victory.
The Betas copped the Fraternity "A" crown by whipping Delta Upsilon, 16-6, while JRPF upset the Hot Dogs, Independent Division I champions, 14-7, for the Independent title. Both games were played yesterday.
Two plays later, Metcalf threw the scoring pass to end Jim Emerson, and Bob Swan added the extra point.
The DU's, however, struck quick-
Betas, JRPF in Hill Title Tilt
Absurdity: A statement or opinion manifestly inconsistent with your own—Ambrose Bierce lv to score in the second quarter
VARSITY
NOW SHOWING!
35c admission — tickets for both shows on sale at Union on Friday till 6 p.m. and then at the door.
Special Alumni and Guest Performance
University Theatre MURPHY HALL — 9:00 P.M.
PAINT YOUR WAGON
Admission: $2.40, $1.80, $1.20
AT 7:00 AND 9:00
EDGAR ALLAN POE'S
TALES OF
TERROR in COLOR
(IDs and Coupon Books do NOT admit)
Don't Let Them Miss
Phone VI 3-2700, Extension 591
Homecoming Guests?
SHE'S GOT THE BUSIEST "LINE" IN TOWN!
A ROSS HUNTER
PRODUCTION
"IF A MAN"
ANSWERS"
...DON'T HANG UP!
Hang around for the FUN!
STARING
SANDRA BOBBY
DEE ★ DARIN
MICHELINE PRESLE * JOHN LUND
CO STARRING CESAR ROMERO • STEFANIE POWERS
COLOR
A Universal-International Picture
ROSS HUNTER
PRODUCTION
"IF A MAN
ANSWERS"
...DON'T HANG UP!
Hang around for the FUN!
THE FUN STARTS
SATURDAY
when quarterback Tom Hamill threw a 35-yard touchdown pass to Mike Berkley. But Phil Harrison's conversion attempt went wide, and the Betas still led, 7-6.
The tough Beta secondary accounted for the second "Butt" score, which came seconds before the halftime intermission.
When Hamill attempted to pass to end Gene Shofner on the DU 25, Beta linebacker Dave Phillips snagged the errant pass and rambled into the end one. Swan again added the extra point, for a 14-6 Beta margin at the halftime intermission.
The stingy Beta defense took charge in the last half. Rusher Karli Kreutzig caught the DU quarterback Hamill in the end zone for a two-point safety in the third period to ice the Beta victory.
In second-round playoffs for the Fraternity "B" Hill championship yesterday, the Beta "Bees" rocked Phi Gamma Delta #2, 58-4, and Phi Gam #1 whipped Alpha Tau Omega, 46-6.
Having a Party?
The DU's mustered a final drive in the last quarter, but the winner's defensive secondary toughened and
GRANADA
THEATRE ... Telephone VIKING 3-5788
the Betas took over the ball on downs.
Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES
LAWRENCE ICE CO.
6th & Vt., VI 3-0350
CHAMPAGNE
GLASS
$1.00
at
Peggy's Gifts & Cards
Mall's Shopping Center
Open 9:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m.
Peggy's Gifts & Cards
WHERE DOES A MAN'E "SPIRAL ROAD" LEAD?
VOLCANIC POWER AND PASSION!
ROCK BURL
HUDSON IVES
GENA ROWLANDS
THE SPIRAL ROAD
GEOFFREY KEEN • A Universal-International Picture
In Eastern COLOR
COMING
SUNDAY!
VARSITY
THEATRE . . . Telephone VKING 3-1055
Special Pre-
"MOVIE'
PARTY!
No Extra
Charge!
Special Pre-Release BONUS TREAT!
"MOVIE"
PARTY!
BE AMONG THE FIRST TO SEE
THIS FINE MOTION PICTURE...
DIRECT FROM THE GATES OF
HOLLYWOOD! WE CAN'T
REVEAL THE TITLE, BUT YOU'LL
BE PLEASANTLY SURPRISED!
IN ADDITION TO OUR REGULAR PROGRAM!
A SPECIAL ADVANCE SHOWING
OF A BRAND NEW HOLLY-
WOOD HIT!
Starring Sandra Dee and
Boby Darin
See it at NO EXTRA CHARGE in
addition to our regular program,
THE PIGEON THAT TOOK ROME.
"PIGEON" at 7:00 and 10:30
SNEAK PREVIEW at 8:40 only
No Extra Charge!
GRANADA
TIMEATRE Telephone VIKING 3-5788
CLASSIFIED ADS
FOR SALE
Uebermann genie Schreibmaschine-
rische Maschinenkooper,
nischer und englischer Speicherrat.
11-14
Motorcycle; $350 cc, low mileage, cheap and dependable transportation. $260 or best offer. Call VI 3-6077 after 5 p.m. or week ends. 11-12
GUNS: LAWRENCE FIREARMS CO.
find what you want at all those other dealers? See us in our elegant surround-
ing order anything. We also refer
1052 Ohio 11-12
1960 Renault Dauphine. 10,000 actual miles. Radio and heater. Side wall tire tires and other extras. Extremely clean VI 2-2741. 720 Arkansas St. or VI 2-2741. 11-13
1955 Ford Customline; radio, hester,
toilet and rear window includes
TV S-305-255 6 p.m. 11-20
Banjo: 5 string Orpheum. $80. See Gene
Enernofsky at 70413 Mass. after a
pour 11,8
TYPEWKITER: Remington Quiet-Riter.
TIMEWKITER: 4 p.m. Clark.
704% Mass, after 4 clark.
11-12
YOU OR YOUR HOUSE ought to own a like new Classic 1929 Packard condo. You can also would like to have this red car with wire wheels, new white sidewalls, etc. for $850 phone V2-2681 on video, p.m. or after 9:30 p.m. Sunday evening. 11-9
Family heirloomls cut glass-pressed glass-
Haviland art·art glass·carnival glass. Brass
banquet lamp and many other items. See
at 1725 Vermont. 11-8
H. H. Scott L.T.-ten FM tuner, Rek-O-
Kut K335 turntable, Shure M212 stereo
arm slash cartridge, Fairchild 212 turn-
table, and a dynamo lamp. All guaranteed perfect,
less than half price. Will finance. Phone
VI 3-8919. 11-8
Used Raithen TV with AM-FM phone-
line. 692-348-5100 guaranteed. Pleasant
Davis, 722 Mass.
Stereo or hi-fi diamond needles for most makes. Half price during November. Don't wait, buy them now at Pettengill-Davis, 723 Mass. tf
new stereo FM—new portable stereos—
new AM-FM radios—new FM radio dis-
sociates as low as $269* and
monthly, at Ray Stoneback's, 925 Massachusetts St. 11-20
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in the midwest—Pet phone V13-289-7500—service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days.
3-speed Royce Union 25" men's or ladies' bike cut to $37.50 at Ray Stoneback's 92% Mass. Used bikes $10.00 each. 11-12
Transistor Radios! 6 transistors now $10.97! AM-FM radios—twin speaker now $43.97! FM radios now $26.97. Ray Stone-back's. 299 Mass. St. 11-12
Sports Car Compact Owners Attention!
We have all sizes of Snow treads avail-
able from Sports Car Discount
Center, 229 Mass. St., 1,000 new tires at
low discount prices! 11-12
TV shopping? Magnavox 24" automatic TV has a 3 year picture tube warranty. You can buy it from just $149.00. See the magnificent Magnavox at Pettengil-Davis, 723 Mass.
All kinds of house plants. Potted . . .
Including philodendron to be used for
room dividers and in picture windows.
Phone VI 3-4207. tt
Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive mimeographed and bound for $4.00 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. If
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. White or
pound. The Lawrence Outlook. 1005
Massachusetts, open all day Saturday. tt
BUSINESS SERVICES
English tutoring ½ block from Corbin.
Appartment to come up to 1127 Ohio p.13
3 blocks 0-60. p.13
RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. V 3-1267. tiffany@sewingcenter.com
GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I study notes.
Completely revised and extremely comprehensive. $4. For free delivery call VI 3-8246. tf
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
mentation. Ola Smitt 9391 $919; Mass. Call VI-3-2683.
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, rental, new and used portables, standards and electrics. Royal, Olympia, Smith Corona, Olivetti and Remington portables. Bond typing papers. Lawrence Typewriter, 758 Mass. Phone VI 3-3644. ff
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center. 1218 Conn. Personal service—sectionalized guinea pigs, chameleons, turtles, guinea pigs, plus complete pet supplies. **tf**
TRANSPORTATION
Want riders to Wichita and vichita Fri-
day. Visit http://www.riders.com/Return Sunday
11th. Coll VI 3-4229. 11-8
Travel-only a limited number of airline flights still available for Thanksgiving and Christmas Holiday.
Suggest making reservations Now!
First National Travel Agency
746 Mass. VI 3-0152
Very nice apartment. Large living room
kitchen and private bath. Well furnished
—all newly decorated—1st floor–private
office. Move-in fee to KLU.
S$5 per month. Cal. UI 3-7810.
FOR RENT
2. Room two will furnished apartment just
888. 1447 Vermont. Phone VI 3-6328.
11-12
Large attractive room for a young woman available because former resident got married. Kitchen privileges with ample refrigerator space. Only a block away from Student Union. Parking. See at 1242 La. or call V-3 9841. 11-14
Single rooms, warm and comfortable. in nice house only 2 minutes from Union for upper classman or graduate students. $27.50 a month. Phone VI 3-6696. 11-8
Cozy 3 room furnished apartment suitable for single person. Good location. Private bath and entrance, also parking. Cash taxes paid. $35 a month. VI 3-2593. 11-12
Four large-room apartment with private bath for 4 or 5 boys. Utilities paid. 3 bathrooms, S2S each Pruitt IV 2-3834 or VI 3-7642. Ask for Mrs. Hulett. Available now. 11-12
For rent a furnished 1 bedroom duplex
for boys. Call VI 3-181-11-9
VI 3-6661.
Partly furnished 2 bedroom house '15
sitting room, carpeted, screened porch, wood burning fireplace,
fully air conditioned, full basement, large
garage, per month. If interested
VI 3-4291. 11-9
Furnished house. Can accommodate up to
10 people per room.
If interested call VI 3-4291. 11-9
FOR ENTRY: extra nice furnished room for men, $1^2$ blocks from campus, two cars. take 1346 Ohio Phone: 2346 or VI $3-2322$. After 6 p. phone: II $1-2031$.
Vacancy in an apartment for a male student now. Phone VI 3-6723. Union. Availability 11-8
FOR RENT, SINGLE ROOMS for men 1½ block from Union. Kitchen privileges, laundry room, phones, kitchen. 5th, 1234 or Seeed or phone VI 2-1518. 11-8 or see evenings.
ROOMS FOR MEN: Double room only, share with Law student; one-half block from Student Union; private entrance, quiet, telephone and utilities paid. Call IV 3-4092 or see at 1301 Louisiana after 5 p.m. weekdays. tf
3 room apartment, private bath. 1 block
away. No parking. Paid. Come and see. 1142 Indiana. If
you don't have a car, call (877) 512-7900.
Why walk up the hill when you can be on top by living at the Campus House, 1245 La. $1½ 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.
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
CO/AD CLASSIFIED
Serving 700,000 readers of college newspapers every week.
For rates, write CO/AD
396 Park Ave.
San Jose, Calif.
TYPING
University Daily Kansan
BOOKS & AUTHORS
HEMINGWAY. Available, Fifth Anniversary
Book of the New York Times.
Our Hemingway Interview, Art of Fiction
series. $3 a copy. Send to Paris,
观刊. 45-39 171st Place, Flushing 8N,
NY
Typist experienced in theses and term papers. Prompt service, reasonable rates, electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Howard Mehlinger at VI 3-4409. ff
EUROPE — Discover this bargain. Write:
Europe, 255-C Sequacia, Pasadena, Calif.
TRAVEL FILMS, 16 mm. Free list. Lobett Co., 2003 Taraval, San Francisco.
HUMOR
TRAVEL
EDUCATIONAL
SAVE 25% - Readers Digest, $2.97 yr,
etc., etc.
*Readers Center, Room C, CO, CAOJ*
*
30,000 COMEDY Lines. Free catalog.
Orben, 3536a Dane Crescent, Baldwin,
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, articles, reports and press releases rates. Electric typwriter. Mrs. McEldowney, 2521 Alabama, Ph. VI 3-8688.
English major and former secretary will type themes and theses on electric type-writer. For neat and accurate work call Mrs. Mellis and Jones, VI 3-5267. tf
EXPERIMENT WITH sleep-learning Fascinating, educational, Details free. Research Association, Box 24-CP, Olympia, Wash.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, these and service with an electric typewriter. Responds to rates Car Mrs. Charles Pattl. V 3-8379.
OPPORTUNITIES
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tt
OVERSEAS OPPORTUNITIES under 2 year contract for single persons, over age 20 to serve on rural, agricultural, and education projects. All expenses plus travel write: International Voluntary Services, 160th St. NW, Washington, D.C.
MODELS WANTED - Earn while learning,
Montana, Los Angeles 25, Calif.
Experienced secretary with electric typewriter wishes to type theses, themes, etc. Phone Nancy Cain at VI 3-6524. tf
14-K SOLID GOLD Automatic Watches,
17 jewel incubio. $47.50 F.T.I. Free catalog:
Transworld, 555 Fifth Ave., NYC.
Experienced typist. 7 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rate. Mrs Barlow, 240 Yale Rd., VI 1648.
Would like typing in my home — term papers, theses, manuscripts, etc. Fast, accurate dependable service. Call Mrs. Rogers. VI 3-0774. tf
Page 11
Manuscripts, theses, and term papers.
Also dissertations typed on wide carriage.
Experience in education 35 special keys.
Experience in education science
Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. VI 2-1546.
Thursday. Nov. 8. 1962
Typing reasonable rates, neat and ac- countable. Mkts V 3-18M, Mrs. Bodin, 825 Greever Terr.
Fast accurate typing. Secretary for 5%
fast accurate typing. Secretary for 5%
at 703 Lawrence Avenue. VI 5-624
at 703 Lawrence Avenue.
Efficient typist. Would like typing in her home. Special attention to term reports, thesis, letters. Call anytime at VI 3-2651. tt
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast, accurate, neat work. Reasonable rates. Familier with legal terms. Marsha Goff VI 2-1749. tt
Car hostess and fountain help wanted to
carry the equipment. You are eligible if you can work two shifts per week. Contact Tom Dixon, Dixon Drive
receiver, 2500 W. 6th or phone 7446. 11-12
HELP WANTED
WANTED
Indian and Lincoln pennies, any American gold. Also wanted, British, Canadian, Mexican and Russian coins. American Colin Mart, 1015 Mass. I 2-0219. 11-13
Will do ironing in my home. Call VI 2-2293. 11-12
LOST
1962 KU class ring with set in-
setings by Marilyn West. Wet-
3-11-80. Reward. 11-8-
Man's silver ID bracelet. Engraved, Tom
Linn. Call VI 3-8125, Lawrence Day,
946-557-8300.
Man's jacket. Sunday at Hilfcrest Lau-
nard; Cafe of the Week; cell VI 3-7863 between 5-30-6-30. 11-12
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
JOE'S BAKERY
Open 24 Hours
Night Deliveries
412 W. 9th VI 3-4720
KU SPORTS
DIAL KLWN 1320
on
7:30 a.m. ___ Daily Sports Shorts
5:00 Today ___ Jayhawk Locker Room
5:20 ___ Tom Hedrick Sports
819 MASS.
ARENSBERG'S
FOUL WEATHER FRIEND
in black glove leather
$11.95
CHARGE
ACCOUNTS
INVITED
Trampeze
VI 3-3470
Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Nov. 8, 1962
ASC Committee
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1) in cooperation with the ASC Current Events Committee.
Patrick Henry, Fort Scott, junior, and Current Events Committee chairman, is working to obtain a representative from the Justice Department in Washington and from the White Citizens Council to debate the legal basis for integration.
The HRC has also arranged with the student radio station, KUOK, to carry a debate on discrimination before the Thanksgiving holiday.
In cooperation with People-toPeople, Thompson said, the HRC will act on complaints that only European foreign students are asked to live in KU fraternities.
"AT THE SAME TIME." Thompson said, "his committee is trying to contact someone from the Congress of Racial Equality and the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee to bring a program on freedom rides and sit-ins, including the film, "The Freedom Rides at Jackson, Miss."
Malik, who brought up this facet of discrimination, said, "The organization of People-to-People in cultivating friendships with foreign students reflects an artificiality."
HE SAID IN SPITE of the efforts of People-to-People, the foreign student at KU recognizes this artificiality, especially among fraternities and sororites.
"Before I came to America," Malik said, "I never realized you could judge people on the basis of color."
He cited an example that there is no dating among KU American students and foreign students.
"I have yet to see an American girl who is willing to go out with an African boy," he said.
OTHER ACTION proposed in the HRC report calls for a scientific random sampling of KU student opinion on discrimination, especially in the fraternity and sorority area.
Thompson said his committee has
discussed methods of scientific polling with members of the KU Human Relations, Anthropology and Sociology Departments, who will help prepare the student poll.
From the results, the HRC hopes to issue a declaration of human rights of the KU students.
Navy May Stop More Soviet Ships
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The U.S. Navy prepared to intercept Soviet ships carrying missiles from Cuba today, and the White House indicated some further announcement on the Cuban crisis would be forthcoming shortly.
The White House said that as of noon (EST), no contact had been made with the Russian vessels removing from Cuba the offensive weapons that brought on the cold war's most dangerous moment.
A missile-count by the American Navy was arranged under a unique agreement between the United States and Russia.
A Defense Department spokesman said: "Our ships are on station. Obviously, when Soviet ships leave there will be a contact under whatever agreement is worked out."
THE PENTAGON spokesman said he was at liberty to discuss planned procedures for the operation. Asked how many Russian missiles the government would insist on seeing aboard the ships, he said 40 would be considered "a minimum."
Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev said yesterday that 40 rockets had been sent to Cuba. Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamera said early in the crisis that more than 30 of the weapons had been spotted by U.S. planes.
At today's session with reporters, the Defense Department spokesman said both the air surveillance of Cuba and the blockade to prevent further arms shipments to the island were continuing.
Now is the time
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
self-windu
OMEGA
DE VOLTAIRE
24K gold case,
$300
self-winding watch with a memory
REACTION in Mrs. Roosevelt's hometown to her death was instantaneous.
Ω
OMEGA
Seamaster®
AUTOMATIC
CALENDAR WATCH
(Continued from page 1)
Roosevelt Dies -
A two-minute silent tribute was paid Mrs. Roosevelt at Carnegie Hall. A solemn work, Bach's "Adagio," was inserted in the evening's concert.
World travelers, sales executives, professional and technical men . . . this is the watch preferred when time must be measured with high-precision.
Self-winding, water and dust-resistant, with sweep-second hand and automatic date-indicator register. Shock-resistant and non-magnetic.
A cabdriver in midtown said he had taken a picture of Mrs. Roosevelt four years ago when she rode in his taxi.
"I sent her the picture and she signed it and returned it to me," he recalled. "She also sent a warm letter. She always had time for people."
Stevenson was the only visitor permitted in Mrs. Roosevelt's apartment during her illness and, except for the immediate family, was the only person permitted to enter the home last night.
MARKS JEWELERS 817 MASS.
Mrs. Roosevelt's body was removed from the mansion at 8:25 p.m.
She and the late president had been married on March 17, 1905 just a few short blocks away on E. 66th St.
KU Debate Squad Travels to Oklahoma
MEMBER
AGS
AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY
Ten students from the KU debate squad will take part in the Central State College Debate Tournament at Edmund, Okla., today through Saturday.
Students participating are Tom Beisecker, Topeka senior; Con Worster, Hutchinson senior; Dave Seal, Independence, Mo., junior; Dan Crary, Kansas City senior; Mary Reeves, Oberlin junior; Lauraleil Bergel, Arlington, Va., junior; Jana Snook, Ford freshman; Beverly Marshall, Fredonia freshman; Webster Golden, Iola freshman; and Mel O'Connor, Bethel freshman.
"For once, gentlemen, I wish you would write what I said. Thank God for television and radio for keeping newspapers a little more honest."
"I defended my opponent's patriotism but you didn't report it," Nixon told reporters.
(Continued from page 1) charge upon charge of unfair press coverage in his political career.
Nixon Quits -
"I don't believe members of the press should feel that the publishers should order them to write one way or the other. I don't believe the FCC (Federal Communications Commission) should reach its long arm out to California if only one lonely voice is raised for me and a whole lot of voices are raised for someone else."
(Continued from page 1)
Nixon, who said on one of his campaign telethons that if he could do it over again he would be a sportscaster, tried to display some of those sportsman-like qualities.
"I want to congratulate Gov. (Edmund G.) Brown for his victory... I wish him well not only from a personal standpoint, because there never were any personal considerations on my part. I think he has a heart, even though he did not think; I had one. I think he is a good American even though he did not think I was.
Nixon named several newspapers which he said gave him unfair treatment during the campaign. But he singled out one reporter as a fair objective writer, Carl Greenberg of the Los Angeles Times.
"He won and I want this state to be led with courage."
But Nixon, who saw his political career in shambles, could not help blaming someone for his defeat by a man he obviously considered a very ordinary opponent.
Jerry's Specials
★ Snow Tires Just $9.95 . . . exchange plus tax
★ Do-It-Yourself Carwash Only 50c
★ Guaranteed Anti-Freeze Protection Only $1.00
JERRY'S CONOCO
9th & INDIANA
REMEMBER HOW GOOD CIGARETTES USED TO TASTE?
(MAYBE YOURS STILL DO)
IF YOU'D LIKE TO FIND OUT...
BRING YOUR CAR TO UNIVERSITY FORD FOR A COMPLETE MOTOR TUNE-UP
AND WHILE YOU'RE THERE...ASK ABOUT
✩ WINTERIZE SPECIAL ✩ FRONT END WORK
✩ TRANSMISSION WORK ✩ MAJOR OVERHAUL
UNIVERSITY FORD 714 VERMONT
DIAL V13-3500
REMEMBER HOW GOOD CIGARETTES USED TO TASTE?
(MAYBE YOURS STILL DO)
Daily hansan
60th Year, No.41
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962
THE LIGHTNING BOLTS
ANYTHING FOR PUBLICITY—Dressed in flapper-era dresses, three sophomores, Ka Estes, Lubbock, Tex., Dede Allen, Lawrence, and Jan Kayden, Ocean Springs, Miss., are part of a group
of girls 23-skiddooing around the campus on the theory that a bare knee and a sauce wink will draw KU males out for the Homecoming dance.
Students Forget Studies, Labor Over Decorations
Books, slide rules and typewriters were abandoned last night as homecoming decorations began to take shape on the KU campus.
Students were knuckling down last night, but the "midnight oil" was burning on the front lawns instead of through the windows.
At one house, a giant ear of corn and a giant box stood alone in the yard. A giant black and silver bowl sat apart from them. An hour later
See related stories on pages 3 and 10.
the giant bowl had joined the giant corn and box.
Hashinger women had to call "Help" when a co-operative agreement with Carruth-O'Leary fell through. Four construction workers from neighboring Ellsworth Hall loaned the women a scaffold to get a huge Jayhawk atop the dormitory's canopy.
Almost before the men were through giving advice, they were helping on the project while Hashinger women brought them food.
At Joseph R. Pearson, men curried about under a 20-foot green giant singing "welcome to the valley."
At a women's hall, women stood warming their hands on cocoa mugs while two or three men struggled with a large sign.
But at other houses, yards usually lit up with floodlights at this time, were only glowing from the light from many windows.
But then, with the many other activities offered, perhaps it is best the thousands of alums do not spend too much time looking at decorations.
Alums arriving early can hear a carillon recital at 6:30 tonight by Ronald Barnes.
Weather
It will be fair and warmer today, with highs expected to be in the 50s. The low tonight will be near 30. Temperatures tomorrow are expected to reach into the upper 50s.
A varsity-freshman basketball game will follow at 7 p.m. in Allen Field House. Hugh Miller, English actor, will present a dramatic recital, "Bare Boards and a Passion," also at 7 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall.
The University Theatre will give alumni priority for tickets to "Paint Your Wagon" at 8:30 p.m. Saturday. The German movie "Rosemary" will be shown at the same time Saturday night in Hoch Auditorium.
Free bus tours of the campus will leave from the Kansas Union Saturday morning. A Union Homecoming reception will begin at 9:30 Saturday morning.
The Department of Home Economics in Fraser Hall, The School of Law in Green Hall, and the School of Business in Summerfield Hall will hold open house Saturday morning. Many living units will hold alumni teas after the game Saturday afternoon.
The Homecoming dance, featuring Warren Durret and his band, will also begin at 8 p.m. in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union.
At game halftime, Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will crown the Homecoming queen, Barbara Schmidt, Kansas City senior.
A concert by Miriam Makeba,
South African folk singer, will close
the evening with a concert at 11:30-
12:30 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium.
Roy Laird, assistant professor of political science, will discuss civil rights at today's SUA Current Events Forum in the Kansas Union.
Civil Rights Topic Of Forum in Union
The forum begins at 4 p.m. in the Music Room.
'Accented' Tragedy Comes Here Tonight
Greek tragedy with a British accent will be part of a one-man recital at 7 tonight in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Hugh Miller, distinguished British actor and senior director of the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London, will present a variety of readings ranging from Greek tragedy to modern comedy in a program entitled "Bare Boards and a Passion."
After early training in classical repertoires in England, Miller became a member of Sir Barry Jackson's Birmingham Repertory Theatre Company. He has played hundreds of roles, mainly in the London theatre, from Shakespeare to Sacha Guitry.
In addition to his acting fame, he has directed more than 20 plays, including several original works. He produced, for the first time in London, his own adaptation of Tolstoy's "The Fruits of Enlightenment," currently one of Moscow's great successes.
Regents Receive State School Plan
WICHITA—(UPI)-Sidney Brick, chairman of the University of Wichita Board of Regents, said today he never was consulted about the report which would reduce the institution's status from that of a University to a college.
The state Board of Regents adopted the report, prepared by a group of national educational experts by a unanimous vote today.
BULLETIN
TOPEKA—(UPI)The state Board of Regents today approved an educational report recommending a sweeping revision of the higher education system in Kansas.
The regents voted unanimously to accept the report submitted by a panel of leading national experts who have been studying Kansas colleges and universities for the past year.
In that statement, Malik charged P-t-P with "artificiality" in creating friendships among foreign and American students. He said he was speaking as a KU student, not a foreign student.
Last night, however, Malik modified his statement.
Foreign Student Modifies Stand On P-T-P Charge
Regents' chairman Clyde Reed of Parsons expressed the board's sincere appreciation to the educators for their report, and the regents passed a resolution that the report be accepted unanimously for
By Trudy Meserve
A Pakistani graduate student last night held out an olive branch to the KU People-to-People organization.
"PEOPLE-TO-PEOPLE," he said, "should be commended rather than criticized for a tremendous job in creating international understanding on the campus."
Rab Malik, the student, said his statement in yesterday's Kansan reflects no ill will or hostility toward the P-t-P program.
Malik said many misunderstandings among American and foreign students have been lessened since P-t-P began at KU last year.
"However," he said, "I believe friendship cannot be created on an organizational basis. It must come from within."
Malik used the P-t-P brother-sister program as an example.
"A FOREIGN STUDENT is suddenly introduced to his American brother," he said. "They are told to be nice to each other. However, the two may be completely incompatible.
"But the American student and the foreign student continue the relationship simply out of duty.
"P-t-P is constantly seeking ways to be more effective. P-t-P at KU involves every student on the campus. It is open for students' ideas which would strengthen the program," he said.
Last night, Reuben McCornack. Abilene junior and co-chairman of KU P-t-P said his organization appreciates Malik's criticism.
People-to-People was created to promote increased understanding among international students and
(Continued on page 16)
The panel, headed by Prof. Alvin C. Eurich, vice-president of the Fund for the Advancement of Education, was retained by the Board of Regents in January, 1962, to make a study of the state's higher education system and to present recommendations to the board.
implementation in the Kansas system.
ONE OF THE major recommendations was that the University of Wichita be taken into the state school system and reduced from university status. It would become a joint branch of the University of Kansas and Kansas State University.
Eurich said Wichita U. would be governed by a board composed of top administrators from KU and K-State and would draw on the faculties of the two universities. Wichita U. would have one representative on its governing board.
The Board of Regents would then have authority over the lesser board in turn.
A two-year technical school would be added to the curriculum at the proposed "state universities center at Wichita." Such a school would produce electricians, mechanical engineering assistants and other technical graduates for the benefit of Wichita's industries.
The universities center would not grant its own diplomas. The diplomas would be from the University of Kansas or Kansas State University, depending on what course the student followed.
ON ANOTHER SUBJECT, the panel recommended Kansas colleges switch to the 11-month tri-semester year in order to make full use of existing buildings and faculty.
Under the tri-semester plan an average student could be graduated with his bachelor's degree in three years.
And as the college population booms, Dr. Eurich and the panel recommend existing classrooms and labs be used from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. weekdays and from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturdays.
The panel recommended that a statewide educational television network be instituted.
Prof. Eurich said the panel was recommending such sweeping revisions based on an expected tripling of the college population in Kansas in the next 20 years.
THE EDUCATORS ALSO recommended considerable revision of the junior college system in hope that more students would take their first two years of college work closer to home.
And under the panel's plan, the (Continued on page 16)
(Continued on page 16)
Templin Men Find Fire Break Fun
Bv Roy Miller
"Somebody said 'Hey, let's put it up on the curb.' So we did."
That, according to an onlooker, is how a mild epidemic of "car jostling" by Templin Hall residents in front of Lewis Hall started last night.
It all began about 8 p.m., when a minor fire in a Templin trash chute sent Templin men pouring into the street between the two dormitories.
Before the men finally returned to their rooms, a group of them had:
- Carried a compact car from a Lewis loading zone to the sidewalk in front of the women's dormitory.
- Stopped and jostled a car leaving the Lewis parking lot.
- Lifted a wheel of a Campus Police patrol car from the street onto the curb.
Amid the excitement, workers in front of Templin, Lewis and nearby Hashinger Hall calmly continued to work on Homecoming decorations.
AS THE TEMPLIN MEN evacuated their dormitory, some headed immediately toward Lewis, onlookers said. The group at one time totaled 150-200, according to some estimates by others. The men stopped in front of the compact car
in the loading zone.
"There were 100 or so guys over there," one participant told a reporter. "But only 15-20 girls picked it up."
"About tipped it over," another interjected.
As the group milled back toward Templin, they stopped a late-modsl car at the Lewis parking lot exit.
"THAT CAR just came through" the participant said. "Hey, let's lift it up," one guy said. Five or xx
"Then." the first man continued, "everybody turned and ran when they saw what they'd done."
guys started to grab it, pushing it up and down, when, all of a sudden, somebody suggested they leave it alone."
They did.
After the car left, the Campus Police patrol car arrived.
The men started toward the car but stopped short of it. When the patrolman walked away they attempted to put the automobile on the curb but stopped when he started to return.
A few minutes later, however, the group, then totaling 15-20 men, put the patrol vehicle's rear wheel on the curb — and left hurriedly.
Page 2
University Daily Kansar
Friday. Nov. 9, 1962
KU's Changing Skyline
The day-by day construction at a growing university often escapes the attention of students. Only when the construction is viewed over a period of years does the full extent of the expansion become apparent.
Many alumni who will be on the Hill this weekend for Homecoming will be surprised at KU's tremendous expansion in recent years. The extent of their surprise perhaps can be imagined by today's KU students if they attempt to visualize the campus as late as 1952.
- Malott Hall was under construction, and dirt had just been broken in preparation for construction of Allen Field House.
- Construction was underway on the "new" portion of the Kansas Union (the northern third of the present building).
- Murphy Hall, the engineering building now under construction, and the nuclear reactor center did not exist.
- Lewis, Templin, Hashinger, Joseph R. Pearson, Carruth-O'Leary, and Gertrude Sellards Pearson dormitories did not exist. Instead of the modern Stouffer Place apartments, married students lived in converted World War II barracks along the southern edge of the campus.
It is obvious that KU has undergone vast changes in the last ten years. Ten years ago, travelers approaching KU watched for the twin towers of Fraser Hall. Today, the KU "skyline" is dominated by the eight and ten-story dormitories along Iowa Street.
Ten years ago, the western boundary of the developed portion of the campus was at Marvin Hall. Today, the western boundary has been extended nearly half a mile west, and a completely new "front door" to KU has been created southwest of the original campus.
THESE PHYSICAL changes are tangible proof KU is an expanding institution. But they are only a portion of the story—and not the most important portion.
Any university which can get money from
alumni, friends, and state legislatures can put up impressive new buildings. The test of a university's growth, however, is in what goes on in those buildings and the effect a university has on the students.
Alumni, if they are observant, may sense that the students also have changed. Many of the traditions which KU students looked forward to in the past no longer cause as much excitement.
A number of students have turned their attention to world problems as these problems affect students. Organizations such as the Student Peace Union, Young Americans for Freedom, and Civil Rights Council have risen to vie with campus politics for news space.
THE UNIVERSITY itself has moved to improve academically. It has become more involved in international education through such programs as the Summer Language Institute and the Costa Rica exchange program. It was one of the first universities to encourage superior students from their freshman year, through the honors program. KU continues to grab a big share of research grants.
KU will continue to expand physically. The long-range plan announced last year calls for new buildings, replacements to present inadequate and obsolete buildings, and additions to existing buildings. New dormitories also are planned.
The University also must continue to grow academically. It is not enough to remain at the present level or even to grow at the same rate as in the past. If KU is a leading state-supported University as the publicity brochures claim, it will remain so only if it pays even more attention to the educational processes than in the past.
KU's alumni, for the most part, realize that physical growth is not enough. KU's students are depending on the alumni to lend continued encouragement to the academic growth of the University as well as to the physical growth.
—Clavton Keller
... Letters ...
Kansan Review Criticized Editor:
the review of "Paint Your Wagon" by Rose Ellen Osborne in Monday's Kansan was such a grossly distorted evaluation of the excellent performance, greatly enjoyed by an audience which included many sophisticated theatre-goers, and the review was so offensive to the talented and deserving cast and producers that I request you to print for Kansan readers the enclosed review by a mature and qualified critic.
(Editor's note: The writer enclosed a review from the Lawrence Journal-World, written by John Pozdro, associate professor of organ and theory. The Daily Kansan does not reprint reviews from other newspapers, but readers who are interested will find it in the Journal-World of Nov. 5.)
It is a pity indeed that deserving talent must suffer from bad reviews in the Daily Kansan written by incompetent critics.
I also request that you publish this letter.
Joseph F. Wilkins Professor of Voice
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
C48
*SOMETIMES PROF SNARFS EXAMINATIONS ARE WORDED IN SUCH AWAY AS TO SHOCK A STUDENTS ENTIRE NERVOUS SYSTEM.
Agrees With Ruhe Editor:
He has taken a stand which will be heartily supported by a large portion of the student body. It has been most discouraging to be forced to pay activity fees which support activities in which I am not interested. And, at those activities which do interest me, I must either pay to be admitted or be shown to second class seating, when I am admitted at all.
In the Nov. 7 issue of the Daily Kansan, Dr. Ruhe clearly and concisely presented the case against the present operation of the University Theatre (and, incidentally, other University activities and facilities.)
May other articulate people please follow Dr. Ruhe's lead until some constructive action is taken to end the present policies.
My nomination for the funniest story(s) of the year;
Editor:
These tummy-ticklers on contemporary morality should go over best in "Cuber" and Berlin, respectively.
Tummy-Ticklers
John D. Featherstone
Lawrence senior
* * *
From United Press International: "President Kennedy and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev were reported to have been high on the list of possible Nobel (peace!) Prize winners."
Robert Bosseau Pittsburgh senior
It Looks This Way
Short Ones
It seems that when the nation goes Democratic, Kansas goes Republican. When the nation goes Republican, Kansas goes Republican.—Arthur C. Miller
It will ever remain incomprehensive that our generation, so great in its achievements of discovery, could be so low spiritually as to give up thinking.—Schweitzer
Future Problems Seen In U.S. Policy on China
With surprising ease, the United States and Nationalist China have won their annual battle to keep Communist China out of the United Nations.
The General Assembly soundly defeated a Soviet resolution calling for the expulsion of Nationalist China and the seating of Communist China.
The margin of this year's vote indicates the issue may have died, from a practical standpoint, and that the only thing which could resurrect it would be a significant change in the status quo—such as China's apparently imminent emergence as a nuclear power.
FORTY-TWO nations voted in favor of the resolution, 56 voted against it, and 12 abstained. (Passage required a two-thirds majority.)
But the vote probably will do little to diminish the amount of emotionalism and debate in this country on the question of U.S. policy toward the two Chinas.
THE ARGUMENT against diplomatic recognition of Red China and its admission to the U.N. was well stated by the late John Foster Dulles when he was Secretary of State:
"Internationally the Chinese Communist regime does not conform to the practices of civilized nations; does not live up to its international obligations; has not been peaceful in the past and gives no evidence of being peaceful in the future. Its foreign policies are hostile to us and our Asian allies. Under these circumstances it would be folly for us to establish relations with the Chinese Communists which would enhance their ability to hurt us and our friends."
Congress, convinced that the majority of the American people agrees with the viewpoint of Dulles, periodically warns the administration against any change of U.S. policy on China.
THE MOST RECENT warning was a unanimous vote in both the House and the Senate in favor of a resolution opposing recognition of China or its admission to the U.N.
But there are some Americans who argue that in its China policy the U.S. has assumed the stance of an ostrich whose head is imbedded in the sand.
Their case, with which the British government is in basic agreement. is this:
FURTHER, THE ARGUMENT goes, our policy is denying us the opportunity to place diplomatic representatives in China. The United Nations cannot deal realistically with such crucial issues as nuclear
Mao Tse-tung and his government are in firm control of the China mainland and its population of nearly 700 million Chinese. Mao is likely to remain in control. Diplomatic recognition of the government would not imply moral approval. Such recognition is in our own interests, since there can be no effective settlement in Asia without China's participation.
testing and disarmament without the participation of representatives of mainland China.
Finally, Communist China moves closer each year to the time when it will have nuclear weapons, making it clear that no East-West nuclear pact will be worth the paper it is written on unless Mao is included.
A wide range of proposals have been made for bringing Communist China into the U.N. Among several impractical proposals is one which calls for membership of both Chinas in the General Assembly with neither on the Security Council.
THIS WILL NOT work for one reason: Under the U.N. Charter, all members of the Security Council—including Nationalist China—must agree on changes in the composition of the council.
Another proposal would give Feking the Chinese seat and turn Formosa over to the Formosans. The island then would be admitted as a new member state. This plan seems appealing, but it has never had significant support in the Assembly.
This leaves only two feasible alternatives: two Chinas in the U.N., with the big one on the Security Council, or one China—Communist China.
A FACULTY MEMBER of San Francisco State College, who recently spent a year's leave of absence studying the China question through intensive interviews with 96 U.N. delegations, concluded that the U.S. "will find it less embarrassing and the world will find it less dangerous" if the U.N. chooses the plan which would put two Chinas in the Assembly, with Communist China on the Security Council.
Both Chinas would thereby be seated without formal action by the Security Council to admit the second one. To do this would not violate any existing rule of procedure, and the lack of an exact precedent for such a move is not a significant barrier.
The most likely method for achieving the "two-Chinas" plan is the newly developed doctrine of successor states. Using this approach, the Assembly would simply declare its willingness to admit both Chinas as two successor states to the original Republic of China.
The difficulties that are bound to arise from keeping this huge country out of the community of nations undoubtedly will grow more perplexing. And it seems very likely, in fact, that the China policy this country is pursuing today will create many of the problems with which the U.S. will be grappling tomorrow.
LACK OF STRONG American leadership, however, is probably an insurmountable obstacle to the adoption of such a plan. It is clear that for a variety of reasons—most of them basically unsound—the U.S. will continue to oppose the admission of the Chinese government to the U.N.
—Fred Zimmerman
Dailyjransan
University of Kaasas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Telephone Viking 3-2700
Telephone VIking 3-2700
Television 711
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
Scott Payne ... Managing Editor
Richard Bonett, Dennis Farney, Zeke Wigglesworth, and Bill Mullins, Assistant Managing Editors; Mike Miller, City Editor; Ben Marshall, Sports Editor; Margaret Catcart, Society Editor.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Clayton Keller and Bill Sheldon
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Co-Editorial Editors
Charles Martinache Business Manager
Jack Cannon, Advertising Manager; Doug Farmer, Circulation Manager;
Gene Spalding, National Advertising Manager; Bill Woodburn, Classi-
fied Advertising Manager; Dan Meek, Promotion Manager
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Folk Singer Appears Here Following Dance
Miriam Makeba — whom Time Magazine calls "the most exciting new singing talent to appear in years" — will sing tomorrow night in Hoch Auditorium.
Her hour-long performance starts at 11:30 p.m., following the Homecoming dance.
Miss Makeba appeared Tuesday before a standing room only audience at Ottawa University. She was given a standing ovation.
ONE OF THE MANY KU students attending that performance, Steve Baratz, Brooklyn, N.Y., senior, said he thought Miss Makeba was one of the best entertainers he had ever heard.
Miss Makeba's singing voice can only be described by comparing it to other singers. In lower registers she sounds like Odetta, but at mid-ranges her phrasing is more like that of Ella Fitzgerald, whose records she collected and studied as a child.
In more lyric passages, however, she impresses the listener with her tone fidelity and clear, pure notes like those of Joan Beaz.
"SHE SANG WITH the delicate phrasing of Ella Fitzgerald, the brassy showmanship of Ethel Merman and the intimate warmth of Frank Sinatra," a Newsweek reviewer once wrote.
"The standing of folk music has been further enhanced by the arrival from the Union of South Africa of Miriam Makeba," the New Yorker commented.
AFTER MISS MAKEBA'S Ottawa concert — she is currently appearing in Kansas City with the Kingston Trio — she said that she tries to understand the emotion of the song she is singing.
"The songs I sing are sometimes happy songs, sometimes sad," she said. "When I sing each I try to understand the feelings involved and to become what the song is."
Asked what she would wish for if she could be allowed her choice of anything in the world, she declined a direct answer.
"There are too many things in the world I would like to wish for," she said, smiling broadly. "I would have to have more than one wish."
Bell's
everything that is best in music
at
Bell's
The Only Complete Music Store in Douglas County
perhaps you need
A Grand Piano
A Spinet Piano
A Used Piano
A Radio
A Phonograph
A Radio Phonograph Combination
A Hi Fidelity Phonograph
A Tape Recorder
A Television Set Phonograph Records Sheet Music-Popular and Standard Books and Studies
"MUSIC - The Gift That Keeps on Giving"
You Will Find Courteous Efficient Service The Year Around
at
BELL MUSIC CO.
925 Massachusetts Street
Bell's
PENNEY'S 60th ANNIVERSARY
WELCOME ALUMS!
60th ANNIVERSARY
WELCOME ALUMS!
SKIRT 6.95
SWEATER 9.95
'FABULOUS'
Lam-Fur Sweaters Dyed to Match Wool Flannel Skirts Penney's plays the elegant matching game. Pick our wool, angora, rabbits hair nylon blend or color sweaters in dressmaker and classic skirt, cardigan and collar styles.
SHOP AT PENNEY'S AND SAVE!
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962
Chinese Art To Be Topic
An expert on Chinese art will speak on Chinese painting Tuesday evening in the Humanities Lecture series.
James Cahill, curator of Chinese art at the Freer Gallery of Art of the Smithsonian Institute, will speak on "The Contemporary Relevance of Chinese Painting" at 8 p.m. in Fraser Theater.
The lecture, which will be illustrated by slides, will be followed by an informal reception.
Cahill arrives here Monday for a three-day visit. While here, he will meet with classes in Asian history, religion, drawing and painting, and will give two other lectures.
At 4:30 p.m. Monday he will speak on "Confucius Humanism and Chinese Art" at an SUA coffee in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
At 8 p.m. Wednesday he will present an illustrated sequel lecture on the same topic of his Humanities Lecture speech. The lecture will be in the Museum of Art.
Cahill is an adjunct professor of art at American University in Washington, D. C. He has studied with Dr. Osvald Siren, authority on Chinese art.
After a year of study as a fellow at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Cahill spent a year studying Far Eastern art at the University of Kyoto in Japan.
Lang
All wool flannel with gold button trim. Grey, green, or camel. 5 to 15, 39, 95
Campus WEST
KU-D
DICK FLOOD
BUT WE DO!
Yes at Briman's leading jewelers your KU ID is your pass to credit. Just show your ID and name your own payment plan.
For DIAMONDS, WATCHES, WATCH repair and all your jewelry needs, your KU ID is your pass to credit at . . .
BRIMAN'S leading jewelers
743 Mass.
VI 3-4366
Weavers
Good Luck, Jayhawks!
cheer raising ideas for
game time
the coffee house Chesterfield in denim by White Stag ... $19.95
class time
Wondamere matchmates in copper blue or nut brown. Intarsia cardigan, $15 — shirt ... $12.95
party time
Gay Gibson's sparkling snowflake in white with a glitter of gold ... $25
any time
Count on Weavers for the latest in campus fashions!
P
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 5
Play to Have 'Nightmare' Tone
To bring a nightmare to the stage realistically is the aim of William Evans, Clarksdale, Miss., graduate student and director of Franz Kafka's "The Trial," opening Sunday night at 8:30 in the Experimental Theatre.
The story concerns an all-powerful judicial system and Joseph K., a young man played by Karl Doerry, Kiel, Germany, graduate student, who finds himself caught in its web of control.
JOSEPH K. age 30, wakes one morning to find that he is under arrest. The underground justice system tells him to go about his business at the bank as usual.
It does not tell him the why, who and for what behind the arrest. He confides his plight to his neighbor portrayed by Nikki Lewis, Overland Park soophomore.
K's uncle, Allan Hazlett, Toppea sophomore, knows a lawyer, Carl Benz, Peabody junior, who consents to defend him. While K. is searching every part of the city for evidence of his crime, he meets a servant girl, Karen Duffy, Albany, N.Y., senior and has an affair with her.
Evans said he has avoided any attempt to interpret the play to the audience.
"We're presenting it in the pure form just tinged with nightmare as it was presented in the novel," he said. "Then it's up to the audience to interpret."
THE PLAY is an original translation by Mr. Evans and Celia Candlin, London, Eng., senior, from a French version by Andre Gide and Jean-Louis Barrault.
Other cast members:
Original music for the production was written by John Taddiken, Independence senior. Evans designed the set, which consists of six walls that are pushed around the stage.
Dennis Mitchell, Topeka senior;
Larry Ketchum, Twinfalls, Idaho;
freshman; Dave Jewell, Bird City
junior; Jerry Duffin, Leavenworth
freshman; Paul Broderick, Overland
Park freshman; Jane Evans,
Leawood freshman; Marilyn Belton,
Lost Springs junior; Jane Hess,
Rogersville, Mo., graduate student;
Rick Friessen, Kansas City sophomore
and Aletha Curtis, Falls
Church, Va., junior; Kate Pollock,
North Perry, Ohio, sophomore
和 Miss Candlin.
Student admission is 50 cents and ID cards.
Three faculty members of the KU School of Pharmacy presented a symposium yesterday at St. Benedicts College, Atchison.
KU Professors Give Atchison Symposium
The three were Prof. Edward E. Smissman, who spoke on pharmaceutical chemistry and its relationship to other sciences; Prof. Duane G. Wenzel, smoking and heart disease, and Assistant Prof. Mathias P. Mertes, an approach to the cure of cancer.
Portraits of Distinction
摄像师
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass. VI 3-0330
Fraternity Jewelry
Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts. Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trephies, Medals
Balfour
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
AL LAUTER
HOMECOMING DANCE AND CONCERT
Saturday, November 10th
Dance: Union Ballroom
8 to 11:30 p.m
Music by
WARREN DURRETT
"K.C.'s OWN BAND"
winner of the Best Band 1961 Award
PLUS
A Concert at Hoch Auditorium from 11:30 to ? presented by
MIRIAM MAKEBA
MIRIAM MAKEBA (AFRICAN FOLK SINGER)
Miss Makeba has performed with Harry Belafonte and the Kingston Trio
Price: $1.50 Per Person
Ticket Good For Both Concert and Dance
Sold at: Information Booth at Student Union, or buy a ticket at the door of dance or concert
ALUMS INVITED!
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962
Barbara Will Make 3 R's Popular
By Marty Moser
If somebody says that the quality of education is going up, a certain first-grade boy may think it is because teachers are getting prettier. His teacher will be Barbara Schmidt, now a Kansas City senior in the School of Education and Homecoming Queen.
THE FIRST grader will think about his teacher then, and will note that she sure is pretty; that she is just the right height and up. And she wears either down or up, and she has long red-brown hair with bright hazel eyes.
He will wonder if she is a queen.
"Well, I was a queen once," she will say. And then she will go on to tell him about it.
She was a cheerleader in that year of '62, she'll begin.
She had been a cheerleader at KU for three years. In fact, she had been a cheerleader almost since she could remember. Cheerleading kept her busy. She did not have much time for many other activities, and she had lots of studying to do.
She tried to study before games, but 'was so excited she couldn't.'
She liked to play the piano for relaxation, and sometimes she painted a little, or made her own greeting cards. She liked to be with people in her spare time.
MISS SCHMIDT may tell the first-grader that she became a teacher because she loved little boys just like him, but that when she was a senior, she had some doubts about her ability as a teacher. She knew she did not know everything about it.
But then, she might add, everybody feels the same way. Anyway she was not afraid of the big outside world — she was eager to teach and the first grade was her favorite.
NEW YORK - (UPI) Things will be jumping today aboard the luxury liner Syrvia.
Things Jumping On This Ship
Yes, sir, the little boy will think, Miss Schmidt is a real queen.
The Cunard line said 12,000 frogs from Oshkosh. Wis., would sail for Cobh, Ireland to be used for medical research.
Tryouts for the annual Campus Problems speaking contest will be held at 4 p.m. Nov. 11 in room 114 of Strong Hall.
The contest, sponsored by the KU department of speech and drama, will be held Nov. 29.
In the tryouts, eight students will be chosen to compete in the contest.
Any student is eligible to enter the tryouts, but he must be sponsored by a KU living group. Each group may sponsor two students.
Speech Department To Sponsor Contest
In Hillcrest Shopping Center
HOMECOMING GREETINGS FROM
Crushed Ice
Ice Cold 6-pacs
of all kinds
PARTY SUPPLIES
Having a Party?
LAWRENCE ICE CO.
6th & Vt., VI 3-0350
HILLCREST BARBER SHOP
We Want You Hawkers to Trim the Huskers VI 3-0537
GEORGE'S
Kansan Classifieds Get Results
GEORGE'S
PHONE VI 3-0511
O
Shop in complete privacy at your convenience. Come in during regular store hours or call for an evening or weekend appointment.
SMOKE with George smoking is our only business GEORGE'S SHOP
LAWRENCE'S ONLY EXCLUSIVE BRIDAL SHOP
Hialey's
OF CENNEL
935 MASSACHUSETTS
727 Massachusetts
GEORGE'S
GEORGE'S
IMPORTANT MESSAGE
TO ANY MAN WHO'S EVER THROWN OUT
A PERFECTLY GOOD SHIRT JUST
BECAUSE THE COLLAR IS FRAYED
爱辽
Now you no longer have to put up with the nonsense of throwing out a shirt merely because the collar's shot. Our Wings ROCKET has the genuine Airplane Cloth collar, guaranteed to outlive the body of the shirt or a new shirt free!
But just because it wears like iron, don't think it feels like iron; it's smooth and luxurious cotton like the shirt body itself.
STYLE, TOO!
“Such a practical shirt probably has no style” is what a lot of people think. Until they see the ROCKET for themselves. The collar is the smart semi-spread; the most flattering collar for 9 out of 10 men. And this no-fray collar shirt has no-pop-off buttons! They're PERMA-SEWN $ ^{\textcircled{2}}$l
A WONDERFUL BUY
You'd think such features would make the shirt expensive. Especially when you see the smart style and feel the excellent fabric. But a Rocket is only $3.95, due to mass production economies. Quite a shirt, Rocket! Come in and see it for yourself.
$3.95
wings>
Edmiston's
ROBERT EDMISTON STORES, INC.
ROBERT EDMISTON STORES, INC.
845 Massachusetts VI 3-5533
Emotions Flow Freely at Poetry Hour
Page 7
KU students welcomed an old friend back to the campus at the Poetry Hour yesterday.
University Daily Kansan
Allen Crafton, professor emeritus of speech and drama, and professor here for 30 years, delighted his listeners with his "Poetry of Many Moods."
Prof. Crafton chose several of his favorite poems to express his theory that there is a poem for every mood.
For a poem with more "punch" he recommended Francis Thompson's "Hound of Heaven."
IN A STRONG voice he soared to the heights of laughter with Ogden Nash's "Emily" and then plunged to the depths of sadness of T. S. Eliot's "The Hollow Men."
"Poetry is the language which tells through the emotions what can't be said in words," he said.
"It is so diverse it can satisfy almost any mood," he said, obviously pleased that others enjoyed his personal favorites.
THE SILVER-HAIRED man told his audience that poetry is many things to many people.
For an intellectual experience he suggested Shakespeare, Keats or Kipling. For those who prefer a whimsical ditty he gave Dorothy
Parker's "Little Old Lady in Purple" who exclaimed in her day, "There was nothing more fun than a man."
DIRECTOR OF KU's drama department from 1923 to 1956, Prof. Crafton lists among his most successful students William Inge, author of "Splender in the Grass" and "Picnic," Francis Feist who played in "Harvery," and Etta Moten, who portrayed Bess in "Porgy and Bess."
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962
Prof. Crafton was awarded the 1961 Honor for the Outstanding Progressive Educator (HOPE). He retired from the KU faculty in the spring of 1961.
Director to Discuss "Paint Your Wagon"
The director of "Paint Your Wagon." William L. Kuhlke, instructor of speech and drama, will discuss the play at 4:30 p.m. today in the University Theatre.
Mr. Kuhlke's talk, the second in a series of lectures by staff directors of the University Theatre, will be informal and designed to allow students, teachers and the public to ask the director questions about his play or its production and to allow the director to express himself more fully as to what he has tried to show.
See Us
Before You Buy
TYPEWRITERS
NEW AND USED
PORTABLES STANDARDS
ELECTRICS
Sales — Rental Service
LAWRENCE
TYPEWRITER
735 Mass. VI 3-3644
Shill appreciate the label
as much as the gift in-
side if the package is from
Obers
Junior Miss
821 Mass.
VI 3-2057
© OBEN FIELDS TRA
Welcome Old Grads
We're Not Trying To Sell Anything
Just Stop in and Say "Hello" and Drink a Toast (FREE COKES)
To Auld Lang Syne Beat Nebraska
Ober's
Our 65th Homecoming
On the Campus
12th & Oread
Downtown
835 Mass.
"WELCOME BACK ALUMS"
New fashion for night:
double knit sheath
a-twinkle with a tiny metallic design, the glitter repeated at arms and neckline. In beige with gold, grey with silver.
Sizes 5 to 15
$25.95
Chiffon that clings, ripples and wafts you to the center of holiday festivities has a two-tone flower on its satin belt. In red with pink, royal with blue, green with pearl green, white with blue.
Sizes 5 to 15
$25.95
Very latest thing in fashion circles: the understated "fuzzy" dress gently gathered at the waist, jeweled at the belt. In turquoise, yellow or pink mohair and worsted wool.
Sizes 5 to 15
$29.95
Featured in Mademoiselle
Welcome Old Grads
We're Not Trying To Sell Anything
Just Stop in and Say "Hello"
and Drink a Toast
(FREE COKES)
To Auld Lang Syne
Beat Nebraska
Ober's
Our 65th Homecoming
17.00
Jay SHOPPE
On the Campus
12th & Oread
Jay
SHOPPE
Downtown
835 Mass.
"WELCOME
BACK
ALUMS"
New fashion for night:
double knit sheath
a-twinkle with a tiny
metallic design, the glitter
repeated at arms
and neckline. In beige
with gold, grey with
silver.
Sizes 5 to 15
$25.95
Chiffon that clings, ripples
and wafts you to the center
of holiday festivities
has a two-tone flower on
its satin belt. In red with
pink, royal with blue, green
with pearl green, white
with blue.
Sizes 5 to 15
$25.95
Very latest thing in
fashion circles: the
understated "fuzzy" dress
gently gathered at the
waist, jeweled at the belt.
In turquoise, yellow
or pink mohair and
worsted wool.
for the
Parties
Ahead
Featured in Mademoiselle
Mademoiselle
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962
Independent
LAUNDRY AND
DRY CLEANERS
740 Vermont 1903 Mass.
9th & Mississippi
Rankin Drug Co.
Prescriptions A Specialty
Drug Sundries, Fountain Pens
Up-to-date Fountain Service
VI 3-5440 1101 Mass.
Holiday Inn Motel
Highway 59 & 10
- Coffee Shop
- 50 Units
Free TV
- Restaurant
- 24 Hour Switchboard
- Room Service
Private Banquet and Meeting Rooms Available 26 More Units and Convention Facilities Under Construction
Phone VI 3-9100 for Reservations
---
“It’s Smart to Shop the Mart”
Store Hours
Mon. thru Fri., 9 to 9
Sat., 9 to 6 p.m.
400 East 23rd Street, Lawrence, Kansas
VIking 3-6691 VIking 3-6692
DON'T DRIVE ON THIS ROAD
WELCOME
The University of K
1962 HOMECOMING
Friday, November 9, 1962 9:00
4:00 p.m. Alumni Registration Opens, Kansas Union Lounge. 9:30
Evening Night Tour of Decorations at Organized Houses. 10:00
6:30-7:00 p.m. Carillon Recital, Memorial Campanile, Ronald Barnes, Carillonneur. 10:00
7:00 p.m. Varsity-Freshman Basketball Game, Allen Field House, $1.00. 11:00
7:15 p.m. Dramatic Recital by Eminent Actor Hugh Miller, "Bare Boards And a Passion," Swarthout Recital Hall in Murphy Hall, No Admission Charge. 12:00
9:00 p.m. "Paint Your Wagon" University Theatre Production Especially for Returning Alumni, Murphy Hall Theatre. (Student I.D.'s and Season Tickets DO NOT Admit to this Performance.) $2.40, $1.80, or $1.20.
9:00 p.m. Showing of German Film, "Rosemary," Hoch Auditorium.
Saturday, November 10, 1962 8:00
9:00 a.m. Alumni Registration Opens, Kansas Union Lounge.
Morning View Homecoming Decorations at Organized Houses.
9:00-11:00 a.m. Home Economics Open House, Department Dining Room, Fraser Hall. 8:00
GO
GO JAYH
White Sewing Center
- SALES - SERVICE - RENTALS
916 Mass.
VI 3-1267
[ ]
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
E ALUMS
rsiy of Kansas
MING SCHEDULE
M
After the Game Enjoy Delicious Pizza
9:00-11:00 a.m. Free Sightseeing Bus Tours of Campus, Starting from Union.
9:30-11:00 a.m. General Homecoming Reception, Union Lounge, Coffee.
10:00-11:30 a.m. School of Business Open House, Room No. 208, Summerfield Hall.
10:00- 1:00 p.m. Law School Open House and Informal Buffet, Green Hall Library.
11:00- 1:00 p.m. Homecoming Buffet Luncheon, Ballroom, Union. Queen and Attendants Will Be Present. $1.55 Per Person.
12:00-12:30 p.m. Carillon Recital, Memorial Campanile.
1:30 p.m. Kansas vs. Nebraska Football Game, Memorial Stadium. $4.00.
Pre-Game Performance: The University of Kansas Marching Band.
Halftime: Crowning of 1962 Homecoming Queen and Her Two Attendants; Presentation of a Homecoming Queen of Past Years.
After the Game: Cider and Doughnuts, Main Floor, Union.
8:00 p.m. "Paint Your Wagon" University Theatre Production, Murphy Hall Theatre. (Student I.D.'s and Season Tickets DO NOT Admit to This Performance.) $2.40,
$1.80, or $1.20.
8:00-11:30 p.m. 1962 Homecoming Dance, Union Ball-
at the
Pizza Hut
14th & Tenn. VI 3-0563
8:00-11:30 p.m. 1962 Homecoming Dance, Union Ballroom and Adjoining Rooms.
Three All Time Favorites
YHAWKS
COLE'S - RUSTY'S HILLCREST
YOUR Local Owned I.G.A. Food Centers
Where Your $ $ Buy You More
You Are Invited to Visit Photon Inc.
1107 Mass.
Lawrence's Photographic Specialty Shop
Where You'll Find
LEICA—NIKON—ROLLET—MINOX
KODAK—MIRANDA—MAMIYA
PENTAX—ZEISS
A Great Selection of Hallmark Cards to Fit Your Every Need
___
No Finer Cleaning
At Any Price
1 HOUR
Fast
DRY
CLEANING
1 HOUR Fast
No Finer Cleaning
At Any Price
1 HOUR
Fast
DRY
CLEANING
842 Mass.
VI 3-9594
--harman kardon
AUDIOIRONICS RADIO & TV PARTS-PA SYSTEMS-HIGH FIDELITY
Amplifiers Tuners Kits or Wired
Garrard
Garrard Changers Automatic Turntables
Speakers by
Electrovoice — J. B. Lansing — Utah
---
Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962
Vox Populi President Hits KU Primary Election Setup
Roger Wilson, Wichita senior and Vox Populi president, last night described the KU primary election system as "a farce."
Wilson predicted there would be no more primaries in future KU elections. He said he bases this prediction on his own personal opinion and comments which past University Party leaders have made to him.
WILSON CITED the results of this fall's primary election in the freshman women's dormitories. There, a UP candidate was eliminated from general election competition although she trailed her nearest competitor by only two votes.
"UP states that the primary is the way in which they choose qualified candidates." Wilson said. "But I can't see how two votes is sufficient
criteria to judge a candidate's qualifications."
Jim Cline, Rockford, Ill., sophomore, criticized The Intelligentsia, Joseph R. Pearson newsletter.
CLINE SAID VOX was told it would have to pay $10 for an advertisement in the newsletter. However, he said, the UP was not charged for its publicity.
Robert Yeargan, Goodland senior and newsletter editor, commented in a telephone interview last night.
"The Intelligentsia supports UP, which it feels to be representative of the majority of people in the dorm." he said.
"But anything we have said about UP was in the realm of our editorial policy. Anything that appeared in advertisement form was paid for by UP."
Moms and Dads
Do you have a son or daughter attending KU? If you do,you can do him or her a big favor.
As you well know, automobiles are not allowed on the hill this year. In fact, no internal combustion engines are allowed either.
Sometimes, it's a long walk from one building to another. Some students almost have to run.
If your favorite student had a bicycle to ride on campus he or she would save a lot of time; and not have to hurry either.
There is a bicycle parking rack by each building where it is easy and convenient to park.
Ask him or her about a bicycle. Then call or stop by to see us.
We've got "The Bicycle Built For You" (him or her or everybody).
RALEIGH—HUFFY—WESTERN FLYER
Downtown Western Auto
VI3-2141
We Think You Will Enjoy our
910Mass.
"Just Fine Food"
Served Piping Hot in a Jiffy.
We are open Every Night until midnight!
CRESTURANT
at the
HILLCREST BOWL 9th & Iowa
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
the best dressed girls in school buy their clothes here...
The Alley Shop at diebolt's 843 Mass.
University Daily Kansan
Page 11
Far-Off Pakistan Friendly Land, Ketzel Discovers
Once you make a friend in Pakistan, he will do anything for you and will expect you to do the same for him, a KU Fulbright lecturer said last night.
By Joanne Prim
Clifford Ketzel, associate professor of political science, was speaking to a meeting of the Muslim Club in the Kansas Union.
Prof. Ketzel and his family spent last year at the University of Peshawar in Pakistan while he taught history.
"A Pakistani student who spent last year in the United States insisted that I borrow his car during the three weeks before mine arrived," he said.
PROF. KETZEL TOLD the group of a particularly friendly Pakistani student.
"He turned his car over to me. When he wanted to use it, he came to my house to get it and returned it when he was through.
"He told me, 'An American without a car is worth zero.'
A CERTAIN CANDIDNESS is connected with this friendship. Prof. Ketzel said. The people of Pakistan do not hesitate to ask others for favors.
"For instance," Prof. Ketzel said, "a Pakistani will come up to you and say, 'I want to go to town. Will you take me in?'
"In the United States, we would shy away from this type of person, but not in Pakistan. If you want something, you ask for it."
During his informal talk, which he called a "Pakistani Poturpri," Fref. Ketzel told of experiences which he said comprised his "most" list.
"MY MOST SATISFYING experience was the relationship with the students.
"They spoke poor English and at first, they were hesitant to be friends, but little by little their reserve was broken down.
"Between classes, I noticed that the students all went out and smoked the 'hooka', a community pipe. One day I asked a student if I might smoke the hooka. He was rather surprised.
"The next day he told me someone had said that such action was not respectable for a teacher, so we smoked the pipe behind the building after that.
"THE PAKISTANI STUDENTS got into the habit of dropping by my house—never saying when. They came sometimes when we were ready to go out for the evening, but we learned just to sit with them until they wanted to go home."
Prof. Ketzel said the greatest compliment he ever received was to be taken as a native when he was dressed in the native costume, a "gamez shalwar."
"People would come up to me and start rattling in Fushtu (the language of Pakistan)," he said.
Prof. Ketzel would then explain that he did not speak the language and that he was an American. This was usually followed by an invitation home to tea.
"Some days I drank 20 cups of tea," he said.
LONDON — (UF1) — Sign in a parking area.
Woman Driver Gives Warning
"Lady parks here — leave plenty of space."
Portraits of Distinction
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962
JOE'S BAKERY
Open 24 Hours
Night Deliveries
412 W. 9th VI 3-4720
Quality Watch Repair
Lowest Prices
DANIELS
It's a HAPPY HOMECOMING with this To or from the Big Game . . . or at home afterwards, there's no treat like this Dairy Queen treat!
© 1956, NATIONAL DAIRY QUEEN DEVELOPMENT CO.
DAIRY QUEEN
1835 Mass.
FRIDAY FLICKS
Shows at 7 and 9:30
FRASER THEATER
James STEWART June ALLYSON
HIS LIFE ...
HIS LOVE ... HIS UNFORGETTABLE MUSIC!
The GLENN MILLER STORY
FROM THE TECHNICOLOR
35c admission—tickets for both shows on sale at Union on Friday till 6 p.m. and then at the door
THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES SALUTE:BILL TYLER
Bill Tyler (B.S.E.E., 1958) is an Engineer with Southern Bell in Louisville. His specialty is telephone power equipment. Recently he engineered power plant replacements valued at nearly $300,000.
he taught a magnetics theory course to high school science teachers. After hours, Bill joins other telephone people in fixing "Talking Machines" for the blind.
Previously, Bill was an Equipment Engineer. In that job he prepared specs for power, carrier and repeater, teletypewriter and other equipment. On a special assignment,
Bill Tyler and other young engineers like him in Bell Telephone Companies throughout the country help bring the finest communications service in the world to the homes and businesses of a growing America.
MARKETING & DEMAND REPAIR
BELL SYSTEM
WESTERN MARKETING &
DEMAND REPAIR
BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES
TELEPHONE MAN-OF-THE-MONTH
University Daily Kansan Friday, Nov. 9, 1962
Betas Win 5 Straight A' Hill Football Titles
It was Beta's day on the Hill yesterday.
For the fifth consecutive year, Beta Theta Pi won the intramural touch football "A" Hill championship. The victim was JRPF, a Joseph R. Pearson Hall team and Independent "A" Hill champ, which fell to the "Butts," 21-0.
For the fourth consecutive year, the Beta Theta Pi "B" team won the Fraternity "B" Hill championship, crushing Phi Gamma Delta, 47-20. The Beta "Bees" play the Navy ROTC team, Independent "B" champions, today at 4 p.m. for the "B" Hill championship.
The Betas drew first blood midway through the first quarter when they marched 70 yards in 11 plays to score. The tally came on a 15-yard blocking-back release, when quarterback Morgan Metcalf threw to Karl Kreutziger. Bob Swan added the conversion to give the Betas a 7-0 lead that they carried to the halftime intermission.
IN SPITE OF THE Beta "A" team's 21-point margin of victory, the Hill championship game was a hard-fought contest down to the wire.
The Betas began their initial scoring drive on a pass interception by safety Laird Patterson on his own 10-yard line.
JRPF had taken the ball on the first series of downs and, sparked by the pinpoint passing of quarterback Jim Poage and receiving of ends Gary McCabe and Denny Morse, moved deep into Beta territory in six plays.
THE BETA DEFENSE, however, featuring a hard rush by John McCormick, Ron Greenlee, and Kreutziger, pressured Poage into the errant pass,
one of five that the alert "Butt' secondary picked off during the afternoon.
The third period was also a scoreless dual, but both teams showed steady drives on offense that marched them far into enemy territory.
Beta Theta Pi took the ball on the first series of downs after the intermission and moved from their own 20-yard line to the JRPH 12 in 14 plays. Typically, the conservative Beta offense tore off small chunks of yardage most of the afternoon, splitting the JRPH secondary.
However, the defending champions ran into a tough JRPH defense, led by rusher Jim Simms, and the drive stalled on the opponent's eight- yard line.
TOWARD THE END of the period, JRPH had its second chance to put across the tying tally. Beta kicker Dave Phillips boomed a 46-yard punt to Poage, who was standing on his own 15. Poage then rifled a pass up the sideline to McCabe who returned the ball all the way to the "Butt" 30.
Two plays later, however, at the outset of the fourth quarter, Poage rifled a 20-yard pass up the middle which Beta linebacker Jim Emerson intercepted in the end zone, killing the threat.
Then the Betas caught fire, moving the ball 60 yards in five plays to an insurance score. The touchdown came on a 30-yard bulls-eye from Metcalf to end Laird Patterson, and again Swan added the extra point.
The key play in this series was a 30-yard Metcalf-to-Emerson pass on the play preceeding the touchdown.
Boating Baseballer
BAYSIDE, N. Y. — (UPI) — Goose Goslin, who compiled a lifetime American league batting average of 316 with the Senators, Browns and Tigers, owns a fleet of boats in New Jersey.
Canadien Capers
MONTREAL — (UPI) — The Montreal Canadiens set a National Hockey League record during the 1955-56 season by winning 45 of 70 regular-season games. They lost only 15 games that season and tied 10.
STUDENTS
Friday Night
CHICKEN SPECIAL
All You Can Eat
ONLY $1
drink and dessert extra
Little Banquet
Ample free parking on the Malls
Grease Jobs . . $1.00
Brake Adj. . . . 98c
Automotive Service
Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel
Balancing
7 a.m.-11 p.m.
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
D&G AUTO SERVICE VI 2-0753 $ \frac{1}{2} $ blk. E. 12th & Haskell
PAGE CREIGHTON
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd
Ample free parking on the Malls
Portraits of Distinction
'WELCOME ALUMNI'
FROM
ROY BORGEN'S
PACKAGE STORE
In the Hillcrest Shopping Center "Stop in and See Us" — VI 2-3990
State Farm Insurance
Poul E. Hodgson
Local Agent
Off. Ph. VI 3-5668 530 W 23rd.
Res. Ph. VI 3-5994 Lawrence, Kan.
© K. W.
Pep Up Your
Wardrobe
With
Patty Woodard
● 2-Pc. Dresses
● Shifts
● Slacks and
V-Neck Tops
Kirsten's
OPEN EVENINGS
Hillcrest Shopping Center
9th & Iowa
VI 2-0562
Similar
to
Illustration
LET Kief's RECORD & HI-FI
LET Kief's
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds
For Music With "Your Favorite Beverage"
Wine, Wine, Wine Home of Blues Green Onions Surfin Safari You Can't Judge a Book
See Kief's Rockin' Section
Make Your Homecoming Party a Success with Music For Anything
Funny Folk Songs My Son, The Folk Singer Allan Sherman
For the Folk Party
Joan Baez — Barbara Dane
Miriam Makeba — Odetta
See Kief's Mood Section
If There's Another Party You Want to Make
Jackie Gleason Percy Faith Sil Austin Petero Nero Mantovani Many Others
Jazz
Black Orpheus — Jazz Samba
Mann Smith Desmond Wilson Adderly Kenton Getz Coltrane Others
How's Your OLD NEEDLE?
---
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 13
KU
100% BACKING FOR KU FROM KU
KU
miller hall...
...pearson hall
jolliffe hall...
100
... grace pearson hall
carruth o'leary hall ...
---
... battenfeld hall
j. r. pearson hall ..
1994.10.28
The building is a multi-story structure with a flat roof and large windows on each floor. It appears to be an office building or a commercial complex. The architecture is modern, with a series of horizontal lines running along the building's length. There are no visible signs of age or damage, suggesting it is well-maintained.
...watkins hall
douthart hall...
...hashinger hall
corbin hall...
THE BOOKSTORE
Page 14
University Daily Kansan
Friday. Nov. 9,1962
BLACK TIGHTS
It's sheer magic! See It and Hear It NEXT FRIDAY First Of The
VARSITY ART Attractions
GRANADA
NOW SHOWING!
HURRY! ENDS TONITE!
CHARLTON • ELSA
HESTON • MARTINEH
MEDVILLE SHAWSON'S
The Pigeon
That Rock Rome
FARRANGISON • TROYMAN RELEASE
Shows At 7:00 & 9:00
Tonite and Saturday! Four Action Hits!
Ed Sullivan says:
"THIS IS REALLY THE BIG SHOW"
THE BIG SHOW
20
CINEMASCOPE COLOR BY DELUXE
DEMONIACALI DIABOLICALI
VILLAGE OF THE
DAMNED
From M.G.M
THE
SHE-
CREATURE
THE PHANTOM From 10,000 Leagues"
"The Big Show" and "Village of the Damned"
Sunday
Sunset
DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 40
★ On Stage!
...
Direct From New York Teen Idol
But what happened when she got them mixed up
★ In Person!
EXTRA ON STAGE
She was so BOSTON in PUBLIC...and so FRENCH in PRIVATE..
P. R.
This Show Only!
Adults $1.00
Children
Under 12 50c
TICKETS ON SALE
NOW!
- Admissions -
Varsity
THEATRE ... TELEPHONE 012-345-6789
Mick Vickery And His Sensational Twist Band Also Giant Twist Contest!
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
--n Eastland COLOUR
10
???
VARSITY
THEATRE Telephone VIKING 3-1065
SO SCARY—WE DARE YOU TO SIT THRU IT ALL! - IF YOU DO-
YOU WIN FREE PLUS FREE 2 FOR 1 PASSES GOOD FOR A FUTURE MOVIE CHARM BRACLET ALL GIRLS!
DO THE DEAD RETURN? DO YOU BELIEVE IN GHOSTS?
YOU MUST SEE TO BELIEVE!
ON STAGE
IN PERSON
DRACULA
DIRECT FROM HOLLYWOOD
IN HOUSE OF THE LIVING DEAD
SEE DRACULA CHANGE INTO A BAT AND FLY INTO THE AUDIENCE AMONG YOU!
ALIVE!!! ON STAGE! IN PERSON
PLUS SCREAM PICTURES
DARE YOU SEE IT!
FRANKENSTEIN MONSTER
gou mixea...T ???
ROSS HUNTER
PRODUCTION
"IF A MAN ANSWERS"
...DON'T HANG UP!
Hang around for the FUN!
AN AMAZING NEW EXPERIENCE IN SCREEN THRILLS!
HORRORS OF THE
BLACK MUSEUM
CINEMASCOFE IN BLOOD. CURQUING COLOR
SE SANARDA
in dazzling
Joan Louis
fashion!
HEAR BOBY
sing the title song!
BASIL
Doors Open 3:00 p.m.
1 DAY ONLY
Thurs., Nov. 16
A ROSS HUNTER PRODUCTION
"IF A MAN ANSWERS"
...DONT HANG UP!
Screenplay by RICHARD MURDER - Directed by HENRY LEVIN
Produced by ROSS HUNTER • A Universal International Fiction
SATURDAY
- Matinee Saturday
— AND — "THE SPOOK CHASERS"
STARRING SANDRA DEE BOBBY DARIN MICHELINE PRESLE & JOHN LUND CO STARRING CESAR ROMERO STEFANIE POWERS
ROSS HUNTER
PRODUCTION
"IF A MAN ANSWERS"
...DONT HANG UP!
Hang around for the
Afternoon At 2:00
At 7:00 and 9:00
Sunday From 2:30
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788
Doors Open 3:00 p.m.
SANDRA DEE BOBBY DARIN
COMPLETE Shows — After School Matinee At 4 p.m. — Eve. 7 & 9 p.m.
— STAGE SHOW AT EACH —
- Evening Showings
- Continuous Shows
THE FUN STARTS
You're a Young Doctor...I'm an Old One--
NO DOCTOR
HAS THE RIGHT
TO PLAY GOD!
99
M. B. KIRKMAN
ROCK HUDSON
BURL IVES
GENA ROWLANDS
---
Sorcerely by John Lee Mahon and Neil Paterson from the novel by J. Pauline Hastings. Produced by Robert Arthur and produced by Eastman COLOR
Eastman COLOR
GEOFFREY KEEN
Please put her out of her agony... She'll pray to God to forgive you...
you..."
STARTS SUNDAY
Tonight & Sat.
7:00 & 9 p.m.
Master Terrorists
in
"Tales of
Terror"
Price - Lorre - Rathbone
One
SPIRAL ROAD
Sunday
Continuous
From
2:30
Sunset
DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 40
Friday. Nov. 9, 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 by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion.
FOR SALE
Seal Point Slamee kittens with American Cat Financer papers. Perfect for breeding purposes. 6 week old. $25. Cash evenings or weekends at VI 3-8871. 11-15
Page 15
Motorcycle: $350 cc, low mileage, cheap and dependable transportation. $260 or best offer. Call VI 3-6077 after 5 p.m. or week ends. 11-12
GUNS: LAWRENCE FIREARMS CO.
New and used guns and ammo. Can't find what you want at all those other deals? See us in our elegant surroundings, will order anything. We also reglue.
1026 Ohio. 11-12
1960 Renault Dauphine. 10,000 actual miles. Radio and heater. White side wall with other extra features. Extremely tough throughout. 720 Arkansas St. or phone VI 2-27-41. 11-13
1855 Ford Customline; radio, heater.
1903 Ford Customline; tires included.
V-3 50-355 at 6 p.m. 11-20
New stereo FM—new portable stereos—
new AM-FM radios—new FM radio dis-
sociation as low as $267* and
month, at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Massachusetts St. 11-20
TYPEWRITER: Remington Quiet-Riter.
PARKER: 4 p.m. Clark.
76413; Mass: after 8:30, 11-12
Stereo or hi-fi diamond needles for most makes. Half price during November. Don't wait, buy them now at Pettengill-Davis, 723 Mass. tf
YOU OR YOUR HOUSE ought to own a like new Classic 1929 Packard console. You can also like to have this red car with wire wheels, new white sidewalls, etc. for your phone I-72521 on Friday at 6:00 p.m. or after 9:00 p.m. Sunday evening. 11-9
3-speed Royce Union 26"男 or ladies
4-speed Royce Union 30"男 or ladies
929 Mass. Used bikes $10.00 each. 11-12
Transistor Radios! 6 transistors now $10.97! AM-FM radios—twin speaker now $45.97! FM radios now $26.97. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. St. 11-12
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in the newest. Open phone VI 12-292 Modern self-service. Open to 6:30 p.m week days.
Sports Car Compact Owners Attention! We have all sizes of Snow treads avail-
able in our 1,000 discount Center, 929 Mass. St. 1,000 new tires at low discount prices! 11-12
All kinds of house plants. Potted . . .
Including philodendron to be used for
room dividers and in picture windows.
Phone VI 3-4207. tf
TV shopping? Mignavox 24" automatic TV has a 3 year picture tube warranty. It also comes with a phone from just $149.90. See the magnificent Magnavox at Pettengill-Davis, 725 Mass.
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. tt
Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.00 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery, tf
TYPING PAPER BARGAINS: Pink
typing paper . 85c per ream. Yellow
paper . 125c per ream. Per pound. The Lawrence Outlook. 100%
Massachusetts, open all day Saturday, tf
FOUND
FOR RENT
Man's jacket. Sunday at Hilderre Laum-
castle call VI 3-7863 between 5:30-6:30) 11-12
Single rooms for men **1** block from Union. Kitchen privileges, maid service and limbs. 1234 Oread—VI 2-1518, call or see evenings. 11-15
3-room apartment with stove, refrigerator and garage. Bills paid. $50. Allo house furnished or unfurnished $65. Call VI 3-7038. 11-15
Small second floor furnished bachelor type apartment suitable for 1 person. Private bath and kitchen. Steam heat. Off street parking, $40 per month except electricity. Rogers Real Estate Co. West. West 14th. Phone VI 3-065 or VI 3-289. 11-15
FURNISHED OFFICE SPACE is now available by the day, week or month. Please contact Secretary and Answering Service. Call V1 85203 or see them at 10211¹ Mass.
M-W-F-tf
Very nice apartment. Large living room with bay window. Large bedroom, kitchen and private bath. Well furnished—all newly decorated—1st floor–private parking—12 minutes walking distance to KU $8 per month. Cal VI 3-7810.
Two room well furnished apartment just redecorated. Garage—all utilities paid $58. 1447 Vermont. Phone VI 3-6328.
Large attractive room for a young woman available because former resident got married. Kitchen privileges with ample refrigerator space. Only a block away from Student Union. Parking. See at 1242 La, or call v 3-9841. 11-14
11-12
Cozy 3 room furnished apartment suitable for single person. Good location. Private bath and entrance, also parking fees paid. $55 a month. XI 9-25383. 11-12
Four large-room apartment with private bath for 4 or 5 boys. Utilities paid. 3 rooms. $25 each. S25 each room. B2-3934 or VI 3-7642. Ask for Mrs. Huletl. Available now. 11-12
Partly furnished 2 bedroom house $1
block from campus. Fully carpeted,
screened porch, wood burning fireplace,
fully air conditioned, full basement, large
lot. $100 per month. If interested call
VI 3-4291. 11-9
TRANSPORTATION
Furnished house. Can accommodate up to
20 people per room.
If interested call VI 3-4291. 11-9
3 room apartment, private bath. 1 block
away. Carpool. Payed. Come and see. 1142 Indiana. tf
Vacancies for young men in contemporary home with swimming pool, shower bath, private entrance, 5 evening meals weekly. $65 a month. Call M1 3-96355 tf
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
Indian and Lincoln penniles, any American gold. Also wanted. British, Canadian, Mexican and Russian coins. American Coin Mart. 1015 Mass. I 2-6219. 11-13
Travel—only a limited number of airline flights still available for Thanksgiving and Christmas Holiday.
WANTED
Will do ironing in my home. Call VI 2-2293. 11-12
Suggest making reservations Now!
'Rock'um Hawkers'
BEAT NEBRASKA
WE'RE DUMP
BEHIND THE
YOU HUSKERS
WELCOME ALUMS
First National Travel Agency
746 Mass. VI 3-0152
BUSINESS SERVICES
English tutoring ½ block from Corbin
applies to come to 1127 Ohio any
morning 7-5:00
RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267.
GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I study notes.
Completely revised and extremely comprehensive. $4. For free delivery call VI 3-8246. tf
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
lays of Tissue. Ola Snutt 1939*; Mass. Call VI 3-5263.
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
TYEFWRITERS — Sales, service, rental.
New and used portables, standards and
electrics. Royal, Olympia, Port Corona,
Olivetti and Remington portables. Bond
typing papers. Lawrence Typewriter, 755
Mass. Phone VI 3-3644. tf
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center. 1218
Conn. Personal service—sectionalized
safety holders, chameleons, turtles,
guinea pigs, etc., plus complete supplies. tf
GRAVITT'S AUTO. LAUNDRY
913 N. H.
MILLIKEN'S "S.O.S." — Open 24 hours a day. Regular Office Hours: 7 a.m.-12 p.m.
• STUDENT TYPING & THESIS
• CUSTOM GETTENER DUPLICATING & THERMO-FAX COPYING
• SECRETARIAL & ANSWERING SERVICE, Office Space Available.
1021½ Massachusetts ph. VI 3-5920
VI 3-6844
Uebernehmung gerne Schreibmaschine-
bilder und englishische Sporrows 13:44
und englishische Sporrows 13:44
TYPING
Typist experienced in theses and term papers. Prompt service, reasonable rates, electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Howard Mhlinger at VI 3-4409. tf
1021 $ ^{1} $ Massachusetts Ph. VI D-5920 M-W-E-f1f
MILLIKEN'S S.O.S. — always first quality typing on IBM machines, equipped with carbon ribbons. Open 24 hours a day $1021\%$. Massachusetts. US 2-3920
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will use type theses, term papers, reports, and electric awewowers. Reasonable pay. Electric awewower. Fledgeown. 2521 Alabama, Ph. VI 3-8586.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, manuscripts, and an electronic typewriter. Reasonable salary. Mrs. Charles Patti, V 3-8379.
English major and former secretary will type themes and theses on electric type-writer. For neat and accurate work call Mrs. Melisand Jones, VI 3-5267. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Ms. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tt
Experienced typist. 7 years experiences in theses and term papers. Electric typesetter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Milaro, Barlow. 2014. Yale Rd., VI 21-1648.
Fast accurate typing Secretary for 51%
at 703 Lawrence Avenue, Robertson, VI 31-826
Experienced secretary with electric type-
ten, 3-150 mm. telephone, or 10-mm. et-
phone Nancy Cain at VF 3-05248
Manuscripts, theses, and term papers. Also dissertations typed on wide carriage. Experience in education and science. Experience in education and science. Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. VI 2-1546. tt
Typing reasonable rates, neat and accom-
mated. Mrs Bodin, 825 Greever Terr.
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast,
accurate, neat work. Reasonable rates.
Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff.
VI 2-1749. tf
HELP WANTED
Car hostess and fountain help wanted to work days 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. You are eligible if you can work two shifts per week. Contact Tom Dixon, Dixon Drive-In Restaurant, 2500 W. 6th or phone VI 3-742-811-12
Efficient typist. Would like typing in her home. Special attention to term reports, thesis, letters. Call anytime at VI 3-2551.
MORE JOBS BETTER PRODUCTS LOWER PRICES Advertising works for you!
girls ... have you visited Lawrence's newest and most unique sportswear shop?
shop casually for something different...
The Alley Shop at diebolt's 843 Mass.
diebolt's
Page 16
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962
Regents Approve Plan -
(Continued from page 1)
three state colleges at Pittsburg, Hays and Emporia would be coordinated through a president of a new council of state colleges.
In order to extend the research opportunities the panel recommended creation of a research foundation established, a separate non-profit corporation that would permit the two universities to provide research and professional services to the state, the federal government and industry.
The panel further called for a marked upward revision of faculty
salaries "to place the colleges and universities in a better competitive position." It also asked for establishment of a small number of 'distinguished regents professorships' to attract outstanding scholars and scientists to the state.
Business? It's quite simple. It's other people's money.—Alexandre Dumas The Younger
Saint: A dead sinner revised and edited—Ambrose Bierce
The life which is unexamined is not worth living—Socrates
Foreign Student-
(Continued from page 1) American students on the KU campus.
"WE FELT THE BEST WAY to accomplish this end was to break down social barriers and barriers of communication."
McCornack agreed that some "artificiality" may exist in relationships between American and foreign students.
"I regret that many students are artificial in their relationships with foreign students," he said. "But this is not the general case."
The Villager
a must in every wardrobe—
The Villager
dresses $18 to $30 shirts $5.95
The Alley Shop
at
diebolt's
843 Mass.
diebolt's
Old Sp
AFTER SHAVE
The one lotion that's cool, exciting brisk as an ocean breeze!
The one-and-only Old Spice exhilarates...gives you that great-to-bealive feeling...refreshes after every shave...adds to your assurance... and wins feminine approval every time, Old Spice After Shave Lotion, 1.25 and 2.00 plus tax.
Old Spice
AFTER SHAVE LOTION
Old Spice
AFTER SHAVE
Old Spice
AFTER SHAVE LOTION
Old Spice
Old Spice - the shave lotion men recommend to other men!
SHULTON
...SKY-HI
RANDCRAFT
SHOES FOR YOUNG MIN
THRILLING...
Greet the Grenadier
...a boot as modern
in concept as a sonic
boom ...in complete
tune with today's
quickened tempo.
Young men seeking a
change of pace will
enthusse at this Rand-
craft version of the
Boot,'62.
$10.99
REDMAN'S SHOES
815 Mass.
Something New in a Muffler...
VEST SCARF by Regal
Debonair and distinguished, it's a muffler, a vest and a cardigan, all in one because it's Regal's versatile vest scarf to give you warmth with style. The fashionable accessory of the season and the perfect gift for the man who has everything.
$2.98
GIBBS CLOTHING CO.
811 Mass.
Homecoming
Daily hansan
60th Year, No.41
SECTION A
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Sports
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962
Homecoming Fervor At KU
KANSAS
48
Sayers Is Set for 'Huskers'
How does a Nebraskan playing for Kansas view tomorrow's Jayhawk-Cornhusker clash?
"It's no different than playing any other team." Gale Sayers, KU's starting sophomore halfback sensation maintains.
"I know about everybody on their team, though," Sayers, who comes from Omaha. Neb., notes as one reservation. "And, a lot of people have asked me for tickets," he also adds.
SAYERS, LEADING the Big Eight backs early in the season, was the subject of concern for KU coaches early in the pre-season drills this fall. Sayers, reported 20 pounds underweight, dispelled much of this worry when the season began.
Up to 191 pounds, from a low of 170, by the Iowa State, game Savers, was the leading Big Fight back.
Fans expect Sayers to reel off 10 and 20 yards every time he carries the ball anymore. And, often he does just that.
Sayers is one of KU's recent prize recruits. While still a senior at Omaha Central High School, Sayers was one of the most sought after prep players in the
A 22-FOOT-PLUS broad jumper and a 9.7 100-yard dash man, Sayers' football talents appeal more to Jayhawker coaches, even though Coach Bill Easton would be delighted if Sayers was on the KU track team come this spring.
country. And, besides his football talent, coaches were also eyeing his track abilities.
Last year's freshman offense was built around the speedy halfback. It was said that the freshmen had two plays, either "Sayers right" or "Sayers left."
Sayers scored all of the frosh's six touchdowns. He netted 321 vards rushing in 41 carries.
Did Sayers ever have any notions of going to Nebraska instead of Kansas? "I started to go there," Sayers says, "but I changed my mind."
Sayers has a brother, Roger, who is well-known in the Midlands in football and track. Roger attends Omaha University and was their leading ground-rainer as well as top dash man last year.
Rumor has it that attempts were made to recruit the elder Savers, Roger, a year older, for KU.
"They've got a pretty good team," Gale says of Nebraska. "But I think we can beat them." he adds.
Big 8 Dark Horse Fired for an Upset
Nebraska's complete turnabout from a mediocre 1961 season to a successful Big Eight team competitor through the first half of the current season has been one of the Midland's biggest surprises.
Last year the Huskers won three games, lost six and tied one. This year, an inspired Nebraska team took an early lead in the Big Eight race.
Much of the credit for this turnabout must go to the head Coach Bob Devaney and his staff. They not only pumped new life into the floundering Cornhuskers, but also introduced new offensive and defensive patterns.
All America candidate Bill "Thunder" Thornton and junior quarterback Dennis Claridge have also been contributing factors to this year's success.
Thornton, the quick, 210-pound fullback from Toledo, Ohio, ranked third in conference rushing last year with 618 yards. He excels in all phases of the game and has led the Huskers in scoring both his sophomore and junior years.
Cabrera Is Key To Jayhawkers Loop CC Hopes
Bv Rov Miller
One of the more pleasant surprises for Bill Easton, Kansas track and cross country coach, when he returned to KU from coaching the Malayan national track team during the summer, was George Cabrera.
Cabrera, the top Jayhawker cross country man this season, ran a mere sixth and seventh last season on the squad. The Kansas City, Mo., junior, though, earned the top spot in two pre-season time trials this year and has stayed atop ever since.
IN THE Jayhawkers' first two meets of the season, Cabrera placed first for KU, the Kansas distance men defeating Southern Illinois and the Chicago Track Club.
Cabrera has no visions of holding a tight grip on the number one spot for the entire season, however.
And, it's this depth that Coach Easton will have to depend on tomorrow when the Jayhawks attempt to defend their league Big Eight title.
"There'll probably be different guys running in the first spot from now on," Cabrera said after the Southern Illinois dual. "If Dotson (Bill) had hurt himself last year, we would have been up a creek. This year we've got pretty good depth."
CABRERA, incidentally, feels confident that the Jayhawkers will retain the title. Coach Easton is not so optimistic. ("He just doesn't want us to go into the meet overconfident," said Cabrera.)
To gain the top spot on the team, Cabraha had to surpass his roommate, Charlie Hayward, captain of the team.
"It's a surprise," Hayward said, who in the pre-season analysis appeared to be the logical number one man, of Cabrera's surge.
"But it's a pleasant surprise," Hayward added. "Everyone was wondering how we were going to replace "Dot" (Dotson, number one man and captain last year). This is what we needed, a young man to come up and take first place.
crea believes his rise from last (Continued on page 10)
"WERE TRYING to find out how he did it. He won't tell us."
He was named to the Associated Press All Big Eight team last year. In addition to being a leader on the football field, he has been named to the Innocent's Society, men's honorary society at Nebraska. He is the first Negro to be accorded this honor.
Denis Claridge has come into his own this year as one of the league's top quarterbacks. He fits perfectly into coach Devaney's system of a quarterback who can both run and throw. Aside from having good running speed, the Robbinsdale, Minn., junior threw for 464 yards and three touchdowns as a sophomore last year. At 6-3, 210 pounds, he possesses the size to become one of the top three quarterbacks in the Big Eight this year.
Another of the big factors in Nebraska's success is their veteran line. The Huskers are deep up front.
Such stalwarts as Bob Brown, 6-5, 259-pound right tackle who intercepted a crucial Iowa State pass to shut off a Cyclone scoring surge; Al Fischer, 215-pound, who spearheads the alternate line from his tackle position: Tyrone Robertson, 229-pound tackle whose hustle has been paramount in the team's success; Dwain Carlson, hard hitting co-captain, and Lloyd Voss, 6-4, 225-pounder from Magnolia, Minn., have helped the Husker game shine.
Nebraska is a veteran team with only three newcomers playing regularly in the top two units. These are Jim Baffico, center, Dave Theisen, halfback, and Kent McCloughan, halfback.
NU has not won a game against the Jayhawkers since Jack Mitchell became head coach five years ago. In 1957, the score was 14-12; in 1958, 29-17; in 1959, 10-3; in 1960, 31-0, and last year 28-6.
But Mitchell remembers Nebraska Coach Devaney's last trip to Lawrence. Devaney and one of his prize pupils, All America Quarterback Chuck Lamson, led a spirited band of Wyoming Cowboys into Memorial Stadium last year and surprised the favored Hawkers with a 6-6 tie.
The game tomorrow could be full of more surprises like this.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962
15
Hawk Quarterback Dispels Questions
Main concern of KU summer quarterbacks before this year's football season was, "Who's going to replace John Hadl?"
Hadl, now top quarterback for the San Diego Chargers in the American Football League, led KU to three productive seasons.
And, during two of those campaigns, Rodger McFarland was Hadi's understudy. People insisted that McFarland had few of the abilities that made Hadl a triple-threater: running, passing and
Leiker Punts Match Hadl's
Not the least of the talents John Hadl's graduation carried away from the Jayhawker football team was the one of the most polished kicking toes in Big Eight history. But Jack Mitchell already has wheeled another long-range booster into place in Tony Leiker, fiery Hays junior.
On those rare occasions when Hadl didn't perform this chore last year, Leiker came in to average 51.0 on two kicks. Nobody can expect that sort of pace on a full-time basis, but the blond slotback has been booming up to 70 yards under the pressure of scrimmage action to date. Whether Leiker is able to cut the deep sidelines as well as the departed All America remains to be seen.
For the record, Hadl twice led the Big Eight on averages of 45.5 and 40.5. The former mark also brought the league a major college NCAA championship in 1959. Best of all though, was his sideline radaring which frequently pinned the enemy deep, forcing a return kick which set-up a comparatively close range Kansas score.
Hadl's two crowns, plus a pair by Ted Rohde, long-legged halfback of the Chuck Mather era, gives Kansas four of the last eight league kings in this department.
Four of last year's top six Big Eight booters are returning. These include Nebraska champion Dennis Claridge at 39.1; two specialists, Dave Hannah, Oklahoma State, and Gary Ellis, Iowa State; and Missouri's reserve quarterback, Darvl Krugman. They finished second, third, and sixth, respectively at 38.6, 38.5 and 36.0.
The kicking game always has been close to Mitchell's heart and it is no different this year, especially with the new rule which allows the kicking team to down the leather inside the enemy 10 yard line.
"We're emphasizing punt coverage and protection just as much as ever," Mitchell says.
punting.
While McFarland probably does not possess Hadi's booting abilities, the senior captain has proven himself as an able runner and passer.
IN THE IOWA State game, for instance, McFarland netted 105 yards in 22 attempts to finish ahead of Sayers. KU's usual rushing leader.
In this instance, as may be the case in other KU contests this year, McFarland was forced to run through the center of the Cyclone line because of their over-shifting designed to stop any Gale Sayers end runs.
After the game, Coach Jack Mitchell said that McFarland changed signals 90 per cent of the time after he made a call in the huddle and then arrived at the line.
LAST YEAR, McFarland led KU to 279 yards against Colorado, the Jayhawks' third-highest rushing production of the season.
"We have a lot of respect for McFarland," said assistant backfield coach Bernie Taylor. "He's one of the finest competitors in college football and a good leader."
And, the Fort Worth, Tex., senior has the respect of area sports-writers, as shown in Big Eight pre-season opinions.
"It appears here the Big Eight football race depends a lot on one man, Rodger McFarland of Kansas," wrote a Topeka sportswriter.
21
Those same summer quarterbacks may have something to talk about again this summer. When McFarland graduates, there may be a legitimate quarterback gap.
BACKING UP McFarland are juniors Con Keating and Brian Palmer. Neither, among themselves, have the multiple talents contained by Hadi1 and McFarland.
But, Palmer is a good passer and Keating is a good runner. Maybe some sort of an arrangement can be worked out before next season.
Meanwhile, Ron Oelschlager, second-string sophomore halfback, may fit into the quarterback picture for next year. Oelschlager is a good passer as well as being a fair runner.
Clothier Realizes Potential By Steady Self-Confidence
The most heartening come-through performance in Kansas' line this autumn is being wielded by senior tackle Marvin Clothier. One of the reasons is because he never gave up on himself.
"I just couldn't believe I wasn't worth anything as a football player," he says grimly. "Thinking about that all summer drove me. I was determined to make it somewhere this year."
BEGINNING WITH his freshman season, the 6-4, 214-pound Stafford lad was one of those exceptional physical potentials that couldn't quite dig a solid toehold anywhere. A fullback in high school, he was switched to center at Kansas. By spring practice he was swinging between center and tackle. As a sophomore he was settled at guard, handling third-unit duty along with Kent Converse, now an established center.
Last year he moved up to the alternate unit at guard. He injured a knee line-backing at Colorado and didn't get back for three weeks. When he did, he was drafted for tackle against Oklahoma State when injuries thinned the rank at that position. Still bothered by his knee he was forced to sit out the remainder of the season. A winter cartilage operation followed. He missed spring practice and was barely visible in the Jayhawkers' summer blueprint.
He asked for a trial at end . . . "I can run and there aren't many big ends who are fast too, so I thought I'd have a better chance there" . . . and was scheduled to open two-a-days on an experimental basis at that spot. But an eleventh-hour decision by the staff, dictated by the presence of only one lettered tackle, called for a shot . . . probably his last shot . . . at tackle.
"I SURE DIDN'T like the idea at first." Clothier admits, but about the fourth day of two-a-days I found I could make real progress."
He opened the season behind sophomore Brian Schweda on the T-side. He gave the best performance of his career in the opener against TCU. Another good job in the 14-0 conquest of Boston U., earned him elevation to the starting unit against Colorado. He's been running on the first unit since then.
As is the case now and then, Clothier's rise in stature has helped the player as much as the team. The guy to whom Clothier most wanted to prove that he could do the job was himself.
"It sure was a relief to find myself able to play at tackle," he confesses. "Now I feel like I'm contributing something to the club. I feel like I can do the job. Actually, I have no doubts. We needed some tackles and I am able to help. I feel so much more at home at this position. I've had more fun playing football this year than I have during my whole career. I was just cluttering up the place at guard. Coach Bernhardt (George, defensive line coach), helped me a great deal. He kept working with me."
CONTRIBUTING TO Clothier's mental torment of one-step forward and one-step back was his stay at guard. "I was always playing against players who got off the ball (charged at the snap) quicker than I could. I never could get off with them nor do some of the things they could do. They were smaller and quicker. It became a psychological problem.
"I'd much rather play against bigger men. At tackle, I find I can match quickness with them. I'd much rather play against a bigger man for that reason alone."
All this doesn't mean Clothier, brother of former KU guard Gary, is the league's best tackle. But as offensive line coach Don Fambrough says . . . "For the first time he is in his best position. He always has had speed (as a 185-pound schoolboy Clothier clocked 10.3 for the 100; 22.4 for the 220, and 50.7 for the 440), and playing ability. He still can improve. He can be as good as he wants to be."
THE LIST
Marvin Clothier
YUAN
NEED A RIDE? NEED RIDERS?
Riding in a Group Saves Money
Find that group under "Transportation" in your
DAILY KANSAN CLASSIFIEDS VI 3-2700 - Ext. 376
Friday, Nov. 9. 1962
University Daily Kansan
I am an American football player. I play as a quarterback.
Page 3
ILLEGAL USE OF HANDS AND ARMS
BALL ILLEGALLY TOUCHED,
KICKED OR BATTED
UNSPORTSMANLIKE CONDUCT
STANDING
OFFSIDE
SEBREW
ILLEGAL MOTION OR SHIFT
SALUTE
ROUGHNESS AND PILING ON
CURRING
CLIPPING
TOUCHDOWN OR FIELD GOAL
YES
INELIGIBLE RECEIVER DOWN FIELD ON PASS
P
ROUGHING THE KICKER
↑ ↓
WELCOME ALUMS to the KANSAS - NEBRASKA GAME
WE ARE HAPPY TO HAVE YOU IN LAWRENCE, THE UNIVERSITY CITY. WE SUGGEST THAT YOU TAKE THIS PAGE TO THE GAME WITH YOU SO YOU'LL BE IN THE 'KNOW' WHEN THE 'FLAG IS DOWN.'
FRIEND
LUMBER COMPANY 1029 New Hampshire
Lawrence Ready Mix
430 Maple
LOGAN-MOORE
LUMBER COMPANY
900 N. Second St.
Penny Ready Mix
730 Delaware
McCONNELL
LUMBER COMPANY 844 E.13th
SHAW
SHAW LUMBER COMPANY 7th and Vermont
Green Brothers 633 Mass.
BUILDING MATERIALS CO.
Quality Concrete Products
900 E. 15th
MORTON'S
SCOTT
TEMPERATURE EQUIPMENT Carrier Air Cond. & Heating 729 New Hampshire
Sherwin - Williams
PAINT COMPANY
1035 New Hampshire
TIME-OUT
10
FORWARD PASS OR
KICK CATCHING
INTERFERENCE
M
SAFETY
V
ILLEGALLY PASSING
OR HANDING
BALL FORWARD
DEFENSIVE HOLDING
TIME-OUT
DEFENSIVE HOLDING
↓
BALL READY-FOR-PLAY
DELAY OF GAME
INTENTIONAL
INTENTIONAL GROUNDING
INCOMPLETE FORWARD PASS,
PENALTY DECLINED.
NO PLAY OR NO SCORE
↓
FIRSTDOWN
ILLEGAL POSITION OR PROCEDURE
AUTHORIZED SUPPLEMENTARY USE ONLY. NO EDITION, RELEASE, OR DISPLAY. NOT FOR SALE.
1. Point the arm outward.
2. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
3. Point the arm inward.
4. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
5. Point the arm outward.
6. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
7. Point the arm inward.
8. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
9. Point the arm outward.
10. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
11. Point the arm inward.
12. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
13. Point the arm outward.
14. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
15. Point the arm inward.
16. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
17. Point the arm outward.
18. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
19. Point the arm inward.
20. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
21. Point the arm outward.
22. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
23. Point the arm inward.
24. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
25. Point the arm outward.
26. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
27. Point the arm inward.
28. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
29. Point the arm outward.
20. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
21. Point the arm inward.
22. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
23. Point the arm outward.
24. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
25. Point the arm inward.
26. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
27. Point the arm outward.
28. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
29. Point the arm inward.
30. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
31. Point the arm outward.
32. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
33. Point the arm inward.
34. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
35. Point the arm outward.
36. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
37. Point the arm inward.
38. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
39. Point the arm outward.
40. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
41. Point the arm inward.
42. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
43. Point the arm outward.
44. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
45. Point the arm inward.
46. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
47. Point the arm outward.
48. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
49. Point the arm inward.
50. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
51. Point the arm outward.
52. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
53. Point the arm inward.
54. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
55. Point the arm outward.
56. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
57. Point the arm inward.
58. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
59. Point the arm outward.
60. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
61. Point the arm inward.
62. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
63. Point the arm outward.
64. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
65. Point the arm inward.
66. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
67. Point the arm outward.
68. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
69. Point the arm inward.
70. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
71. Point the arm outward.
72. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
73. Point the arm inward.
74. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
75. Point the arm outward.
76. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
77. Point the arm inward.
78. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
79. Point the arm outward.
80. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
81. Point the arm inward.
82. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
83. Point the arm outward.
84. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
85. Point the arm inward.
86. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
87. Point the arm outward.
88. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
89. Point the arm inward.
90. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
91. Point the arm outward.
92. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
93. Point the arm inward.
94. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
95. Point the arm outward.
96. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
97. Point the arm inward.
98. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
99. Point the arm outward.
100. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
101. Point the arm inward.
102. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
103. Point the arm outward.
104. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
105. Point the arm inward.
106. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
107. Point the arm outward.
108. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
109. Point the arm inward.
110. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
111. Point the arm outward.
112. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
113. Point the arm inward.
114. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
115. Point the arm outward.
116. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
117. Point the arm inward.
118. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
119. Point the arm outward.
120. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
121. Point the arm inward.
122. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
123. Point the arm outward.
124. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
125. Point the arm inward.
126. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
127. Point the arm outward.
128. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
129. Point the arm inward.
130. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
131. Point the arm outward.
132. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
133. Point the arm inward.
134. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
135. Point the arm outward.
136. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
137. Point the arm inward.
138. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
139. Point the arm outward.
140. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
141. Point the arm inward.
142. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
143. Point the arm outward.
144. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
145. Point the arm inward.
146. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
147. Point the arm outward.
148. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
149. Point the arm inward.
150. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
151. Point the arm outward.
152. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
153. Point the arm inward.
154. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
155. Point the arm outward.
156. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
157. Point the arm inward.
158. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
159. Point the arm outward.
160. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
161. Point the arm inward.
162. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
163. Point the arm outward.
164. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
165. Point the arm inward.
166. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
167. Point the arm outward.
168. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
169. Point the arm inward.
170. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
171. Point the arm outward.
172. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
173. Point the arm inward.
174. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
175. Point the arm outward.
176. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
177. Point the arm inward.
178. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
179. Point the arm outward.
180. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
181. Point the arm inward.
182. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
183. Point the arm outward.
184. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
185. Point the arm inward.
186. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
187. Point the arm outward.
188. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
189. Point the arm inward.
190. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
191. Point the arm outward.
192. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
193. Point the arm inward.
194. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
195. Point the arm outward.
196. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
197. Point the arm inward.
198. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
199. Point the arm outward.
200. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
201. Point the arm inward.
202. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
203. Point the arm outward.
204. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
205. Point the arm inward.
206. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
207. Point the arm outward.
208. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
209. Point the arm inward.
210. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
211. Point the arm outward.
212. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
213. Point the arm inward.
214. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
215. Point the arm outward.
216. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
217. Point the arm inward.
218. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
219. Point the arm outward.
220. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
221. Point the arm inward.
222. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
223. Point the arm outward.
224. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
225. Point the arm inward.
226. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
227. Point the arm outward.
228. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
229. Point the arm inward.
230. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
231. Point the arm outward.
232. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
233. Point the arm inward.
234. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
235. Point the arm outward.
236. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
237. Point the arm inward.
238. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
239. Point the arm outward.
240. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
241. Point the arm inward.
242. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
243. Point the arm outward.
244. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
245. Point the arm inward.
246. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
247. Point the arm outward.
248. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
249. Point the arm inward.
250. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
251. Point the arm outward.
252. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
253. Point the arm inward.
254. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
255. Point the arm outward.
256. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
257. Point the arm inward.
258. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
259. Point the arm outward.
260. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
261. Point the arm inward.
262. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
263. Point the arm outward.
264. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
265. Point the arm inward.
266. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
267. Point the arm outward.
268. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
269. Point the arm inward.
270. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
271. Point the arm outward.
272. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
273. Point the arm inward.
274. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
275. Point the arm outward.
276. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
277. Point the arm inward.
278. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
279. Point the arm outward.
280. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
281. Point the arm inward.
282. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
283. Point the arm outward.
284. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
285. Point the arm inward.
286. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
287. Point the arm outward.
288. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
289. Point the arm inward.
290. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
291. Point the arm outward.
292. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
293. Point the arm inward.
294. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
295. Point the arm outward.
296. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
297. Point the arm inward.
298. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
299. Point the arm outward.
300. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
301. Point the arm inward.
302. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
303. Point the arm outward.
304. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
305. Point the arm inward.
306. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
307. Point the arm outward.
308. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
309. Point the arm inward.
310. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
311. Point the arm outward.
312. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
313. Point the arm inward.
314. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
315. Point the arm outward.
316. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
317. Point the arm inward.
318. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
319. Point the arm outward.
320. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
321. Point the arm inward.
322. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
323. Point the arm outward.
324. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
325. Point the arm inward.
326. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
327. Point the arm outward.
328. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
329. Point the arm inward.
330. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
331. Point the arm outward.
332. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
333. Point the arm inward.
334. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
335. Point the arm outward.
336. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
337. Point the arm inward.
338. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
339. Point the arm outward.
340. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
341. Point the arm inward.
342. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
343. Point the arm outward.
344. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
345. Point the arm inward.
346. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
347. Point the arm outward.
348. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
349. Point the arm inward.
350. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
351. Point the arm outward.
352. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
353. Point the arm inward.
354. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
355. Point the arm outward.
356. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
357. Point the arm inward.
358. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
359. Point the arm outward.
360. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
361. Point the arm inward.
362. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
363. Point the arm outward.
364. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
365. Point the arm inward.
366. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
367. Point the arm outward.
368. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
369. Point the arm inward.
370. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
371. Point the arm outward.
372. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
373. Point the arm inward.
374. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
375. Point the arm outward.
376. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
377. Point the arm inward.
378. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
379. Point the arm outward.
380. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
381. Point the arm inward.
382. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
383. Point the arm outward.
384. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
385. Point the arm inward.
386. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
387. Point the arm outward.
388. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
389. Point the arm inward.
390. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
391. Point the arm outward.
392. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
393. Point the arm inward.
394. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
395. Point the arm outward.
396. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
397. Point the arm inward.
398. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
399. Point the arm outward.
400. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
401. Point the arm inward.
402. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
403. Point the arm outward.
404. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
405. Point the arm inward.
406. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
407. Point the arm outward.
408. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
409. Point the arm inward.
410. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
411. Point the arm outward.
412. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
413. Point the arm inward.
414. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
415. Point the arm outward.
416. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
417. Point the arm inward.
418. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
419. Point the arm outward.
420. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
421. Point the arm inward.
422. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
423. Point the arm outward.
424. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
425. Point the arm inward.
426. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
427. Point the arm outward.
428. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
429. Point the arm inward.
430. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
431. Point the arm outward.
432. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
433. Point the arm inward.
434. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
435. Point the arm outward.
436. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
437. Point the arm inward.
438. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
439. Point the arm outward.
440. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
441. Point the arm inward.
442. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
443. Point the arm outward.
444. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
445. Point the arm inward.
446. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
447. Point the arm outward.
448. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
449. Point the arm inward.
450. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
451. Point the arm outward.
452. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
453. Point the arm inward.
454. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
455. Point the arm outward.
456. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
457. Point the arm inward.
458. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
459. Point the arm outward.
460. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
461. Point the arm inward.
462. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
463. Point the arm outward.
464. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
465. Point the arm inward.
466. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
467. Point the arm outward.
468. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
469. Point the arm inward.
470. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
471. Point the arm outward.
472. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
473. Point the arm inward.
474. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
475. Point the arm outward.
476. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
477. Point the arm inward.
478. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
479. Point the arm outward.
480. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
481. Point the arm inward.
482. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
483. Point the arm outward.
484. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
485. Point the arm inward.
486. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
487. Point the arm outward.
488. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
489. Point the arm inward.
490. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
491. Point the arm outward.
492. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
493. Point the arm inward.
494. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
495. Point the arm outward.
496. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
497. Point the arm inward.
498. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
499. Point the arm outward.
500. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
501. Point the arm inward.
502. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
503. Point the arm outward.
504. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
505. Point the arm inward.
506. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
507. Point the arm outward.
508. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
509. Point the arm inward.
510. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
511. Point the arm outward.
512. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
513. Point the arm inward.
514. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
515. Point the arm outward.
516. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
517. Point the arm inward.
518. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
519. Point the arm outward.
520. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
521. Point the arm inward.
522. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
523. Point the arm outward.
524. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
525. Point the arm inward.
526. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
527. Point the arm outward.
528. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
529. Point the arm inward.
530. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
531. Point the arm outward.
532. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
533. Point the arm inward.
534. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
535. Point the arm outward.
536. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
537. Point the arm inward.
538. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
539. Point the arm outward.
540. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
541. Point the arm inward.
542. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
543. Point the arm outward.
544. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
545. Point the arm inward.
546. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
547. Point the arm outward.
548. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
549. Point the arm inward.
550. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
551. Point the arm outward.
552. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
553. Point the arm inward.
554. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
555. Point the arm outward.
556. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
557. Point the arm inward.
558. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
559. Point the arm outward.
560. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
561. Point the arm inward.
562. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
563. Point the arm outward.
564. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
565. Point the arm inward.
566. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
567. Point the arm outward.
568. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
569. Point the arm inward.
570. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
571. Point the arm outward.
572. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
573. Point the arm inward.
574. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
575. Point the arm outward.
576. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
577. Point the arm inward.
578. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
579. Point the arm outward.
580. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
581. Point the arm inward.
582. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
583. Point the arm outward.
584. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
585. Point the arm inward.
586. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
587. Point the arm outward.
588. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
589. Point the arm inward.
590. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
591. Point the arm outward.
592. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
593. Point the arm inward.
594. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
595. Point the arm outward.
596. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
597. Point the arm inward.
598. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
599. Point the arm outward.
600. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
601. Point the arm inward.
602. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
603. Point the arm outward.
604. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
605. Point the arm inward.
606. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
607. Point the arm outward.
608. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
609. Point the arm inward.
610. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
611. Point the arm outward.
612. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
613. Point the arm inward.
614. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
615. Point the arm outward.
616. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
617. Point the arm inward.
618. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
619. Point the arm outward.
620. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
621. Point the arm inward.
622. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
623. Point the arm outward.
624. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
625. Point the arm inward.
626. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
627. Point the arm outward.
628. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
629. Point the arm inward.
630. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
631. Point the arm outward.
632. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
633. Point the arm inward.
634. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
635. Point the arm outward.
636. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
637. Point the arm inward.
638. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
639. Point the arm outward.
640. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
641. Point the arm inward.
642. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
643. Point the arm outward.
644. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
645. Point the arm inward.
646. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
647. Point the arm outward.
648. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
649. Point the arm inward.
650. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
651. Point the arm outward.
652. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
653. Point the arm inward.
654. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
655. Point the arm outward.
656. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
657. Point the arm inward.
658. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
659. Point the arm outward.
660. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
661. Point the arm inward.
662. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
663. Point the arm outward.
664. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
665. Point the arm inward.
666. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
667. Point the arm outward.
668. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
669. Point the arm inward.
670. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
671. Point the arm outward.
672. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
673. Point the arm inward.
674. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
675. Point the arm outward.
676. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
677. Point the arm inward.
678. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
679. Point the arm outward.
680. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
681. Point the arm inward.
682. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
683. Point the arm outward.
684. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
685. Point the arm inward.
686. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
687. Point the arm outward.
688. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
689. Point the arm inward.
690. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
691. Point the arm outward.
692. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
693. Point the arm inward.
694. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
695. Point the arm outward.
696. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
697. Point the arm inward.
698. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
699. Point the arm outward.
700. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
701. Point the arm inward.
702. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
703. Point the arm outward.
704. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
705. Point the arm inward.
706. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
707. Point the arm outward.
708. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
709. Point the arm inward.
710. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
711. Point the arm outward.
712. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
713. Point the arm inward.
714. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
715. Point the arm outward.
716. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
717. Point the arm inward.
718. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
719. Point the arm outward.
720. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
721. Point the arm inward.
722. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
723. Point the arm outward.
724. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
725. Point the arm inward.
726. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
727. Point the arm outward.
728. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
729. Point the arm inward.
730. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
731. Point the arm outward.
732. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
733. Point the arm inward.
734. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
735. Point the arm outward.
736. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
737. Point the arm inward.
738. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
739. Point the arm outward.
740. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
741. Point the arm inward.
742. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
743. Point the arm outward.
744. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
745. Point the arm inward.
746. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
747. Point the arm outward.
748. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
749. Point the arm inward.
750. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
751. Point the arm outward.
752. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
753. Point the arm inward.
754. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
755. Point the arm outward.
756. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
757. Point the arm inward.
758. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
759. Point the arm outward.
760. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
761. Point the arm inward.
762. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
763. Point the arm outward.
764. Draw a line from the end of the arm to the midpoint of the forearm.
765. Point the arm inward.
766. Draw a line from the end of the
PERSONAL FOUL
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Fridav. Nov. 9. 1$^{o}$62
THE HOUSE OF THE BEST BUILDER.
Chi Omega
東京大学医学部
Alpha Phi
GREEKS SAY
Kappa Alpha Theta
PARKSIDE HIGH SCHOOL
Alpha Delta Pi
THE HOTEL
Kappa Kappa Gamma
10
Sigma Kappa
Alpha Omicron Pi
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
WELCOME ALUMS GO KANSAS-
Delta Gamma
Gamma Phi Beta
Pi Beta Phi
Pi Beta Phi
125
Alpha Chi Omega
Alpha Kappa Alpha
Delta Delta Delta
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Friday, Nov. 9, 1962
Basketball Aim: Improvement
'Iron Man' Ellison Top Returnee; Coach Harp Looks to Sophomores
A handful of sophomores and an iron man named Nolen Ellison may give the Kansas Jayhawkers an improved basketball record this season.
We'll be improved this season." Coach Dick Harp said at the beginning of practices, "just how much improved depends a lot on our sonhomores."
The KU basketball roster includes seven lettermen and seven sophomores. Three more prospects, two of them returnees, are expected to report after the football season.
The pre-season tab for the top player on the team has to go to Nolen Ellison, a likely All Big Eight choice, and then some.
LAST YEAR, teamed up with Jerry Gardner, Ellison was part of one of the best guard tandems in the nation. Ellison compiled an 18.1 point per game average, second to top scorer Gardner.
More than anything else, Ellison played all but two minutes and some odd seconds in the Jayhawkers' 7-18 campaign, qualifying as "iron man" of the squad. It may be safely asserted that Ellison will be introduced as a starter when the Jayhawkers open their season Dec. 1 here with Montana.
Another fairly safe choice for the starting team is Jim Dumas. Last year, KU's leading rebounder, with 218 recoveries as a forward, Dumas is being given a trial at guard this year.
PROBABLE starting forwards are Harry Gibson and Love Sparks. Gibson, bothered much of the season with a leg injury last year, provided spark for the Jayhawkers with his shots from the side, Sparks, a good
The KU freshman basketball team, featuring five all-state prep choices on their probable starting lineup, meet the varsity at 7 tonight in the annual Jayhawker basketball preview.
Five All-Staters To Test Varsity
The varsity squad contains three seniors, a junior and a sophomore. The probable starting lineups for the frosh-varsity game are:
FRESHMEN--Sherman Stimloy, 5-11, and Delvin Lewis, 6-2, guards; Fred Chana, 6-6, and Riney Lochmann, 6-6, forwards, and Walter Wesley, $6\cdot 10^{\frac{1}{3}}$, center.
LED BY CENTER Unseld and forward David Brill, the fresht cut a 13-point varsity lead to two with 1:40 left in the game.
NEW YORK — (UPI) — Eddie Arcau rode three straight winners in the Jockey Club Gold Cup on two occasions; with High Gun in 1954 and Nashua in 1955 and 1956; and with Sword Dancer in 1959 and with Kelso in 1960 and 1961.
The varsity's Dumas cinched the varsity victory with two free throws at that point. The freshmen led, 36-35, at the end of the first half.
VARSITY—Nolen Ellison, 6-1, and Jim Dumas, 6-1, guards; Loye Sparks, 6-4, Harry Gibson,6-3, forwards, and George Unseld, 6-7, center.
defensive player, had a 4.5 point scoring average per game.
Profitable Naqs
Unseld was the game's top scorer with 26 points while the varsity's Ellison had 17 points.
Consistent
The only sophomore expected to break into Harp's initial starting lineup is George Unseld, 6-7 center. Unseld led the freshman team last year, scoring 26 points in the frosh-varsity tilt and dropped in 35 more in a game at Kansas State.
NEW YORK — (UPI) — C. V.
Whitney was the leading owner in 1600 when his horses earned $1,039,-081. Although Tompion, Silver Spoon and Chinchilla raced for him that year, Dotted Swiss was the leading money-winner with $296,900.
Last year, in the biggest scare given the varsity by the frosh since Wilt Chamberlain was a freshman, the varsity won by a mere four-point margin, 67-63.
The other sophomore candidates are Kerry Bolton, 6-3 guard; David Brill, 6-5 forward; Jim Gough, $6-7\frac{1}{2}$ forward; Richard Ruggles, 5-11 guard; David Schichtle, 6-2 guard, and Pete Townsend, 6-5 forward.
Also included on the Jayhawks' present roster are three other lettermen, John Matt, 6-6 center, Buddy Vance, 6-6 forward, and Allen Correll, 5-11, who played on the Jayhawk team in 1959 and 1960, will be eligible for play beginning of the second semester.
Coach Ted Owens towers are Walter Wesley. $ 6 - 10 \frac{1}{2} $; Alan Bryant, 6-7; Fred Chana, 6-6; Riney Lochmann, 6-6, and Le Roy McDonald, 6-7. Wesley, Chana and Lochmann were all-state selections in high school. Lochmann was also an All America pick.
CHICAGO — (UPI) — Pierre Pilote of the Chicago Black Hawks, one of the National Hockey League's best defensesmen, owns and operates a launderette in St. Catharines, Ont., during the off-season.
LEE FLACHSBARTH, 6-6 center and Jay Roberts, 6-4 forward, both lettermen, will report after the football season.
Sideline
Wayne Loving, 5-11 guard, will report after the football season. Mike Shinn, 6-5 center and a member of the football team, may pass basketball this year.
Frosh Prospects Tall
OTHER MEMBERS who were on high school all state teams are George Czaplinski, 6-3; Delvin Lewis, 6-2; Larry Norris, 6-4, and Sherman Stimloy, 5-11. Other fresh prospects are Tom Jones, 6-0, and George Kopp, 6-0.
Height is the best word to use in describing the KU freshmen basketball candidates. Of the 12 out, five stand 6-6 or better.
Flower of Their Class
Two other potential candidates are presently working with the football team. They are Loyce Bailey, 6-0, and Steve Renko, 6-4.
CAMDEN, N. J. — (UPI) — Five of the last six winners of the Garden State Stakes were named 2-year-old champions of their years: Crimson Satan, Warfare, First Landing, Nadir and Barbizon.
HOMOGENIZE THOSE CORN HUSKERS, JAYHAWKS!
Nebraska has a good team, but they are meeting a quality product—KU.
The Cornhuskers will be beaten in LAWRENCE Saturday,but LAWRENCE SANITARY can't be topped.
KU's favorite over 42 years.
LAWRENCE Sanitary
ALL STAR
VITAMIN D
HOMOGENIZED
LAWRENCE Sanitary
ALL STAR
Grade A
VITAMIN D PASTEURIZED
HOMOGENIZED
Milk
FLAVOR CONTROLLED BY vh PROCESS
400 U. S. P. UNITS OF VITAMIN D
ACTIVATED ERGOSTEROL ADDED PER QUART
ONE HALF GALLON LIQUID
FOR A QUICK DELIGHTFUL DESSERT
Versity Velvast
ICE CREAM
TRY OUR OTHER FINE
GRADE A DAIRY PRODUCTS
SKIM MILK
BUTTERMILK
CHOCOLATE MILK
HALF AND NALE
WHIPPING CREAM
SOUR CREAM
BUTTER
Lawrence Sanitary ALL STAR DAIRY Milk & Ice Cream Co.
202 West 6th
VI 3-5511
'Dragster Doughty' Likes Secondary
Little wonder Phil Doughty relishes his defensive job in Kansas' secondary. He's lived dangerously before as a high-school hot-rodder in his home town of Oelwein, Ia.
Most of his drag-race competition was staged on the high school's quarter-mile track, starting out of the chute, like the track folks used to do before they became so turn-conscious even on non-Olympic years.
The sturdy Jayhawker junior still is fascinated by carburators and horse-power, but he obviously would rather talk football.
He is one of those near-extinct finds who was un-recruited. He came to Kansas in the first place on an NROTC scholarship. He was a 160-pound end then, in danger of being trampled under foot. In a year and a half's play he hasn't touched the ball on an offensive play, but he obviously carries as much pride in his job as a T-formation quarterback.
THAT'S ONE REASON he's become what Coach Jack Mitchell describes as "one of the best deep defensive backs we've had since we've been here."
"WF DIDN'T TEAR it up much though," notes Phil. "It always was overgrown with grass in the summer. How fast did we go? Well, I had a '53 Mercury that registered to 120 on the speedometer. The pin used to lay against that, so $^{1}$ know I must have gone faster." to run. If you let your man go too
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 7
"I learned quite a bit from Roger Hill (ace of the 1960 deep secondary)." Doughty says. "I played end on the scout squad as a sophomore and ran a lot of pass patterns against him. I never could shake him even although I was faster than he was. Watching him I noticed he never had his back to you. He always seemed to be in a position where he was looking through his man, watching him and the passer too.
"Playing back there, I've learned you've got to have confidence in your teammates in the secondary. You've got to do your job. You can't worry about what the others will do. Oelschlager (Ron, sophomore T-back) and Leiker (Tony, veteran slot-back) are real good back there. I get a lot of help from the corremen on my side, (left), Coleman (Ken) and Baughman (Armand). The ends too, St. Clair (Pack) and Shinn (Mike).
"THEY MAKE the difference on the running pass which is real tough. A defensive halfback has got to stay on this play and stay with his man until you're sure the passer is going
to run. If you let your man go too soon, the passer will stop at the line (scrimmage line) and throw it over your head.
"The hardest job though is covering a good end in any situation That Horton (Bob) at Boston (Boston U.) was the best I've seen so far Big and strong and fast."
Doughty, now a solid 180, didn't play in his normal sophomore season of '60, and scores another rarity here because he admits he'd rather have it that way. "I wasn't ready to play Big Eight football and I knew I wasn't ready. I learned a lot playing against bigger, better boys. I was small (he wrestled in the 154-pound class at Oelwein as a senior), but one thing saved me. I could run and Coach Mitchell likes speed.
"I DON'T MISS carrying the ball because I didn't do it in high school (he was an end there and an end-linebacker for his coach-Dad, Paul Doughty in Junior High). I always felt I could do the team and myself more good on defense. This year I think my tackling in the open field has improved because I've learned to keep my head up. I just make it a rule to hit 'em with my helmet first."
Doughty has forsaken hot-rodding since he departed high school. Hunting and fishing are his chief hobbies now. But he still loves to tinker with ancient autos. Right now he's driving a 1940 Chrysler limousine, which he and two pals purchased for $60 last year and promptly nicknamed "The Beast." He's dickering though, for a 1946 La Salle hearse, now owned by an acquaintance in Davis City, Ia.
If At First Etc.
CHICAGO — (UPI) — Robert L Miller made 36 consecutive incomplete pitching starts before winning over the Chicago Cubs Sept. 30, 1962 for the New York Mets.
10
MORE VICTORIES
MORE SEATS PROPOSED—The western section of Memorial Stadium will mushroom by 6,500 seats resulting from approval of a plan by
6,500 Seat Addition To Be Completed in 1963
the University athletic board and the Kansas Board of Regents.
Little Crandall Has Big Desire
By Rusty Laney
The Jayhawkers' little number 23 brought over 30,000 fans to their feet on his third varsity ball carry.
Against Colorado in the fourth quarter, he streaked around left end for 52-yards and KU's final touchdown in the 35-8 rout.
Who's number 23? He's Dave Crandall, one of the many fine, talented sophomore backs Jack Mitchell has this year.
"There are no little cliques on the team. Everybody is striving toward a single goal out on that field and all of them are pulling together. If your assignment is only to fake a run, you want to do it so your teammate who does get the ball will have a better chance of scoring."
Belonging, that is one of the key words for this likeable young man,
"It gives me a thrill every time I see that big "Blue" line swarm in around a ball carrier and stop him dead, and I can say, 'I'm a part of that team effort'.
At 5-10, 175 pounds Dave is small for a college back. When asked why he wanted to get in and mix it up with the big boys he gave several reasons.
"Well," he shrugged, "it's a way of getting through college. Also Mike Shinn and I used to pal around together at Topeka high and ever since Shinn was a junior it was known he was coming to KU to play football.
"Whenever we would go into some place all the guys would crowe around Mike and wish him good luck up here and well, I just wanted to be a part of that too.
Crandall almost did not play college football. His mother was very strongly against it but Dave was determined to play. He brought his mother up to see KU play Kansas State and after watching the Jayhawkers roll over the Wildcats, his mom said, "Well if you are going to play college ball, play for KU so you will have good protection." That's all the encouragement Dave needed.
"Rodger had been kidding me a lot about just running latterly toward the sideline and when he called my number in the huddle he said it again. Sure enough I cut up field and scored."
This is the type of spirit which caused quarterback Rodger McFarland to tell Crandall before the game, "If you cut up field today, you'll score a touchdown."
When asked if this was his biggest thrill, Dave replied "Of course." But he added, "Anyone of our halfbacks could have done it with the blocking I had. I was fresh. Colorado was just run down."
- By the start of next football season, KU's Memorial Stadium will have facilities to accommodate 6,500 additional fans.
The addition, expected to cost approximately $600,000, will extend westward from the top rim of the stadium 27 rows and will extend 10 feet beyond the north edge of the playing field and 40 feet beyond the south edge of the field.
Included in the proposal is a triple-deck press box, 97 feet long, 20 feet deep and centering on the 50-yard line.
Bids will be opened approximately Nov. 1. The awarding of the contract is tentatively set for Dec. 1.
The stadium addition will be financed jointly through the athletic corporation's reserve funds, a 20-year loan from the endowment association and through donations. Each source will finance one-third of the project, not to exceed $200,-000.
CalvinVanderWerf, professor of chemistry and chairman of the athletic board, said the plan was discussed and "received approval from the athletic family." He said the athletic board's objective is to present a plan that would receive support from the administration, faculty, students and alumni.
Prof. VanderWerf gave four reasons why expansion is necessary.
- An expanding student body that is anticipated to grow to 20,-000 by 1975. (At present there are 10,400 students on the Lawrence campus.)
- The demand for seats that cannot presently be met.
- The desire to compete with the Big 10 not only academically but athletically. "Our board has gone on record as wanting to schedule Big 10 schools on a home-and-home basis." (Presently, Illinois and Minnesota are scheduled on an away basis.)
- Increased population. "We feel we are in the middle of the fastest growing area in the Big Eight. Planners tell us that someday there will be a continuous city from Kansas City to Topcka.
With increasing enrollment, we are increasing alumni interests in KU. We are going to project athletics into a more vital role in the University. Twenty-five per cent of athletic profits will be turned over to the Endowment Association to use as they wish."
VanderWerf said that the entire sports program could be expanded by the new addition.
"Our figures show that football is the only profit-making sport. Football pays for our sports program."
He indicated that initial athletic program improvements would include an imroved track in the stadium and the adding of wrestling as a varsity sport.
Prof. VanderWerf attributed the stadium expansion plan to athletic director A. C. (Dutch) Lonborg, who will retire next year.
"Expansion represents the realization of Dutch's dreams over the years," Prof VanderWerf said. "It is the culmination of a wonderful career." He said that resources in the athletic reserve fund have increased the $200,000 in five years, and
that without Lonborg's "able leadership," the board would not have been in a financial position to consider expansion.
The addition will bring the stadium's permanent seating capacity to 42,930. With the present non-permanent bleachers, total capacity will be 44,900. Presently there are 36,400 permanent seats and 38,400 total capacity, including the bleachers.
The expansion will move KU from sixth in stadium capacity to fourth in the Big Eight. Only Oklahoma, Missouri and Colorado will have larger stadiums.
VanderWerf said that the first proposal, while "more logical," had no chance of winning wholehearted public approval because of emotional and sentimental reasons.
The decision to build upward rules out the possibility of building an upper deck. The construction of an upper deck was considered, Lonborg said, but overruled because the seating would not be as good.
Only 6 Years Behind Times
Ask Don Pierce who stole second base in the 1924 World Series (if anybody did), where the 1938 heavy-weight boxing championship bout was held (if there was one that year) or who won the National Football League title in 1946 (there was a winner that year) and chances are he'll give you the correct answer.
Pierce, KU sports publicity director, is a walking sports encyclopedia. Pierce complains that his days aren't long enough. He says he has trouble keeping up on his reading of periodicals.
Periodical reading for Pierce does not mean reading the current Sports Illustrated (he calls it a "slick cook book for a two-yacht family") or the recent newspapers.
Instead Pierce is presently mulling over the issues of Sport magazine for 1956.
"It makes a good review," explains Pierce.
Pierce, who is never at a loss for a word of humor, is in his 17th year as KU sports publicity director. He has 23 years of sportswriting to his credit.
Pierce was all state in high school for Topeka and all league for Kansas in 1940. He played professional with the Brooklyn Dodgers in the NFL in 1942 and the Chicago Cardinals in 1943.
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Friday, Nov. 9, 1962
MORE VICTORIES THAT COUNT
In June, the University of Kansas was the victor, among colleges and universities across the nation, receiving the Grand Award of the United States Steel Foundation, presented by the American Alumni Council, for improvement in its progam of alumni giving in 1961-62.
FOR IMPROVEMENT
FIRST AWARD 1962
The Grand Award Trophy presented to the University of Kansas at Banff, Canada, June 27, 1962, for alumni support.
GIVE YOUR SUPPORT TO A WINNING TEAM, THE ACIATION, AND THE GREATE
The Douglas Cou First National Bank
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962 University Daily Kansan .
A. G. Browne
Bob Billings, KU director of Aids and Awards, helps a worthy student in solving his financial problems.
We congratulate the University of Kansas Alumni Association for its 16,500 members, and the Kansas University Endowment Association and the Greater University Fund for their record of support received from more than 11,000 donors in the past year. Through that support, thousands of worthy and deserving students receive scholarship and loan assistance at KU.
THE ALUMNI ASSOCIATION, THE ENDOWMENT ASSO- REATER UNIVERSITY FUND.
ounty State Bank Lawrence National Bank
Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Friday Nov. 9, 1962
KU Coach Nearly Passed Up Football
By Don Pierce
KU Sports Publicity Director
Jack Mitchell, an All America quarterback at Oklahoma just 15 years ago, once thought his athletic future lay in tennis instead of the gridiron. For a while during his high school sophomore days he thought there would no career at all as he lay in bed six months with rheumatie fever.
As a tailback he was one of the greatest players in Kansas high school history at Arkansas City. Yet he never played a down at that position beyond his freshman year as a collegian.
He hesitated to transfer from Texas to Oklahoma after World War II because he was skeptical of the T-formation. Yet he rode that very offense to fame as the first in a long line of super Sooner quarterbacks who have become a modern Big Eight legend.
THAT IS THE framework in the playing career of Kansas' 28th head football coach, who is in his fifth season here this year.
Mitchell, who holds a lifetime contract for a $17,500 salary as the Jayhawker coach, ranks as one of the top 10 coaches for number of games won in the nation. Mitchell's career victory total is 57. In all, the KU coach has a 54-32-5 record.
This record includes two years at Wichita and three at Arkansas.
Bud Wilkinson, of course, the most winningest coach in the country and Mitchell's coach at OU, left his imprint on this intense young athlete who was born and raised just four miles north of the Kansas-Oklahoma border.
SO DID JIM TATUM, the husky driver who recruited him for the Sooners in 1946. Neither, however, influenced him any more than did a far less famous prep coach named PeeWee Grout, a 6-5, 230-pounder, who played at Washburn during the Ernie Bearg-Elmer Holm days.
Had it not been for Grout, Mitchell might never have played football beyond the junior high level.
"I had my mind made up to play fall tennis, Mitchell laughs in relating the incident that sent him down football avenue for keeps." "It was late in the summer just before I entered Ark City High (1939)."
"I weighed 135 and figured I was getting up with the big boys now and wouldn't be good enough nor big enough. One day late in August I started out the door wearing shorts with my raquet.
"JUST AS I HIT the steps here! Amos Curry, our athletic director and the biggest guy I ever saw, getting out of a car in front of our house. Mr. Curry introduced me to Coach Grout.
"Coach took a look at me and wasn't impressed. 'Amos,' he said, 'is this the boy you tell me is supposed to be a good backfield prospect.' Amos said it was.
"What's that in your hand,' he asked me, nodding at my racquet. 'Football opens in three days. You'll be there won't you?' And he sort of glared at me. I was afraid to say no."
Midway through Mitchell's sophomore season he was elevated to starting tailback when senior Martin Turner got water on the knee. With the finale against Wellington coming up, Mitchell discovered that a coach must be undisputed in his own domain.
"COACH CAME to me and asked me if I didn't think Turner should start against Wellington since it was his last game," Jack relates. "I told him I thought the best player ought to start."
‘'All right,' coach said, 'I tried to be nice. Martin's the best player and he's going to start.' I said 'yes sir'.
"Martin did start and played a fine game. I got in some defense and we were able to snap Wellington's undefeated streak. Coach was a good psychologist and master of the situation."
The next two years were to belong to Mitchell, but there was a disheartening detour.
HE HAD EARNED starting forward on a basketball team that included Tom Hamilton, later a great at Texas, and played the first semester satisfactorily. Then came two days of 105 degree temperature, three blood transfusions and the six months siege of lying still in bed with rheumatic fever.
"I studied that second semester at home the best I could," he relates. Some of the teachers were kind enough to come out and help me. I couldn't have made it at all without them.
"When the doctor finally let me out of bed he said. Iwas to do nothing but a little walking. My mother tried to tell me I was through with football and all other sports as gently as she could. 'Athletics aren't everything,' she told me about every day.' I got the idea, of course."
school house, all in secret. When he reported to the Halstead clinic for a checkup in mid-August he was told his heart was nearly normal.
Mitchell walked all right. When he dared, he jogged a little and banged a tennis ball against the
ON AUGUST 15, his doctor okaved him for football with the stipulation he had to come out after any long run. Grout's favorite play, 64-special, with Mitchell running off tackle from wingback, went so well Mitchell was on the bench considerable.
In basketball he was okayed for six minutes of action in every quarter. He was a three-year regular in this as well as football and as a senior, teamed with the late Gerold Nold, to win the state prep doubles championship at Emporia.
He was named first team all state in football, but only three schools were interested. Oklahoma, Texas and Wichita. Kansas and Kansas State offered basketball scholarships.
He finally decided on Texas because a former Arkansas Citian, Harry Newman, had gone to UT and was living in Austin at the time.
MITCHELL OPENED his freshman season by scoring four touchdowns against Randolph Field. This was in 1942 Playing a class ahead of him as a varsity blocking back was Don Fambrough, later to be a foe at Kansas and now one of his assistant coaches here.
Service duty called after one semester at Austin and Mitchell found himself playing halfback for the Third Infantry Regiment in Germany.
He faced several problems when he returned home a first lieutenant. Tatum met him at Ponca City and invited him to spring practice. Mitchell was not enamoured at the prospect of playing the Sliding-T, which Big Jim was to install for the 1946 season.
"I wanted to be a little closer to home, too." Mitchell reveals. "Actually, I liked Texas and would like to have gone back. But I would have liked it better had the school been at Norman.
"Then, too, they had a tailback named Bobby Layne and I figured my first-string chances were pretty slim. Still I liked that single wing and had never seen the T in any form."
MITCHELL THOUGHT he'd made a mistake for sure when he reported to Norman. Tatum was asking all former single-wing tailbacks to try their hand at quarterback.
He found he was the sixth-best passer among six candidates. The pass and the handoff filled the first
Bill Jennings, backfield coach — Jennings, the newest member of the Jayhawks staff, was head coach at Nebraska last year. Jennings joins one of his former pupils, Jack Mitchell, whom he tutored at Oklahoma.
He tried to return to halfback, but one evening Wilkinson, whom Tatum had brought from Iowa PreFlight as one of his assistants struck the chord that pointed him toward All America and, at the same time, ushered in OU's reign of football terror with quarterbacks as the principal villains.
Bernie Taylor, backfield coach — Taylor came to KU last year from the head coaching post at Riverside, Calif., high school. He was previously backfield tutor for three years at Wichita, being associated a year there with Fambrough.
"He walked in with me one night after practice." Mitchell recalls and pointed out that the Split-T quarterback actually was much like a single-wing tailback. He was the important man in the backfield.
He was an All Conference selection in 1946 and 1947 and co-captained KU's first bowl club, the 1948 edition which played in the Orange Bowl.
few days of drills and Mitchell wasn't happy.
BERNHARDT WAS line coach at Wichita two seasons before Mitchell moved up from an assistantship at Texas Tech. The latter retained him there and the pair moved on to Arkansas for a three-year stint before assuming the reins at Kansas.
Wayne Replogle, in-state recruiting and promotion assistant — Replogle concentrates on instate recruiting, filling an autumn-long travel schedule. He also films game movies for football and basketball and narrates KU's quarterback club circuit.
He began his coaching career as line assistant under Dick Godlove at Washburn in 1949 and 1950, coming out of a three-year association with the Chicago Rockets and Brooklyn Dodgers in the professional ranks.
Don Fambrough, line coach — Formerly a freshman coach here for three seasons, Fambrough moved up as offensive line aide last year. He is regarded as one of the finest linemen in KU history, graduating in 1948.
MITCHELL ENDED spring practice as the number two hand behind Dave Wallace, who he calls, "physically the best Split-T quarterback I've seen . . . He could out-run, out-pass and out-kick all of us, and was tough."
Tom Triplett, freshman coach — Triplett is in his second year as head freshman coach, formerly a varsity line assistant. Triplett was an All Southern guard at Western Kentucky.
JENNINGS WAS A wingback as a player for Oklahoma and he still holds Sooner records for most passes caught in a season and most receiving yards for a career.
HE WAS AN ALL CIC halfback at Emporia, his alma mater, in 1946.
A brief rundown on each assistant is a follows:
Floyd Temple, scout squad assistant — Doubling as head baseball coach. Temple is a ten-year member of the Jayhawker athletic department.
Wallace was still number one when the season opened against Army. But the second team came in
"I started thinking about that. When we got to the option play I knew he was right."
Seven Jayhawk Assistant Coaches Give Aid for Successful Program
He has been varsity baseball coach nine seasons. He was a third baseman on KU's 1949 Big Seven championship team.
It takes more than just a head coach and a group of 11 players to produce a successful football team. Although they are seldom publicized, Coach Jack Mitchell's seven assistants are indispensible to the Kansas football program.
(Continued from page 1)
Cabrera -
A brief rundown on each assistant is a follows. George Bernhardt, line coach — Tomorrow's homecoming match will recall to Bernhardt the homecoming game of Lawrence high school this year. At that game, Judy, his daughter, was named Lawrence High queen.
"The time trials this fall marked the first time since last spring I've had a clock on me" Cabrera said. "This long lavoy helped.
(Continued from page 1)
year, when he placed 186th in the league and 65th in the NCAA meet, steams from a rest from active running.
"When I returned to school I wasn't tired of running."
Cabrera, a two-miler, missed the outdoor track season last spring because of a hip injury. He went through a series of heat and physical therapy treatments here and at the KU medical center in Kansas City during the outdoor schedule.
"The coach was sort of sore at me all spring, I guess he thought I was gold-bricking," recalled Cabrera. Easton is not unhappy with Cabrera now.
to score both touchdowns in a narrow 20-14 defeat and started the next game against Texas A&M.
The seconds never were seconds again. Wallace hurt both knees early the next season and Mitchell was in for keeps as the Sooners twice tied Kansas for the old Big Six title, then started their streak of outright crowns in 1948.
Mitchell earned high reputation as a nifty runner. He is the only quarterback in league history to win the individual rushing championship.
Upon graduation from OU, Mitchell became head coach at Blackwell, Okla., high school, where he guided his first club to a 9-2 season. He was called to Tulsa as backfield coach in 1950, then served two seasons in the same capacity at Texas Tech under DWitt Weaver.
PITTSBURGH — (UPI) — Big Daddy Lipscomb, defensive tackle for the Pittsburgh Steelers, never attended college, but learned to play football in the U.S. Marines.
Harness Crowd
Mitchell is married to the former Jeanne Kincheloe of Arkansas City. They have two sons, Jack 12, and Jud. 8.
WESTBURY, N. Y. —(UPI)—The largest crowd ever to witness a harshe race in the United States was 54,861 for the 1980 running of the Roosevelt International at Roosevelt Raceway.
Leatherneck Grad
BALTIMORE—(UPI) —The Baltimore Clippers, newest entry in the American Hockey league, are coached by former New York Ranger captain Red Sullivan.
New Allegiance
Never Know
DETROIT — (UPI) — Detroit Lions linebacker Max Messner was considered a better basketball prospect than a football player when he attended Ashland (Ohio) high school.
V-124
... CESSNA 150
Inquire how you can earn academic credit through MAE 40 -MAE 41
Learn How to Fly in the Easy to Fly...
K
INVESTIGATE OUR SPECIAL FLIGHT COURSE NOW!
Krhart Flying Service
INCORPORATED
1/2 Mile NE of Tee Pee Municipal Airport
VI 3-2167
SALON OF THE RIGHT HAND
10000000000
AB
As summ count that ]
Jay pound
RO
trave
ers'
Des
pass
The before at KV pass If it how regular
DU fresh the season
He varsit was I short
Iro
caught
broust
talent
FR as a
La Larry
Deer thou
unit,
Jack plays
fiden
88 yr
1
1
1
KASAS
0 000 000 1
Alumni TD Catch Boosted Roberts
Jay Roberts, KU's big 6-4, 215 pound end, loves to travel.
As a matter of fact, he spent last summer hitchhiking around the country with a friend on a venture that he calls a "pauper's Route 66."
ROBERTS ALSO does a lot of traveling downfield on the Jayhawkers' offensive attack. The likeable Des Moines, Iowa, lad is KU's top pass receiver.
There are some observers that say before Roberts hangs up his cleats at KU, that he will become the best pass receiver in Jayhawker history. If this comes true, it is interesting how Roberts got his chance to play regularly.
DURING SPRING PRACTICE his freshman year, he did not figure in the Jayhawkers plans for the 1961 season.
He was so far down when it came varsity-alumni game time that he was loaned to the alums, who were short on plevers.
Ironically it was Roberts who caught the game-winning pass that brought the alums victory over the talent-loaded varsity.
FROM THEN ON. Robert's future as a pass receiver was set.
Last year, he had to buck veterans Larry Allen, Benny Boydston, Mike Deer and Andy Graham. Even though he was listed on the third unit, it was Roberts who Coach Jack Mitchell sent in on the big pass plays. He rewarded his coach's confidence by catching seven passes for 88 vards and one touchdown.
Roberts has another distinction
ROBERTS WAS a mainstay on Coach Dick Harp's basketball team last year and figures highly in the Jayhawkers plans for this year. As a freshman, Roberts averaged 16 points in four games, high for the squad.
ROBERTS RECALLS a humorous experience that happened to him in basketball last year. "I did not get to suit up for the first game," he shuckles. "They couldn't find pants big enough to fit me," he continued with a blush.
Pete Quatrochi Follows Tradition Of Fine Centers
His third sport is track. He scored in the high jump at the Big Eight meet to letter. Coach Bill Easton's letter requirements include that if one places in the conference he letters.
In addition to playing football, he is on the varsity basketball and track teams. He became the 33rd player to earn letters in three sports last year.
Roberts' favorite gridiron figure is professional Ray Berry. "He's the greatest pass receiver I have ever seen. He's the least talented, but still he's the best."
Roberts, besides being proficient in three sports, is also equally proficient on the books. In high school he was a National Merit Scholarship finalist and was highly sought after by Ivy League schools. At KU, he still maintains a B average despite his year-long athletic participation.
He has taken 18 hours in Japanese and Chinese languages thus far, but insists he is not a language major.
He thinks, however, it might come in handy in his travels.
The hardest job a center has a blocking the middle linebacker. That's the word from Kansas' reckless new ace, Pete Quatrochi, who is maintaining a streak of recent Jayhawker pivot excellence inaugurated by Fred Hageman in 1959.
"That's especially true if you run into a good one like Romig (Joe, two-time Colorado All-America)," says the North Kansas City junior. "Guys like that will get a step on you before you can get to him and you just have to block 'em from behind. You just have to stay with 'em, stay up (stay erect to prevent a clip) and try to crowd them past the runner. Coach (Jack Mitchell) always tells us we've got to keep dogging them, even though we can't cut them off."
BEST TIP QUATROCHI . . . pronounced Quah-trock-ee . . . ever received on this technique came from Hageman, two-time all Big Eight selectee.
"Hageman told me to fire out quick and cut to the spot where you think they'll be," Pete explains, "not where they line up. Once you get in the habit of doing this, 't helps a lot. Hageman also taught me how to stay low as a linebacker. It makes you a little harder for the blockers to find you and helps you keep your balance when you're hit."
Actually, Quatrochi isn't jolted as frequently as most linebackers, always one of the best individual targets in any defense. Reason is, he's usually gone when the blocker arrives, save for the thrusts aimed straight at his middle linebacking station. Not only is he a fast diagnostician, but his nimbleness of foot and quick reaction carry him into the play more rapidly than most.
"I USE MY HANDS and forearms a lot to keep the blockers off too." Pete explains. "When they come straight at you though, you've got to go in fast and hit 'em. The most important thing is to read the keys fast and get into the ball carrier as fast as you can. Coach says it's the linebacker's responsibility to make a lot of tackles."
Quatrochi credits his ascendence from the third club, on which he earned a letter last year, to the varsity simply because . . . "I got tired of playing third-string. I started trying harder on everything in the spring. Of course, you get more confidence the more you play."
Pete vaulted over last year's no. 2 pivot, Kent Converse, who also is well-regarded. Starter Kent Staab, a second-team all-conference choice, was lifted by graduation.
STILL QUATROCHI is eternally conscious of the pressure from Converse, hard-tackling Lared senior. "Converse is a good football player," he admires.
Offensive line coach Don Fambrough credits Quatrochi's wide improvement to something more than increased effort. "He is a natural competitor," Fambrough says. "From the start, he was aggressive and had the courage to stick his head in there. When you have these qualities you can improve. Then it's just a matter of experience. Pete isn't blessed with overall speed, but he does have quickness. Another thing is that he's had good centers here to pattern after ever since he came in as a freshman."
Kansas Homecoming To Be Broadcast
The 1962 Kansas Jayhawker Homecoming football game against the Nebraska Cornhuskers will be broadcast over the KU sports network beginning at 1:15 p.m. Saturday.
The Network will broadcast the game to 16 stations. Among area stations carrying the game are: KANU - FM (91.5) Lawrence; KMBC (980) Kansas City, Mo., WIBW (580 Topeka, KSAL (1150) Salina, and KVOE (1400) Emporia.
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 11
Eiseman Mean on Field; Is Easy-going When Off
One the football field, Fred Eiseman, 6-1/2, 215-pound tackle, is mean and aggressive.
But off the field, he is an easy-going guy, who likes to lean back in a soft chair, and spin yarns.
THE SKOKIE. ILL. lad enjoys playing football and recalls many humorous incidents that have happened to him.
One of his most unforgettable was in the varsity-alumni game two years ago. "I was real eager to play," Eiseman recalls. "I had been sitting on the bench for some time when Mitchell finally hollered 'Eiseman.'
"I was so excited that I tripped over the tarpaulin on the side-lines and practically knocked him over."
ANOTHER HUMOROUS incident happened when Eiseman returned for fall practice two years ago.
But before the season got underway Eiseman made it down to his normal playing weight.
"I was about 40-pounds overweight," he chuckled. "At our first practice session, Mitchell called me out to the center of the circle during callisthenics and tried to auction me off as his prize hog."
THE SENIOR TACKLE still has weight problems and keeps a six-nack of Metracal in his room, which he drinks for lunch.
Eiseman has not always lined up at the tackle position. In high school he was a fullback at St. George High School in Evanston, Ill.
At that position, he was all-state and all-Chicago Catholic League. During his freshman year at KU, he was transferred to tackle, where he has been ever since.
"IT WAS NECESSARY," Eiseman laughs. "I'm awfully slow. I don't know anything about the backfield anymore, tackle is my home."
Eiseman has worked up through the ranks to his home on the starting team. He did not letter as a sophomore and a third team tackle. Most remarkable is that he moved from the sixth unit to the third.
Last year he rotated between second and third units. He was third team until Dick Davis, now in the professional ranks, was injured and he played second team the remainder of the season.
WHO'S THE BEST TACKLE Eiseman's played against? It's former teammate Stan Kirshman.
"I learned a lot by just watching him," he admits.
Eiseman is one who combines brain and brawn. His decision to attend KU was the result of his wanting to attend the KU Medical School.
IN HIGH SCHOOL he was an A student, winning the Knute Rockne award for athletics and scholarship. He still maintains a strong grade average of B.
Eiseman's most exciting experience in football was KU's 23-7 win over Missouri two years ago.
"I didn't get to play, but I still got a big charge out of being on that team that beat Missouri."
KANSAS
75
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Friday. Nov. 9, 1962
Sigma Alpha Epsilon
Phi Delta Theta
Theta Chi
Sigma Phi Epsilon
Tau Kappa Epsilon
Delta Upsilon
Alpha Kappa Lambda
Alpha Phi Alpha
Phi Kappa Psi
The University of Florida
FAMILY HOUSE
SUNY Poly State University
THE NEW HOLLYWOOD MUSEUM
PARK LANE HOUSE
GAINESBURG
1250 W. 64TH ST. NEW YORK, N.Y. 10036
KU
KU FRATERNITIES WELCOME
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962 University Daily Kansan
HOLLYWOOD
Lambda Chi Alpha
Delta Chi
Sigma Nu
Acacia
Theta Tau
Pi Kappa Alpha
Phi Kappa Sigma
Kappa Sigma
Alpha Tau Omega
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Mansion
THOMPSON HOUSE
THE MUSEUM
100
[Image of a large, multi-story building with a large tree in front.]
KU
THORPE
ALL ALUMS TO HOMECOMING
Page 14
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962
HOLY MARY'S DAY
DINE OUT AT THESE BEFORE OR AFTER THE
Have Your Meals at Any of These Fine Restaurants
Hotel Eldridge
Post Game Buffet Dinner
Ribs, Ham, Chicken, Beef 5:00 - 8:30 p.m.
All You Can Eat
$2.50
HOTEL HOTELELDRIDGE WELCOME Welcome Football Fans
Dinner By Candlelight
Sandy's
SANDY'S
THRIFT & SWIFT
DRIVE-IN
2120 West 9th Across from Hillcrest
There Is No Waiting at Sandy's MENU
Hamburgers ___ 15c
Cheeseburgers ___ 19c
Toasted Cheese ___ 15c
French Fries ___ 10c
Milk Shakes ___ 20c
Coke, Coffee, Orange ___ 10c
Milk, Root Beer ___ 10c
Sandy's uses only Gov't inspected beef
Meet Your Friends
At
Margaret's Cafe
SERVING BREAKFAST, LUNCH & DINNER
Open 6:30 a.m. to 7 p.m. — Closed Sunday
04 W. 23rd. VI 3-05
Waymouth CAFE
CHUCK WAGON
RESTAURANT
The Chuck Wagon RESTAURANT
An Informal Frontier Atmosphere
Charcoal Broiled Steaks Bar-B-Que South on Highway 59 VI 3-9844
Southern Pit
Delicious Barbecued Ribs
All Good Foods & Beverages
1834 Mass.
VI 3-9481
JU
---
G
En
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962
Page 15
WESTERN UNION
DGE
ans
100
FINE RESTAURANTS GAME - OR ANY TIME
Enjoy the Tasty Foods Offered in Lawrence
A man serving a dish to three people at a table.
The Castle Tea Room 1307 Mass.-VI 3-1151
1908-1926
HARRY WALK
Hal's Steak House East Highway No. 10-23rd St.
2 Dining Rooms to Serve You Fast Service — Excellent Food
Griff's
BURGER BAR
Hamburgers 12c
1618 W. 23rd
PAPA'S CAFE
Meet All the Old Gang at The Wheel after the game 4 Street Hill VI 3-9603
Allen's Drive-In
Home of Allen's Royal Hamburger
"The place where particular people eat"
1404 W. 23rd. VI 3-5000
AJILENZ
DRIVING
Page 16
University Daily Kansan
Friday. Nov. 9,1962
HEY ALUMS!
P. H. Pohlmann, 1915
S.
J
Are you current with K.U. campus happenings?
There 's one way to stay up-to-date read
THE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
Clip the coupon below and send to The Daily Kansan Business Office
→
TO: THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN 111 FLINT HALL
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Please send me the UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN for:
□ one semester for $3.00 □ a full year for $5.00
Enclosed is (a) ___ in payment.
Name
Address ...
Daily Hansan
---
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
60th Year, No. 41
SECTION B
DOC YAKS FAMOUS
MEDICINE SH
DOC
YAKS
PILL CUP
DOC YAK—During the '20s, the annual arrival of Doc Yak and his "Famous Pep Pills," enlivened Homecoming week. This pep rally in
--front of Green Hall in 1929 shows students anxiously awaiting his arrival.
Alums Return to Recapture College Days of Their Youth
By Rose Osborne
KU alumni will forsake babies and business to rendezvous with the past this weekend.
Homecoming offers the alums a chance to leave the daily grind to recapture their college youth.
Each year the Alma Mater sounds sadder, the game longer, the climb to the Campanile steeper and all the other alumni older.
To alumni Sam, the campus hasn't changed a bit.
Skirts are as short as they were in the forties. The twist is as revealing as the black bottom of the thirties. There is the same old Saturday night crowd at the Campanile
For a weekend Alumni Sam can relive his college days.
GRADS OF THE LATE 1800's might recall the night pranksters roiled a Civil War cannon from the court house up the hill and opened fire on the totem pole erected in front of Fraser by the class of 1833.
Alums of 1911 remember the day a crowd assembled for commencement sighted a whale in Potter's lake. Nobody ever harpooned KU's Moby Dick. The creature disappeared, but nobody ever denied it
This was the era of the beanie and the paddle. Insisting that freshmen were too fresh, upperclassmen of 1908 decreed that "every freshman shall wear a light green skull cap
with a bright red button not less than 1½ inches in diameter.
Fresh were to tip caps to faculty members, touch caps to seniors and give up their seats to upperclassmen. No freshman was allowed on campus with a date.
KU STUDENTS tripped through the twenties with their ukuleles and racon coats. Fellows decided that University women were sufficiently educated to ignore a rule prohibiting smoking in front of women.
In 1926 the Rock Chalk Cairn was erected from a pile of native stones on the highest point on Mt. Oread overlooking Memorial Stadium. The Cairn symbolized KU traditions, history and ideals until vandals blew it up with dynamite in 1933. The Cairn was rebuilt to the North of the Campanile.
Students literally went about unshaven and in sloppy shirts Friday before the Homecoming game.
The thirties saw Hobo Day come to the campus.
This was the decade when KU was known as the "lilac campus of America." Any student could spread an epidemic of spring fever just by sneezing.
The forties brought Dandelion Day and the "Bitter Bird" to KU, and took part of the student body to war.
IN 1938 DROUGHT and borers nearly wiped out the lilacs, but the campus retained its easy informality.
In 1941 a student army of 3,400
In This Section
International Focus . . page 3
New Construction . . page 4
Honey Queen . . . page 13
Class Gifts . . . . page 14
That was the year Beta Theta Pi's great mascott — a Great Dane — was picked up and booked by Lawrence police for disturbing the peace.
Stag week and a night shirt parade livened up the campus for the 49er's.
NO DATES or shaves were allowed during stag week. The project was almost sabotaged when a sorority visited two fraternity houses. At one fraternity the women were welcomed warmly. The boys at the second house "courteously" poured water on them.
Stag week was short-lived. KU women put a damper on it.
By 1949 dandelions growing on Mt. Oread were so sparse that the Building and Grounds Department could control them with spray.
attacked 18%4 million dandelions on the hill.
CLASSES BECAME smaller during the war years and social life slowed. In 1946 the "Bitter Bird" turned up as the campus humor magazine, featuring an alluring she and fascinating he each month.
A night shirt parade may not have been a compromise for stag week, but at least marchers filed down the hill two by two.
Nightshirted men and women in blue jeans and pigtails gathered for a bonfire rally in South Park.
The fifties witnessed the compaction of the Campanile — a monument to KU students killed in World War II.
In 1522 the bells rang for KU homecoming and a student protested that football queen candidates should be curvy, rather than cultural and intellectual.
It was rumored that law students had planted poison ivy in back of the law building to discourage any KU women who might want to detour around Green Hall and the statue of "Uncle Jimmy Green" to class.
The law students and Uncle Jimmy are still here. The ivy is, too.
Wild Days of '37 Are Now Passe
A KU graduate of 1937 attending the 1962 Homecoming will probably not see many of the things which made his Homecoming celebration wild and wooly a few years back.
Gone, for example, is the sorority mouse race.
Held on "Hobo Day," the mouse race was a big affair in '37. That year, the Chi Omega entry won, but only after some cheering soul blasted the little beast out of the starting circle with a snowball.
Gone also is the fraternity sack race, which began right after the completion of the mouse race. Fresh runners, in true Pony Express tradition, sacked the course which started in front of Hoch Auditorium and ended at the Student Union. Relay runners were stationed at the Commons and at Fraser.
(The Commons was a white frame building that sat, until it burned down in 1941, in front of Watson on the corner of Jayhawk and Sunflower. It housed the first cafeteria, and later the anatomy department.)
"Red" McGinley won the sack race for the Phi Gam's, and then proceeded to top his own feat by winning the "Shiller Shore Manhood Trophy" for the longest and most bristling beard among the assembled Hobos.
Hobo Day was tradition unto itself. The day before the game, students and returning alums dressed in their Saturday worst as LiL Abner and Daisy Mae for a snake dance and "Doe" Yak's medicine show in Hoch. The medicine show featured a torch singer, a "Jam" band, and the selection of the Hobo Day queen.
The '37 Homecoming had a few firsts, too. WHB in Kansas City carried the Homecoming game on a national radio hookup, and also carried a 15 minute pep rally before the game. One WHB official with a flair for words called the program "College Spirit in the Modern Manner."
An integral part of Homecoming was the parade down Massachusetts St., complete with fireworks and costumed Indians from Haskell. The parade, rally, and other pre-game activities were directed by Russell L. Wilev, director of the University Band.
One tradition has been retained. Because of the "Cinderella" team KU had that year, the rumor was going around that if KU defeated the University of Missouri, the administration might add an extra day to Thanksgiving vacation. The administration said no.
But KU didn't beat MU anyway. The game ended in and 0-0 tie. A Missouri fan, in his cups to a rather disgraceful degree, said that if either team had left the field, the other wouldn't have been able to score for five minutes.
Homecoming queen in '37 was Doris Johnson, Kappa Kappa Gamma. She was, and this is a tradition that is perhaps well forgotten, chosen by the players of the Missouri team.
BUTTERFIELD
HOBO DAY—This pleasant looking couple won first place in the Hobo Day contest during the 20's. The first Hobo Day was held in 1894 and became an annual part of the Homecoming celebration. The tradition was discontinued in the late '30s partially because of the vandalism which usually accompanied the event.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Friday, Nov. 9, 1962
WELCOME ALUMS
SWEAT SHIRTS $3.10 to $3.50 Green, Gray and Navy
White Long 1/4 length Zipper Black with 3-color Jayhawk Hooded Sweatshirts
6-Footer Scarf $4.95
Brainwarmers $2.00
Mittens $2.00
(All three in either Royal Blue or Red on White)
SOUVENIRS
Little Jayhawker $1.00
also
Joe Quarterbank $2.95
Pennants - Scrapbooks and Photo Albums - Playing Cards - Lighters - Spoons China Glassware - Bookends
KU
HELP SUPPORT K.U.
KANSAS
UNION
BOOK
STORE
square dots
I
KU Exchange Programs Set Educational Pace
By Bernard Henrie
KU is going international.
In addition to receiving more foreign students here, the University is sending greater numbers of KU students abroad.
KU has direct exchanges with 14 colleges and universities overseas, which make it one of the leaders in this area.
"The ideal arrangement is one in which there is a complete exchange of ideas and social patterns, a well organized system of cultural cross fertilization." Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe said recently.
ALFRED V. BOERNER, director of the State Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs, paid tribute to the KU exchange program, calling it a "happy blending of university, private foundation, and United States government resources."
While Lawrence students are placed at a number of different Universities, KU's greatest efforts have been in cooperation with the University of Costa Rica.
John Gardner, president of the Carnegie Corporation of New York, contributed $100,000 to the KU program, which he referred to as "an extremely interesting experiment."
The International Institute of Education has said that if 10 reputable institutions in the United States were assisted financially and encouraged to seek similar relationships, the impact on higher education in Latin America, as well as in the United States, would be impressive.
WHAT KIND of things has this international education led to?
- It has prompted 27 Kansans in Lawrence to crowd around a short-wave radio to hear distant, static-ridden election returns in Spanish from San Jose. Costa Rica.
- In San Jose it brought out the University of Costa Rica chorus to serenade Chancellor Wescoe on a recent visit with his wife.
- A girl from Marysville has begun visiting prisons and doing other social work throughout Costa Rica.
Page 3
- And another girl from Missouri was nominated for a beauty queen contest at Costa Rica U.
SOME KU FACULTY members have become so deeply committed to the program that they have invested money in Costa Rican industries. One alumnus who started a thriving paint and plastics industry in San Jose recruited a plant manager from the KU faculty and hopes to interest students and graduates in summer and full-time employment.
A faculty exchange program, financed by the Carnegie Corporation, took the deans of KU's college of liberal arts and school of business and six professors to Costa Rica in August 1960, and the group returned for a three month stay the following summer.
FROM COSTA RICA have come four young instructors, sponsored by the International Cooperation Administration, to work toward Ph.D. degrees here.
The University of Kansas has also played host to Costa Rica's ex-President Jose Figueres, the Costa Rican school's assistant dean of science and letters, its dean of economic sciences, and many other Costa Rican officials and citizens.
Other Latin American institutions are interested in the possibilities of similar agreements with American universities and Panama University has said it prefers an agreement with KU.
KU STUDENTS who maintained a "B" average or better through 16 hours of college Spanish and pass a special course in the fundamentals of Costa Rican geography, history and literature, with stress on pronunciation, are allowed to participate in the Junior Year Abroad program with Costa Rica.
The students also receive a four-day orientation at the Foreign Service Institute in Washington. D.C., and then they journey on to Costa Rica. They arrive several weeks before classes start to allow them time to get acquainted and settled in their new Costa Rican homes.
THE STUDENTS attend regular courses during the academic year, beginning in March and ending in November. Cost approximate those at KU and all academic credits are transferred to KU.
Most important, the students are not permit to cluster together. Each one is housed in a different Costa Rican home and is kept busy with a project designed to channel his special interests into areas outside the university.
New Students Say They Like KU
KU's reputation as a good school, its active social life, and its international atmosphere are a few of the reasons given by new students for coming here.
Some, of course, land at KU by accident.
Fritz Gysin, Switzerland graduate student, is one of the latter. He is on an Institute of International Education scholarship, and the IIE selected KU for him.
Hannington Pamba, Kenya graduate student, said, "My advisers at Tabor College (at Hillsboro, Kam.) recommended KU for my graduate study when I graduated last year.
Thailand graduate student Kovit Yeam-Ot was disappointed by Kansas' frosty weather which he assumed would be similar to tropical Thai weather. He said, "I came here because I wanted to live in the 'heart' of the United States."
Mansur Mady, Saudi Arabia, sophomore, studied English and speech at the University of Texas in Austin last year. The International office at UT recommended that he attend KU. "KU is a difficult school, but I learned the essentials of getting along in a few weeks," he said.
Ramesh Gandhi, Bombay, India junior, had been admitted to the University of Utah at Salt Lake City, but decided to study at KU because it was less expensive. He said he also found a better international atmosphere at KU.
Robert Howard, freshman, Pullman, Mich., said, "I was stationed at Olathe, Kan., and the Marine Corps recommended KU. Besides, I heard KU had an active social life and I like Kansas weather so I decided to study here."
M. H. NUMAH
LONG WAY HOME — Fritz Gysin, Swiss-American student from Basel Switzerland, points out Lawrence on the topographical map of KU in the Museum of Natural History. Fritz came to KU as part of the Institute of International Education program. KU was chosen by the Institute as the University which Fritz would attend.
Friday, Nov. 9. 1962
University Daily Kansan
PEOPLE
TO
PEOPLE
P-T-P IN SEATTLE—Reuben McCornack, Abilene junior, visits with Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy at the Seattle World's Fair this summer. McCornack worked at the People-to-People booth at the Fair.
World's Fair Visit Called 'Delightful'
By Trudy Meserve
Take four foreign students from four different countries.
Add three KU American students Sprinkle heavily with People-to- People.
Pour the mixture into the Seattle World's Fair, and you have a recipe for what one foreign student termed a "delightful and educational" summer.
National People-to-People sent Reuben McCornack, Abilen junior; Young Chull Kim, Seoul, Korea; senior; Pedro Bonot, Huesca, Spain, graduate student; Walter Bgya, Tangyika, Africa, sophomore; and Raja Naib, Jhelum, Pakistan, graduate student, to the Fair to tell Seattle residents and World's Fair visitors of the organization.
Bruce Bee, class of '62, and James Dillingham, Salina junior, also lived with the group, but worked elsewhere at the Fair.
But for the seven, the summer was more than a time for informing others about the P-t-P program.
The seven lived and worked together 24 hours a day for about three months trying to promote international understanding not only to visitors at the P-t-P Fair exhibit, but also among themselves.
"I returned to school this year with a slight foreign accent, although from which country I cannot tell." McCornack said. "Occasionally I catch myself eating European style, and now I always drink tea with cream and sugar."
"The international atmosphere prevailed in our house," Kim said. "You could smell curry powder in the house one night, soy sauce the next evening and fried chicken the following evening."
"We didn't resolve anything, but each of us listened and tried to understand others' attitudes."
The seven rented a three-story house for the summer and shared such household responsibilities as cooking and cleaning.
"We discussed cultural, social and political problems." McCormack said. "It was enlightening to get the views of persons from other countries on subjects from dating to discrimination.
The men held frequent group discussions.
Bonet said there was conflict yet cooperation in the group.
The seven commended Seattle residents for their hospitality.
"Not everything was perfect," he said. "We had our individual and group problems, but we also had tremendous cooperation in solving them."
"We were invited to so many dinners and parties that it was impossible to attend all of them." McCornack said. "Finally we decided to take turns going to social events."
One Seattle woman who learned Bgoya lost his electric guitar enroute to Seattle promptly bought another one for him.
We used no machines and no gadgets in our display. Our strategy was simply people talking to other people about the organization. Foreign and American visitors heard about People-to-People from foreign and American students." McCormaack said.
"Not too many people knew about P-t-P when they first came to the Fair, but most knew about the program when they left," Kim said.
McCornack said about 5,000 P-t-P memberships were received by the Kansas City headquarters at the close of the summer.
McCornack said the Fair board financed the land area for the P-t-P exhibit. He said he thought the P-t-P exhibit was the only one to receive such financial aid.
Besides telling of P-t-P, foreign students were interpreters and Fair guides for other foreign visitors.
The students also initiated an "International Music Hour," presented 10 times in an amphitheater on the Fair grounds. The program centered around Kim, the emcee, who told about incidents which happened to him since his arrival in America. Bgoya played his guitar and sang.
A vocal group of Korean choreo and singers from the University of Madrid and the Seattle area provided the other entertainment.
"About 2.000 people packed the amphitheater for each performance," McCornack said.
"The success is not in the money we made," Kim said. "The success is in our contacts with people from all different areas of this country and with people from other countries."
Kim said he is contacting people in the Orient to establish a P-t-P program there.
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962
[Image of a large stone building with a tall tower, arched windows, and columns]
DYCHE HALL - The Museum of Natural History has been housed in Dyche Hall since early in the century except for a nine year
Art, Natural History Museums Advance KU Cultural Atmosphere
By Stephen Sells
Dyche Museum of Natural History and the KU Museum of Art have faced each other across Jayhawk Blvd. for 36 years.
period when foundation settling necessitated the replacement of the inside of the building during the years 1932-41.
Dyche Museum was named for Professor Lewis L. Dyche after his death in 1915. Prof. Dyche's collecting, hunting and expeditioning gave him a reputation which helped KU obtain a $75,000 appropriation in 1901 to build the museum.
THE MUSEUM'S PANORAMA of North American animals, the largest such exhibit in the world, was originated by Prof. Dyche, who displayed it at the Chicago World's Fair of 1893.
The panorama includes a realistic, 500 foot-long background painting, more than 200 mammals mounted and placed in "life-zone" surroundings and a complicated scenic background.
The museum was closed from 1932 to 1941 to allow replacement of the entire inner structure, necessitated by foundation settling. The repairs were done under a $55,000 appropriation.
IN 1949 A FIRE of unknown cause caused an estimated $3,500 damage to museum supplies in the tower room of Dyche Hall.
The construction now going on next to Dyche is for its 350,000 square foot, six-story addition, to be used for teaching and research.
The addition, in planning for 12 years, will cost about $800,000, 10 times the original building's cost, and will be ready for use by spring, 1963.
ADDITIONAL STUDY and labora- tority space will be provided for natural history students as well as functional space for the scientific
Engineering Students Work Under Crowded Conditions
Dr. E. Raymond Hall, museum director, said that the displays and exhibits are a sideline to the principal purpose of the museum. He said the main functions are:
collections and special literature. Dyche Museum's collection includes more than 250,000 specimens.
Hidden from view behind Marvin Hall are a quonset hut and two massive native stone buildings—the present engineering laboratories
The electrical engineering laboratory illustrates the plight of all the others. Kenneth J. Butler, instructor of electrical engineering in charge of the laboratory, said he is faced with a critical shortage of space.
collections and special literature.
Equipment in the electrical engineering laboratory originally cost approximately $200,000. This includes such special equipment as Logic Trainers, analog computers and digital computer given to the school by Westinghouse.
These facilities will be moved upon completion of the engineering building now under construction. The new building will double existing laboratory space.
A new analog computer, presently housed in the Nuclear Reactor building, will be moved into the engineering building upon its completion.
"There is virtually no space available for graduate students' projects." Butler said. He also said storage must be accommodated through the use of hall and lab space.
Cramped space and multi-purpose use of all available rooms characterize the buildings. Some rooms are storage facilities, classrooms, laboratories, and offices—all at the same time.
By Ralph Gage
- To preserve safely and acces-sibly materials already acquired.
- To obtain new materials from critical geographical areas or strata.
Butler said the equipment is good and reasonably up-to-date. He said there are special items he would like to have available, but which are not urgently needed. He added he had no bone to pick with the university concerning equipment procurement.
- To use the materials in advanced teaching and research that aim to present generalizations not before made.
- To train biological and anthropological scientists as advanced students and as junior staff members, and
- To distribute and apply the results of museum studies.
THE MUSEUM OF ART building began as the University's Spooner Library. When the books were moved to Watson Library, an extensive art collection offered KU in 1917 by W. B. Thayer of Kansas City was accepted and housed in Spooner. In the spring of 1926, the building re-opened as the Spooner-Thayer Art Museum.
"Our success and opportunity to be effective is in considerable part due to the interest and financial support of friends of the museum," said Mr. Hall.
During and after World War II the basement was used as a men's dormitory. Before the Little Theater was constructed in Green Hall, the speech and drama department used the basement as a theater.
Between 1949 and 1951 the structure was remodeled, allowing the staff to use the entire building for the first time in ten years.
An alumnus who has not been on the KU campus since last year or even since early this year, may find a change in the campus' appearance since his last visit.
IN 1955 A FIRE caused about $5,000 damage to the building, but the art objects were not damaged.
The museum's acting director, Marilyn Stokstad, spent last summer in Central American collecting and arranging for an exhibit of Central American contemporary painting.
The KU campus is changing, and it will change with greater rapidity as work on the 10-year master building plan begins.
PRESENTLY, CONSTRUCTION activity is concentrated at four sites. Two of these projects are well on their way towards completion. The four sites are the new engineering building, the museum addition, the library addition and the new dormitory.
By Roy Miller
More than 50 works will be for sale to the public at prices within reach of KU students. The exhibit opens Dec. 2.
The new engineering building, now 65 per cent completed, according to Keith Lawton, vice chancellor for operations, is directly east of the Nuclear Reactor.
Alumni Will View Campus Facelifting
The structure is expected to be ready for students by the fall semester of 1963.
ARCHITECTURE students will move into the present Marvin Hall following construction of the new engineering building and a minor remodeling of Marvin Hall.
The installation of a two-floor modern gallery and the reinstallation of the medieval collection in the Rennaissance gallery are in the planning stages.
A major remodeling of the present Marvin Hall and the elimination of the Lindley Annexes area, are parts of the 10-year building plan.
The addition to Dyche Hall (the Museum of Natural History) is also 65 per cent complete. The addition is expected to be completed by April. It will be for ornithology laboratories.
EXPECTED TOTAL COST of the new museum wing is $758,000. The funds will come from the National Science Foundation, the United States Public Health Service, some private gifts, and the state.
The addition to Watson Library, now in the preliminary excavation stages, is expected to be completed by January, 1964. The addition will provide space for 800,000 additional books. Appropriations for the addition, to be located in the area of the old journalism building, total $1.8 million.
The new Ellsworth Hall under construction, south of the present Temple, Lewis and Hashinger Halls, is 10 stories and will house 850 students when opened in the fall of next year. The hall has been named for Fred Ellsworth, who recently retired as alumni secretary.
FUTURE BUILDING PLANS on the campus include another dormitory, a 10-story structure, to be built in the Daisy Field tract on the campus' west edge. The proposed structure will be south of Ellsworth Hall.
The demolition of Blake Hall may
begin before the end of the school year. A $750,000 appropriation has been allotted for Blake's replacement.
Other plans call for the demolition of Robinson Gymnasium, Haworth Hall and Fraser Hall. Demolition of Robinson and Haworth cannot begin until a new gymnasium, proposed for the intramural field area, is constructed.
CLASSROOM COMPLEX will replace the gymnasium and Haworth. A request of funds for a replacement for Fraser, the oldest structure on campus, will be part of the 1963 legislative budget. If the funds are appropriated, the new Fraser, to be located in the area around the Pioneer Statue, would be ready, possibly, in three years, following one year of preliminary plans and two years of construction.
The present Fraser, however, will not be destroyed for several years. The new and old Fraser may stand side-by-side for several years. Fraser classroom space must be used until the new classroom complex is constructed.
Computers See All. Tell All
COLUMBUS, Ohio — (UPI) — A state liquor department employ had some interesting information in explaining to a board which controls state finances how his department uses computers to keep tab on liquor sales.
Among the miscellaneous bits of information he gave the board: liquor sales usually double during the first two weeks in an area where there is a strike: gin sales are highest in summer; gallon size bottles of whiskey sell like mad around Ohio State University during the fraternity rushing season, and five women in the computer section of his department are pregnant.
"You learn the darnest things in this business." mused House Speaker Roger Cloud, a member of the board.
Portraits of Distinction
HIXON STUDIO
摄图
Bob Blank
Bob Blank
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
SPECIALIZED
Complete Service For Renault Cars
All Other Foreign Cars
- Minor Services
- Lube & Oil Changes
- Motor Tune-Up
- Brake Service
Also we service Home-builts too.
Tony's D-X Service
23rd & Iowa
VI 2-0444
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
KICK OFF TIME!
Rumsey Funeral Home
AMBULANCE SERVICE
Dial VI 3-5111
Fred Rumsey Oscar Rumsey
Unusual Xmas Gifts
John’s Novelty Shop
Next to Granada Theater
Norris Brothers, Inc.
Plumbing Air Conditioning
Heating Electrical
1515 W. 6th VI 3-6911
General Appliance Company
Your Exclusive Full Line
General Electric Dealer
1103 Mass. VI 3-0120
Virginia Inn Motel
• 24 air-conditioned units • Free TV
• Telephone in every unit • Swimming pool
36 NEW UNITS & RESTAURANT OPENING SOON!
West Highway 40 VI 3-6611
36
4
---
GO JAYHAWKS
---
1996.04.25 09:30:48
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Friday, Nov. 9, 1962
NAMED
ANGEL FLIGHT - Which are prettier, angels or airplanes? The members of KU's Arnold Air Society think the Angels are. Pictured above
are (left to right) Mary Kline, Wichita sophomore, and Mary Kay Tatum, Osceola, Mo., junior.
Angels Promote AFROTC
By Joanne Prim
Barn parties . . . singing groups
. . . awards banquets . . . Command-
er's Call . . . fund-raising projects
. . . Military Ball.
As Carolyn Toews, Inman senior and commander of Angel Flight, mentioned these activities, she paused and said, "It seems that we're perpetually busy."
These and other projects help the "Angels" fulfill their purpose: "to further the cause of the United States Air Force by promoting the interest of the college man in the AFROTC program."
"We also serve as an auxiliary to Arnold Air Force Society, an honorary organization for outstanding Air Force cadets, in social functions," Miss Toews added.
The first social event of this semester was a barn party Oct. 27. It was followed closely by Commander's Call, a semi-annual area convention at the University of Missouri Nov. 2-3. The spring Commander's Call will be held at KU. It has been held here for two years.
"We're also planning service projects." Miss Toews said, "such as Christmas caroling for the hospitals and rest homes in Lawrence.
"Our singing group, which was started last semester, plans to go to Forbes Air Force Base, Topeka, and Richards-Gebaur, Grandview, Mo.
"We have a big banquet in the spring," Miss Toews continued.
"when we present awards to the two members of Angel Flight and Arnold Air who have done the most for their groups.
"Last year, KU Arnold Air was named the top squadron in our area, and we (the Angels) presented the award to members at an annual banquet," she said.
"A new award will be given this year to the two outstanding in scholarship," she said.
KU is included in an area composed of schools in Kansas, Missouri. Illinois and Oklahoma.
KU's Angel Flight officers hope to send the 40-member flight to the national conclave, to be held in Buffalo, N.Y., in April.
They plan to work with Arnold Air on money-making projects to finance the trip. Each year, members of both groups sell University parking tickets for the football and basketball games.
Members of Angel Flight serve as hostesses to visiting Air Force dignitaries and help with receptions.
The most glamorous social event of the year for the Angels and ROTC units is the Military Ball. This year for the first time the Military Ball queen will be chosen from 12 Angel Flight finalists. Angel Flight recently pledged 25 women, who were selected after an application and an interview.
"They were chosen on the basis of poise, personality, and the ability to
Women Serve in Congress
WASHINGTON — (UPI) Twenty women, a record high. served in Congress this year. But the odds are better than even that feminine representation in the next Congress will hit an eight-year low.
Even so, there may be three women in the U.S. Senate for the first time in history. The two women now in the Senate — Democrat Maurice B. Neuberger of Oregon and Republican Margaret Chase Smith of Maine — are coming back. Their terms do not expire until ing re-election, 11 women won major party nominations. 1967.
SEEKING re-election to the House are six Democratic women and four Republican women, including Rep. Frances P. Bolton, R. Ohio, dean of women in Congress. Mrs. Bolton's 22 years of service exceeds by a few months Mrs. Smith's combined House-Senate service.
Only 10 of the 18 women in the House are seeking re-election, however. Seven are retiring. The eighth, Rep. Gracie Pfost, Idaho Democrat, is running for the Senate seat now held by Republican Len B. Jordan.
If she wins, she will be the sixth woman in history to be elected to the Senate and the fourth to win a Senate term of more than two months. The four-year term Mrs. Pfost is seeking in Idaho will expire at the same time as the six-year terms to which Mrs. Smith and Mrs. Neuberger were elected in 1930.
In addition to incumbents seeking re-election, 11 women won major party nominations for House seats. However, with two or three exceptions they are running in districts where their party has traditionally been the underdog. Five other women running under the banner of minor parties in New York and New Jersey are given no chance of victory.
IN THE LAST national election in 1960, women won two Senate and 15 House seats, equalling the previous record of 17 women lawmakers. However, in the intervening years, three southern Congressmen died and their widows were chosen in special elections to fill the vacancies. This raised to 20 the number of women in Congress.
When the 88th Congress convenes on Jan. 9, there will be no women members from the South. No woman is running for Congress in the South this year. The three chosen to fill out unexpired terms are retiring. So is Rep. Iris Blitch, D-Ga., who has eight years service.
meet people — such as an interview with 12 people facing you." Miss Toews explained. "Applications were distributed in all women's living groups.
Dorothy Stevens, Hutchinson senior and Angel Flight rush chairman and pledge trainer, said: "We would like to expand membership by second semester. However, this action must have the consent of the Air Force ROTC advisers.
"There was a really good turnout for fall rush, and we think we could carry out our purposes better with increased membership," she commented.
Initiation of fall pledges will be in December.
The Angel Flight uniforms are regulation Air Force blue. They consist of a tailored suit, white blouse, hats similar to those worn by an airline hostess, black heels and white gloves. ___
Buses Gain in Popularity As Cars Leave Campus
Daily service to the "Hill" gained new popularity this year as the new traffic control program went into effect, prohibiting cars from using the campus during classes.
The Lawrence Bus Co. estimates that 1,500 to 2,000 students daily take advantage of their service.
The green and white buses have not always been such a common sight on campus. Up until 1957 bus service to class was only experimental. However, in that year the Lawrence Bus Co. started its regular morning and noon runs from Corbin Hall. In 1957 Corbin Hall was the only University dormitory.
Today three buses leave the women's dormitories for the campus every hour on the half hour. Special buses are added in bad weather.
As the new dormitories were built, bus service was extended to serve them.
Women of KU get your man while you can. Your sex is increasing on campus at an alarming rate.
KU's Feminine Minority Decreases at Rapid Rate
Another bus runs from the West Hills area to the campus every hour on the half hour.
Men students have dominated the KU campus with a two to one ratio for the past twenty years, with the exception of three years during World War II.
Men rejoice . . . your choice of KU coeds will increase in the next few years.
Since 1939 the only period of feminine majority on the hill was during the war years of 1943, 1944 and 1945. After this, with the GI Bill, men hurried back to school to finish their education.
KU Housemother Acts As Adviser, Dietician, Hostess
The increase in woman enrollment more than doubled the men enrollment between 1961 and 1962.
By Jackie Stern
Mrs. Thomas Clark, a 14-year veteran in the role, commented on the job.
She reads books for her family. The typical KU housemother acts daily as supervisor, dietician and hostess during the school months.
She leads three lives.
"It is not as easy as it looks," she said.
"I didn't know a thing about planning menus for 65 girls," she said. Our first cook really taught me the ropes.
Mrs. Clark, who is affectionately called "Mom" by the women of Alpha Delta Pi, came to the sorority 14 years ago. The mother of one son, Thomas Jr., she said she always wanted a daughter. Now she has 65.
MOM CLARK recalled her first problems in running a sorority house.
The main problem was solving 65 different tastes, Mrs. Clark pointed out.
However, after 14 years experience, Mrs. Clark has mastered the technique and can now plan a menu with maximum efficiency in an amazingly short time. Contrary to popular belief, the housemother's duties do not end with the menu responsibility.
AS AN OFFICIAL hostess of Alpha Delta Pi, Mom Clark spends a large segment of her time attending meetings — house meetings advisory board meetings, housemother's meetings, Mother's club meetings and alumni meetings. In addition, Mrs. Clark acts as official hostess at all rush parties, teas, dinners, and other affairs.
Who says the typical housemother has time to play cards everyday? she asked.
AS SUPERVISOR. Mrs. Clark buys everything in the house except the furniture. It is her responsibility to see that the house is run smoothly. This includes the small things, too, such as supervising the care of the lawn or checking periodically to see that all electrical equipment is working properly.
Besides these duties the house-
mother has still another obligation to fulfill. She must always be consciously concerned with the well-being of each individual in the house.
She must be willing and available at all times to answer the cry:
"MOM I HAVE a problem; may I talk to you?"
"The housemother must have the confidence of these women and assure them she will keep their secrets" Mrs. Clark said emphatically.
"To me a home is not a home without a mother and a hostess. Anyone can do the cooking and cleaning but a housemother has the responsibility of bringing warmth and love into the home" she said.
When asked if college women today had changed from those of 14 years ago Mom Clark leaned back, smiled and said nothing for a few seconds.
"I'M NOT ONE that thinks this younger generation is going to the dogs. Women are just as fine today as ever," she finally said.
However, she did comment on the trend toward casual dress which has swept the campus in the last couple of years.
"Perhaps the pendulum has swung too far. Women never used to wear slacks downtown or on campus years ago," she said.
Portraits of Distinction
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
Portraits of Distinction
HIXON STUDIO
Hold on!
IRVING GRANZ presents
AMERICA'S NO. 1 RECORDING STARS
AN EVENING WITH
the
Kingston
TRIO
EXTRA ADDED ATTRACTION
MIRIAM MAKEBA
The most exciting new singing talent to appear in many years. Time Magazine
SATURDAY, NOV. 10
8:30 P.M.
MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM—K.C., Mo.
Tickets: $2.50,$3.00,$3.50,$4.00
On Sale At
AUDITORIUM BOX OFFICE
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
WELCOME BACK ALUMS
FIELD
Yellow Cab COMPANY
24 HOUR TAXI SERVICE
VI 3-6333
SMALL DELIVERIES
5 New Jersey Ward Thompson, Owned
W
MONTGOMERY WARD
Satisfaction Guarantee or Your Money Back For Over 90 Years
825 MASS.
VI 3-4596
NewYork Cleaners V1 3-0501
926 Mass. Merchants of Good Appearance Serving KU for 50 Years
-Taxi--
VI 3-2800
24 HOUR SERVICE
Small Package Delivery Service
Union Cab Co.
Jayhawk Theatre Bldg.
hair creations
by George Corn's
BEAUTY SERVICE
Campus Beauty Shoppe
1144 INDIANA VI 3-3034
BEAT NEBRASKA!
NEBRASKA!
Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday, Nov. 9,1962
KNOTTS
MONTTIE
GO YOU HA Welcome A
Be sure to drop in before the Game for Lunch at the "Jayhawk Buffet in the Ballroom.
After the Game, come on over for an After-the-game Snack or Dinner.
Jay Buff
Pra Roo
Hav Nes
Uni Caf
Any Time Is a Good Time for Delicious Fo
KANSAS FOOD SEI
BEAT NEB
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
HAWKERS Alumni
HOURS
Jayhawk
Buffet - --- 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Prairie
Room --- 11 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Hawk's
Nest --- 8:30 a.m. to 11:15 p.m.
Union
Cafeteria 10:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.
5 p.m. to 6:30 p.m.
icious Foods at Your Kansas Union
S UNION SERVICE
EBRASKA
KINOTTE 2015
KHATTE 1990
Page 10 University Daily Kansan Friday, Nov. 9, 1962
BUILDING FOR THE FUTURE
"A Bigger and Better KU"
Harmon Construction Co., Inc.
...
KU's new 650-man dorm
Templin Hall
Lewis Hall
Carruth-O'Leary Hall
Gertrude Sellards Pearson Mammalian Genetics Laboratory Murphy Hall
Addition to Dyche Museum Remodeling of Bailey Hall
Harmon Construction Co., Inc. D.A. (Al) Harmon, KU Alumnus, President Oklahoma City, Oklahoma
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962 University Daily Kansan
KU's FOOTBALL SQUAD: FAST and STRONG
75 21 7 71 6 81 68 44 27 11 9 30 4 10 3 11 87
KANSAS 41 92 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79
It's the KU Football Squad for Another Husker Triumph It's Acme Laundry for Another Consistently Good Team
Your clothes are expertly handled at Acme Laundry and Dry Cleaners. Speedy service on last minute clothes needs. We will do everything possible to meet your cleaning demands. Try the finer services that Acme offers.
1-HOUR PERSONALIZED JET LIGHTNING SERVICE
Acme LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS
Hillcrest Shopping Center VI 3-0928
Downtown VI 3-5155
Malls Shopping Center VI 3-0895
Page 12 University Daily Kansan Friday, Nov. 9, 1962
Let Us Score for You With Our Sanitone Team
LAWRENCE LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS WE CLEAN PRESS & BRAKES ANY GARMENT QUILTIES GETS LAUNDRY
Your Route Servicemen
Clarence Stone ___ North Campus
Bob Kopfenstein ___ West Campus
Ralph Owens ___ East Campus
Bob Bost ___ South Campus
Management Bob and Gene Shmalberg
Good Luck to the Jayhawks Against Nebraska Tomorrow
LAWRENCE
launderers and dry cleaners
Specialists in Fabric Care
abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
Friday. Nov. 9. 1962
University Daily Kansan
Page 13
1968
HONEY QUEEN - Joycelyn Cade (center, the Kansas Honey Queen, presents Gov. John Anderson (right) a jar of Kansas clover honey as part of a program of the National Beekeeper's Federation to promote and extend the use of
honey especially during the months of October and November. Everett Sperry (left) of Lawrence and chairman of the Honey Queen committee of the Kansas Beekeeper's Association, looks on.
Joycelyn Cade, Quenemo senior, was recently chosen the state honey queen by the National Beekeeper's Association of Kansas.
In January she will travel to San Antonio, Tex., to compete for the title of National Honey Queen in a contest sponsored by the National Beekeeper's Federation.
KU Coed Is Honey Queen
The Kansas honey queen is now
Iron Horse Has Brighter Look
SCHENECTADY, N. Y. — (UPI)
—The old gray locomotive isn't what she used to be."
Today's Iron Horse sports a brighter dress than its forebears of 25 years ago. It's likely to be as colorful as a summer rainbow, according to a leading locomotive manufacturer, Alco Products, Inc., reports its paint shop has sprayed more than 200 different colors and shades on new diesel locomotives in the past year alone. Most railroads nowadays have a three-, four-, or five-color scheme for their locomotives.
NEW YORK — (UPI) — A hotel manager learns never to be startled by odd requests.
She Made Her Own Bed
A woman guest asked Joseph J. Van, manager of the Edison Hotel, if it would be okay for her to clean her own room and make her own bed. She explained she'd never traveled before and would feel more at home if she, rather than a chambermaid, would do those chores.
doing research on the habits of bees for a 300-word essay she must write in preparation for the national contest.
Not only must the National Honey Queen be well-versed in the bee industry, but she must also know how to cook with honey.
Bowlers Gain in Popularity
"I'm looking for more recipes now," she said. "I've always loved to cook so this is no problem. I've already made honey apple pie and honey butternut rolls," she said.
The pot is the heady fashion news from London. The pot? A hat that resembles the male's bowler. Pots, properly worn, sit on the head straight across the brow.
Portraits of Distinction
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
Dean Recounts Day
Emily Taylor, dean of women, recently received a letter from a KU college man accusing her of being nothing more than a myth.
"He had been trying to see me, but couldn't get an appointment," Dean Taylor said.
"It's no wonder he had difficulty making an appointment. Here is my schedule for one day," she said.
9.15. Strong Hall,
at the office.
220, Strong Hall.
10:15—picture taken for Jayhawk-er.
10:30—meeting in Chancellor Wescoe's office.
11:30—conference with a freshman counselor about a problem on her corridor.
Noon—conference with a representative of a political party to discuss the implications of a proposed plank in the party platform.
12. 30 p.m.-lunch with the Watkins-Summerfield Scholarship Committee.
1:30-meeting with Cwens Board. 2:30-meeting with the women's scholarship hall presidents.
3:30—conference with a freshman woman who was dissatisfied with her course schedule.
3:45—conference with a senior woman about her future plans.
4:15—discussion with a foreign woman student about a housing problem.
4:30 - talk to the Associated Women Students (AWS) House.
5:45 - dinner at a sorority house and a talk on scholarship.
8—speech at a membership meeting of the American Association of University Women.
"AFTER THAT, I went home with a friend for a while to visit," Dean Taylor said.
"You know the only time you have to read is at night. I read professional literature in my field and just enough fiction to keep up," she said.
"Then I left for home. I usually read and answer the phone and go to bed around 2 a.m.
"HOBIES? Oh ... reading, music, and drama. I'm going to see "Media" in Kansas City tomorrow night. I try to see all the plays in Kansas City and of course all the ones here at the theatre.
"Reading is my main way of spending spare time. I can read and listen to music at the same time." Dean Taylor explained.
Speaking of her role as an adviser, Dean Taylor said:
"Problems run the gamut of all the things a college woman faces.
"We like for the women to feel they have someplace to go to get started on a problem. If we can't help them, we direct them to someone who can," she said.
"Some come with no problem at all—just to talk, get information, or get acquainted.
"WOMEN come in with personal problems, such as a conflict with faculty members or problems with their roommates. We try to help them decide on the best approach to the problem.
Although counseling occupies a large part of Dean Taylor's time, she still has time to scrub windows at Gertrude Sellards Pearson (GSP) and cook dinner at the Pi Beta Phi sorority house.
THE GSP counselors and the Pi Phis each won a day's service in 1960 from Dean Taylor as an award for raising money for the KU Women's Memorial Scholarship Fund.
She also served one night as a counselor at GSP, insisting each resident who signed out give her name in full, her parents' names, her address, the minute of her departure and expected return, her escort's name, and the specific address of the place she planned to spend the evening.
An article in the May 5,1960,Daily Kansan reported:
"EMILY TAYLOR, dean of women, kicked off her high-heeled shoes and dunned tennis shoes last night. She found that being a counselor on duty at GSP involved considerable footwork."
"Of course, that is true of any area of personnel work. It's not like a job where you see what you have produced," she said.
All of the dean of women assistants do some advising, but I still like to attend groups' meetings occasionally." she said.
"I HAVE a feeling I have too many meetings, but there are a good many committees one just has to serve on," she said.
Dean Taylor said a difficult aspect of her job as dean was never knowing for sure how any contact with an individual would turn out.
A native of Alabama, she holds a bachelor's degree in English from Ohio State University and masters and Ph.D. degrees in education.
Dean Taylor came to KU in 1956 from Miami University, Oxford, Ohio, where she was an assistant dean of women.
SHE IS currently president of the Kansas Association of Deans and Women Counselors and advisory dean to the national Cwen's Board.
Offices she has held include the presidency of the Montana American Association of University Women and the chairmanship of the Deans and advisers of Women of Ohio.
Welcome Alums
Farming is a good life Co-ops make it better! Progress keeps the farmer in business Co-ops are the shortest route to progress
New machines, new feeds, new petroleum products, new services, co-ops produce and supply them first and most economically.
Progress comes to you in a straight line from co-ops. In a co-op, you and your neighbors solve your problems together—now and later.
Progress keeps you in business, and the easiest way to share in progress is through your local Farmers Co-op Association, owned and operated by the people who patronize them.
Farmer's Co-op Association
Lawrence, Kansas
Good Luck Against Nebraska Tomorrow!
Page 14
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962
(1)
BRONZE JAYHAWKER—The sculpture, a gift of the class of 1956. stands behind the Kansas Union. The Jayhawker was designed by Elden C. Teftt, associate professor of design, who handled the entire project from designing to casting on campus.
Senior Class Gifts Become Landmarks
By Patti Behen
Gifts donated by graduating classes have contributed much to the building of KU.
Since the earliest years of the University, graduating seniors have left gifts in memory of their class. Many of these class gifts have become campus landmarks. Many helped greatly in the construction of today's University.
PERHAPS THE most needed gifts were those which helped in the building of the Kansas Union.
The graduating classes of the 1920s made many contributions for the furnishings in the Union. The class of 1922 donated the chime clock in the first floor lobby, the class of 1928 contributed toward the tapestries and the trophy case, and the class of 1929 gave a piano for the ballroom.
One of the most important class gifts was made by the class of 1930, which furnished the Union with a service elevator. Before its installation, there were many difficulties in serving the dinners in the ballroom, as food had to be transported up two floors from the kitchen to the ballroom.
The stage in the Union ballroom was contributed by the class of 1937. The classes of 1938 and 1939 left donations for the building of the English Room and the Kansas Room, and the class of 1941 contributed to the construction of the new wing of the Union.
INTERIOR COMPLETION of the Union building was achieved through the gifts of the class of 1951. Balcony furniture was contributed by the class of 1953, and the covered entrance by the class of 1957.
The first class gift was given by the graduating seniors of 1873. They gave a large engraving, "The Temple of Karnak," which hung in Fraser Hall for many years.
A revolutionary gift was made by the class of 1894. Graduating seniors of that year pioneered the Student Loan Fund with $342.30 raised by class plays and other projects.
MANY CAMPUS landmarks familiar to present KU students are the result of gifts made by former classes. The sun dial standing next to Green Hall was given by the class of 1899. The bulletin board on Jayhawk Boulevard—which formerly stood near Robinson Gymnasium—was a gift by the class of 1915. The information booth across from Bailey Hall was the gift of the class of 1950. The base for the pioneer statue which stands in front of Fraser Hall was contributed by the class of 1920.
Other class gifts which have become such familiar sights include the bulletin board and bench in front of Watson Library, the bird-baths, the steps leading to the Campanile, and the gateway markings on Memorial Drive.
Perhaps the most interesting and most imaginative class gift was made by the class of 1945, which donated the crabbapple trees which are seen across the campus.
MORE RECENT class gifts include the bronze statue of a jayhawk, class of 1956, and an art piece, "The Avenger," contributed to the Museum of Art by the class of 1961.
Last year's graduating seniors voted to donate a campus map display board, which will be placed in the Kansas Union.
Student Pranks Harass Campus Police Since1873
By Joanne Prim
Skeletons, paint and stink bombs have figured prominently in student activities at the University of Kansas.
Prank-pulling has become a time-honored tradition at KU, dating back to 1873 when the University was only seven years old.
During the principal speech at commencement exercises in Fraser Hall, a skeleton was carefully lowered through the ceiling directly above the speaker's head. The pranksters escaped, but "the bones" remained.
THE STUNT directly affecting the most people was carried off by the notorious Mr. X in December, 1957. He planted a sulphur stink bomb in the Kansas Union, driving out 400 students, many with headaches and stomach aches.
The odor was detected as far north as 11th Street and as far east as Kentucky Street, mostly because of the strong southerly wind.
A police officer at the scene, recalling his service days, said the odor reminded him of opening the hold on a ship and smelling spoiled onions.
Mr. X also rigged the campanile to ring 200 times on April Fool's Day.
The Jimmy Green statue in front of Green Hall has been covered with water color and oil-based paints and tar.
KUOK's Growth Has Kept Pace With University's
KUOK, founded in 1953, has grown from its original coverage of 350 students to a present coverage of 4,500 students.
Houses receiving KUOK programing include: Templin, Lewis, Joseph R. Pearson, Carruth O'Leary, Corbin, Gertrude Sellars Pearson, battenfeld, Sigma Phi Epsilon, and Phi Kappa Sigma.
"MANAGER'S Comment," a five minute editorial each Wednesday at 5:30 p.m., is also new this semester. This program is devoted mostly to questions facing KU students, but also discusses problems of national or international significance.
KUOK operates on a wired-wireless system. The signal, after it leaves the studios in the basement of Hoch Auditorium, is transmitted over telephone lines to the houses which subscribe to KUOK service. This telephone line is connected to a small transmitter in the house, which feeds the signal into the electrical system, enabling any radio in the house to receive KUOK on 630 kilocycles.
SEVERAL NEW programs have appeared on KUOK this fall. "Close-Up," broadcast at 9:00 each Thursday evening, spotlights problems or questions facing KU students. Programs on this series have examined the Human Rights Committee of the ASC, the ASC Committee on Committees and Legislation, and the pricing policy and operation of the Kansas Memorial Union.
KUOK IS ONE of only five radio stations on American college campuses that is permitted to sell advertising while operating as a nonprofit service to the student body. The entire staff, as well as the entire audience, is composed of students, making the station unique in this area of the United States.
In programming, KUOK also provides many exclusive services. Last year, the station carried live coverage of the Model United Nations, the SUA Jazz Forum, and the Spring Sing. In addition, KUOK provides a student-oriented news service, featuring campus politics, social functions, sports events, and other activities.
IT HAS BEEN green on St. Patrick's Day, red on May Day, and yellow-orange several times.
The pioneer statue was painted gray one Halloween and crowned with a pumpkin.
Paint removal jobs usually fell to the building and grounds crew, but three students who applied paint in September, 1954, removed it later.
Jimmy Green has been the more popular of the two statues. He was "hit" three times in one week in April, 1960.
On October 10, 1960, a small group of women from Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall decided to end the all-male reign at Green. They sat on the steps one afternoon and joined the law students in whistling and calling.
THEIR THOUGHTS naturally turned to the statue in front of the building. They came back that night and proceeded with the next step of their plan—to dress Jimmy Green in women's clothes.
Just as they completed their task, the campus police arrived. The women scattered.
The new name for the statue? Ginny Green, of course.
The Chi Omega fountain frequently has bubbled with soap suds and blue dye.
MEMBERS OF the All Student Council were taken to jail in 1914 when they posted dance posters on telephone poles—in violation of a city ordinance.
John Madden, editor of the Daily Kansan, convinced police to swear out warrants for the ASC members' arrest because the ASC refused to advertise the dance in the Kansan.
He forgot one thing. He was a member of the ASC. too.
A small panic occurred in November, 1958, when a man was seen hanging in the lighted clock on the front of Blake Hall. However, a climb to the clock revealed that the one-armed, featureless man was only a cardboard cut-out.
A SKELETON valued at about $150 was stolen the same year from the anatomy laboratory.
The November 6 Daily Kansan said:
"Campus and city officials have been notified of the theft, but so far no one knows whose closet the skeleton could be in."
The skeleton was found January 8 in a cemetery. Three high school
students had taken it and kept it in one of their homes. They were afraid to return it after they learned of its value.
Pranks and other student activities such as necking, suicide, and a Communist flag-raising continued to occur at Fraser.
SEVERAL STUDENTS, disturbed with the quality of the KU flag being flown over Fraser's tower, stole the flag in 1958.
It was returned in a cardboard box slipped into the Daily Kansan newsroom one night.
An attached note said:
"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 this ratty thing again—The Frustrated Alpinists."
A MORE QUET prank was the re-arrangement of the chemistry department bulletin board in Malott Hall. The names and room numbers of faculty members were jumbled into meaningless groups of letters, and an arrow which directed students to the chemistry department was pointed toward the ceiling.
The long rivalry between KU and K-State often resulted in flourishes with paint brushes weilded by students from both schools.
In 1554, "KS" was painted in lavender on administrative buildings and Jimmy Green was just that--green.
KU loyalists retaliated by capturing Touchdown IV, K-State's wilddeat mascot.
The first peace pact between the two schools was signed in 1929. It has been re-signed periodically ever since.
THE FOOTBALL FUED with Mizzou is another tradition. A huge black and yellow MU flag was the center of attraction at a Nov. 22, 1960 rally.
Student buttons with derogatory slogans were confiscated last year, as tempers grew warm and the football game neared.
Although everyone enjoys a good joke, vandalism is not appreciated by campus police.
"I sincerely hope that the fun of homecoming week won't be marred by any vandalism or mischevious pranks that might cause injury to persons or destruction to property," said Joseph G. Skillman, campus police chief.
Jayhawk Can Trace Its Origin To Gold-Hungry Forty-Niners
The proud symbol of the Kansas Jayhawker evolved from a somewhat undignified origin.
The earliest known use of the word was when it applied to a group of Forty-inners on a desperate venture to the California gold fields. With little equipment or supplies, and the prospect of desolate mountains and plains, one member said they would "Jayhawk" their way there.
KU
THE TERM TOOK on a new—and unsavory — meaning during the 1850's. Bands of buswhackers and despoilers whose real design according to John James Ingalls, was "indiscriminate plunder" adopted the name Jayhawkers.
By the Civil War the name was applied more and more to Kansans and with a more sanctified meaning. It implied an undefeatable fighting spirit.
In 1890 when the name was first applied to the University football team, "Jayhawker" had taken on a proud and dignified meaning. Then, as now, the term conned capability, fortitude, and dependability.
AFTER ADOPTING the Jayhawk as a school symbol, another twenty years elapsed before the bird was captured on paper. Henry Maloy in 1910 drew his conception of the bird in the school paper. His bird was characterized by his shoes, the purpose of which was to kick around the "Missouri Hound Dog," after the sentiment of a song then popular.
In 1923, Jimmy O'Bryon and George Hollingbery designed a widely accepted Jayhawk that resembled a quaint duck.
The austere, fighting spirit of the bird, was captured in 1929, in a drawing for the "Jayhawk Club," the alumni club of Kansas City.
LATER DR. GENE ("Yogi") Williams created a perky Jayhawker with a tough, almost defiant air.
Throughout the history of the word, Jayhawker, has implied fortitude and an ability to win against mighty odds.
GO
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 18
GO
Let's Go Kansas!
Welcome
Alumni & Visitors
to the
1962 Homecoming
We hope you enjoy your stay here at the University
KU KU's
Frosh Hawks
Jay Janes
LET'S GO KANSAS! Beat Nebraska
We're Behind You
All the Way
GO
GO
Page 16 University Daily Kansan Friday, Nov. 9, 1962
GO
GO KANSAS
B·E·A·T
93
NEBRAKA
K. U. CONCESSIONS KANSAS UNION
Daily hansan
60th Year, No.41
SECTION C
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962
Homecoming Queen-1962
Audrey Hepburn
1962 HOMECOMING QUEEN — Barbara Ann Schmidt, Kansas City senior, will preside over the homecoming game and dance tomorrow afternoon and evening. Miss Schmidt, an elementary education major, is a member of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. Miss Schmidt has been a varsity cheerleader for three years,
but will miss this football game to accept the homecoming queen crown from Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe. She and her two attendants, Karen Jo Emel, Colby junior, and Anne Peterson, Clifton senior, have spent a busy week appearing on radio and television shows and fulfilling other social obligations.
In This Section
Trip to Alaska . . . Page 2 S U A . . . . Page 6
Role of the Critic. Page 4 Campus Politics Page 14
Manet Painting Is Damaged by Thief
By Jim Alsbrook
The "bungling" thief who stole the Manet painting from the KU Museum of Art in August was "incredibly stupid," William M. Ittman, Cincinnati junior and art history major who discovered the theft, said recently.
"The work has been irreparably damaged, for he cut the painting from the frame. I would feel much better if he had stolen the whole thing — frame and all — for then the work would be complete and whenever we get it back it would be as Manet saw it."
ITTMAN and a friend, Craig Craven, Stanberry, Mo., graduate student, were coming downstairs from the second floor of Spooner Hall August 31 when Ittman noticed the painting was gone. As he glanced into the museum's European Gallery he saw the empty frame which had contained the $40,000 Manet painting, "Line Campineau."
Ittman's attitude of anger and disgust is typical of those connected with the museum. Nobody there wants to discuss the purloined work and the subject is a rather delicate one.
KU people aren't alone in their concern. The Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Kansas Bureau of Investigation, the Lawrence police, KU police, and art museums throughout the world are sniffing vengefully for the culprit.
THE INSURANCE company is another interested party, for it has posted a $2,000 reward — $1,000 for the lawful recovery of the painting and another $1,000 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of persons criminally connected with the theft.
There is a bright aspect to the theft, however. It has drawn attention to the quality and quantity of the museum's art, carefully gathered through the years and displayed right under the noses of many unappreciative KU students.
In other parts of the nation, KU's collection is considered the finest university art collection in the midwest, said Marilyn Stokstad, associate professor of art history and acting director of the museum. She said the KU collection ranks close to those of such private schools as Harvard, Yale, Princeton and Smith.
THE KU MUSEUM of Art, established in 1928, is housed in a former library. It is the oldest university art museum in the Midwest and contains creations spanning the whole gamut of artistic expression: paintings, sculpture, prints, drawings, engravings, ceramics, relief sculpture, decorative art pieces such as figurines, tapestries and bottles, and furniture.
The museum houses products from ancient Egypt, Greece and Rome. Medieval Renaissance, Baroque and Modern art are represented. Mysterious-looking pieces from the Orient sit placidly surveying 20th Century Americans as they tour the gallery.
Various museum pieces have been acquired by purchase and by gift. The University, the Endowment Association and such private sources as the William B. Thayer Memorial Collection, the Maurice Jones Collection, the Burnap Collection and others have added substantially to the gallery.
KU's museum is principally a "teaching" collection rather than an "exclusive" one, for the directors and curators have sought to obtain typical representations of each age and media rather than sensational high-priced exclusives.
"WE DON'T HAVE the Mona Lisa, the Last Supper, or the Bayeux Tapestry," Prof. Stokstad said. "But we do have a gallery in which the student and the art lover can find examples of nearly every mode and origin for about 2500 years."
The stolen Manet is valuable because it is the "first inspiration" of a second and final rendition now hanging at the Nelson Art Gallery in Kansas City, Mo. The painting, an oil on camvas, 23 by $17\frac{1}{2}$ inches, is a portrait of the daughter of Manet's physician. It was painted in 1878 when Manet was semi-paralyzed. It was a gift to KU from Charles Curry, Kansas City financier.
Many KU students of art and art history are from other states.
"The reputation of the gallery and the teaching staff is so good that I came to Kansas," one student commented.
Another said, "Various universities are noted for various strong points, and one of KU's strong points is its art department."
MANY FOREIGN students have visited the KU gallery and have seen centuries-old creations rendered in their homelands.
In recent years several distinguished authorities on art have visited the KU gallery and have spoken highly of its collection. Among them were the curator of the Victoria and Albert Museum of London, the curator of the Gallery of the Louvre of Paris and the director of the National Gallery at Washington, D.C.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Friday. Nov. 9, 1962
KU Student Hitchhikes Across Alaskan Tundra
By Philip G. Harrison As Told to Dennis Bowers
I looked out across the frozen tundra, scarcely comprehending the significance of the strange contrasts of the land stretched out before me. A land where forests stood almost flush against business district, a land yet to be conquered.
The forests extended northward a few hundred miles and then gave way to the land of permafrost.
I looked at the weather-beaten road sign. "Fairbanks . . . 610" Six hundred and ten miles to the next town. Quite a haul, especially hitch-hiking. Down the highway I saw a car approaching . . . the third one in an hour. I checked to see that my suitcase was keeping dry, sheltered on the leeward side of the road sign and stepped out on the road to make the universal hitch-hiking sign of the extended thumb.
THE CAR approached with some tourists. It was loaded to the hilt. The man peered out between strokes of the wipers and the kids looked out the fogged back window, their red noses pressed against the glass. They stuck their tongues out at me as the car swished on by the wet asphalt, and I knew my trip had begun.
The "new Alaska." Ketchikan, Juneau, Haines and Fairbanks share the characteristic "just built" appearance of many Alaskan cities. All these towns have, in the last 10 years, acquired the characteristics of civilization that we take for granted in the "lower 48," such as paved streets, and buildings of more than two stories. At the boat stops of Ketchikan, Juneau and Haines, I had an early glimpse of Alaskan prices. The high living cost is due not only to the cost of shipping almost all foods and manufactured goods into the area, but to the cost of labor. For although Alaska is the "last frontier" of America, many Alaskans believe labor unions have a stranglehold upon the economy and have forced the cost of labor to alarming heights, accelerating in that region the wage-price spiral.
Skagway is more of a reflection of the past than a promise of the future. It was developed and built during the great Klondike gold rush of 1898 and 1899. In the days of '98, when Skagway was the gateway to the Yukon, when gold prospectors by the thousands trooped over the White Pass in search of gold, and when Soapy Smith the notorious gambler and saloon-keeper, cheated them of their day-by-day findings, Skagway was a boom-town. The gold is gone now, and nearly one-third of the business buildings on the main street are vacant.
Whitehorse, from which I embarked on my tour of the northwest via good-natured drivers, is not unlike a small western Kansas town. It is the northern terminal of the Pass and Yukon railway.
**BUT FAIRBANKS** was the closest town . . . 610 miles away and there are none of what we would call highways between the two "cities."
That whole first day, I spent getting to the small town of Tok where I spent the night as guest of the truck driver who finally gave me a ride.
Getting a ride the next morning proved easy, as all cars proceeding up the Alaskan highway have to stop at the U.S. Customs and Immigration office at Tok. When someone would stop for customs inspection, I would step up and introduce myself. (I soon learned that the bitchhiker has much greater success when adding a wave and a smile to the usual gesture with the thumb.)
Fairbanks, the second largest city in Alaska, has only the business district streets paved, and those only recently. The city as a whole appears no larger than Ottawa, Kan.
I STAYED IN Fairbanks one "night" and was forced to take the Alaska railway to Anchorage via McKinley Park because the highway and a bridge had been washed out. The Alaska Railway is owned and operated at a loss by the Department of the Interior. Although it has all the equipment and characteristics of a larger railroad, it is operated
much on the same basis as an interurban trolley. One train goes each way every day. Many fishermen from Anchorage and Fairbanks take the train from the city to their favorite fishing holes, as it is the policy of the railroad to drop these sportsmen off and pick them up anywhere along the route.
As the dining car prices are very expensive, I carried a sack of groceries, as did most of the local people who took the train.
Like Fairbanks, Anchorage affords rich opportunities for the patrons of bars, with over 40 on the main street alone. While I was downtown taking in the sights, I met a truckdriver named John. We entered one of the lounges, and, after ordering, a lady, dressed in an evening gown and shoulder-length white gloves entered and sat down at the bar. John suggested that we move over and sit with her. As he was buying, I agreed. After a half hour's conversation between the two it became somewhat evident that she was slightly less than interested in the details of the eight flat tires that John had had since leaving Detroit. Shortly, a man in a suit approached her and asked her to dance. It was evident that John had lost the game, more evident when she left with the other gentleman.
ANCHORAGE is the most modern as well as the largest city in Alaska. It claims a population of 100,000, but if this is so, I find myself wondering where they all are. The business district is roughly the size of Lawrence, but because of the primeval surroundings, there is still the curious mixture of rural and urban.
A good example of this is Mike Baker. He caught my eye with his full, white beard, waxed mustaches, skullcap, and jolly expression. I did not, however, give him much thought until I encountered him the following evening at the soda fountain of a drug store. A slide rule, protruding from the bib pocket of his overalls first struck me as strange. Conversing with him, I was astounded at the incongruity of his speech and appearance. Although he appeared to be an old sourdough, his topics of conversation wandered from political philosophy to literature. I spent most of the next few days with Mike. He was hungry for discussion. We discussed every book I had read, and every course I had taken in prep school and at the University. There was nothing I had read that he had not, and nothing I could discourse upon with which he was not more well-versed than I. Mike had had no formal education beyond the eighth grade. His originality of thought and intellect were Newtonian. Mike, although 51, has the hope of earning enough money as a machinery operator to acquire higher education and become a farm machinery design consultant.
Hitchhiking out of Anchorage, I thought somewhat anprehensively of the 1,000-mile trip that lay before me to the next town of Haines. From the outskirts of Anchorage, I almost immediately got a ride for 20 miles with a construction worker.
The traffic the next day was scarce. I waited more than 8½ hours for a ride. With only three cars coming by in an hour, most of them tourists loaded to the brim. I was somewhat doubtful as to exactly when I was going to obtain a ride. After finishing a book I had started, I dug a hole by the roadside and erected a sign saying "Tok." which was my next destination. When I became hungry, I took a cardboard out of one of my laundered shirts and made a sign saying "food" and fastened it to my post. Shortly afterward, an army convoy of three fuel trucks stopped and gave me some ration. Finally a family from Ellison Air Force Base stopped and gave me a ride to Tok.
I have discovered that it is the duty of a hitchhiker to entertain the children if he is riding with a family. In some cases this is not unpleasant, but in the latter case, it was rather tedious. I traveled only 110 miles that day.
WE ARRIVED in Haines, Alaska,
on washboard pavement, as Alaska's roads are almost all gravel. Haines is a large commercial fishing port, and I spent many interesting hours, including one night on a small fishing boat owned and operated by a man named Edsel. I met Edsel when he was weaving together two sections of webbing, attaching corkline and leadline to make a new net. He referred to "the Scriptures" as the principal authority upon which he based his arguments. I had breakfast on Edsel's boat the next morning, and needless to say, we had smoked salmon.
During July and August the salmon come in from the sea to go up the fresh water streams to spawn. The streams are unbelievably full of them. One could almost reach out with his hand and catch one. I don't believe it would be possible to wade across a stream without stepping on one.
Just outside of Haines is Klukwan, the chief village of the Chikkat Indians. I hitched a ride out to the village on the mail delivery car and walked the length of the village. Everything about the village was in bad repair; few of the Indians spoke English, and the whole atmosphere seemed to be one of sedentary existence. The Indians were very secretive about their belongings, and the whereabouts of their dugout canoes was a secret, so I was unable to see them.
One Indian I got to know rather well was Paul Phillips, who had attended Haskell Institute for three years (1957-1959) and, simultaneously, had taken electrical engineering courses at KU night school. He also worked as projectionist for two years in the Granada and Varsity theaters.
IT IS NOT unusual for friends to go into a bar and roll dice for the cost of the drinks or for a customer to roll against the bartender. If the customer wins, the drink is free, but if the bartender wins, the cost is double.
On the afternoon of the 26th day of August, we went up an inlet to see a pair of glaciers that emptied into the sea. We blew short blasts on the whistle, causing large pieces of ice to break loose from the glaciers.
On board, I sat with an 86-year-old man by the name of Kenneth Bass. Bass was in the Klondike Gold Rush of '98 and had made the White Pass run several times. He told me how he foolishly gambled away all his money in Ketchikan and arrived in Skagway broke. He contracted to deliver U.S.
(Continued on page 10)
Bell's
everything that is best in music
at
Bell's
The Only Complete Music Store in Douglas County
perhaps you need
A Grand Piano
A Spinet Piano
A Used Piano
A Radio
A Phonograph
A Radio Phonograph Combination
A Hi Fidelity Phonograph
A Tape Recorder
A Television Set
Phonograph Records
Sheet Music-Popular and Standard
Books and Studies
"MUSIC - The Gift That Keeps on Giving"
You Will Find Courteous Efficient Service The Year Around
at
BELL MUSIC CO. 925 Massachusetts Street
Bell's
Read and Use Kansan Classifieds
DIXON'S announces:
Flavor Crisp Chicken
-the finest chicken you've ever eaten. Fresh to finish in
only 7 minutes
Call us ahead and your order will be packed to take with you (at no extra charge)
DIXON'S Drive In Restaurant
2500 West 6th
Miles Ahead in Quality & Service
VI 3-7446
Minutes from the Campus
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
WELCOME ALUMS
From the Car Dealers of Lawrence
CADILLAC - PONTIAC
COMPLETE MOTOR SERVICE ON ALL MAKES AND MODELS
OAKLEAF STANLEY Motors, Inc. 1040 VERMONT
It's Easy to Trade at Winters
Ship Winter Chevrolet
Winter Oldsmobile-Rambler
When Better Cars Are Built Buick Will Build Them
Parker Buick, Inc. 700 N. Hamp.
Service Parts Body Shop ON DODGE - CHRYSLER - PLYMOUTH
Jim Clark Motors
623 MASS.
FORD - FALCON - THUNDERBIRD
Genuine Ford Parts & Service New & Used Cars & Trucks Fine Body & Paint Work
University Ford Sales 714 VERMONT
BEAT NEBRASKA
социальной академии МГРНМАЯ 79 [аналогно it] аспекта их е в
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962
Arts Critic Must Say More Than 'Like It' Or 'Don't Like It
By Terry Murphy
Every person who reads a book, views a movie, or merely sightseees through a museum or a foreign country, is a practicing critical reviewer.
But the critic who appraises any art object with the purpose of informing others as to its relative worth cannot fulfill his obligations with a casual or flippant "I liked it," or "I didn't like it."
How does a person prepare to become a knowledgeable critic whose opinions express a fair measurement of the work's value? The problem cannot be solved by any pat formula.
A PERSON who is trained and skilled in a particular art has certain advantages of sophistication which an outsider would not have. But, this poses problems such as tempting the insider to pontificate or write esotericly.
Obviously, to appreciate what the
artist, author, architect, et al., is attempting to express requires at least a cursory familiarity with the working of the craft under consideration.
It seems the best preparation — and it is one open to all — is familiarization through exposure coupled with reading of academic treatments and methods.
Even if a critic favors the impressionistic philosophy of criticism, he should know from experience what the standards of excellence are within a field.
But, perhaps the greatest preparation for the work of being a critic is the endless challenge to retain an open mind. Personal dislikes or pleasures can color the criticism — and each work deserves to be measured by its own standards of excellence.
ANOTHER HELPFUL device is to study the work of critics who are highly esteemed. The methods and
approaches used by a professional can suggest new means to the amateur.
And a critic should be aware of new developments as well as established classical forms that are already recognized as satisfactory vehicles of art expression.
Of all the preparations, perhaps exposure to the works of art, and an active interest would be the two most essential factors.
And of course, it is also necessary always to remember that you write for the appreciation of a widely diverse audience. What would not be appreciated by the critic might well be appreciated by a reader.
And this person is the principal reason for writing an evaluation of any work of art.
Better'n Sinking Fund
DALLAS, Tex. — (UPI) — Nameplate on a boat docked at a nearby lake: "Floating Debt."
Robinson Gym Remains Same After Almost 58 Years
Back in 1882, a hardy and persistent band of athletic students won the right to sweat on University property.
Chancellor James Marvin objected to such frivolity as gymnastics at KU, but finally agreed to let the students work with bar bells, Indian clubs and parallel bars in the basement of Fraser Hall.
THE NEED FOR improved facilities finally became too pressing to be ignored, and in a 1904 Chancellor Frank Strong obtained a $100,000
appropriation from the Kansas legislature to build a gymnasium.
The only remaining problem was where to put it.
At that time, the entire south side of Mt. Oread was owned by Frank B. Lawrence, nephew of ex-Governor Charles Robinson. Robinson had willed the 40 acre area to Lawrence.
And so the University had to buy the Hill climbed daily by students in order to build a place where students could exercise.
KU SPORTS
on
DIAL KLWN 1320
7:30 a.m. Daily Sports Shorts
5:00 Today In the Enemy Camp
5:20 Tom Hedrick Sports
HELPING TO BUILD A GREATER KU
(1984)
This architect's drawing of Watson Library shows the additions left and right 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.
Over the years we have been proud to help KU grow by constructing the following buildings:
Corbin Hall
North College Hall
Lindley Hall
Malott Hall
Hoch Auditorium
Union Building Additions
Fowler Shops
Snow Hall Addition
Watkins Memorial Hospital
J. R. Pearson Hall
Hashinger Hall
B. A. GREEN CONSTRUCTION CO. INC.
Cecil B. Green Ernest P. Haas Patrick D. Green
Robert J. Green Basil A. Green
1207 IOWA, LAWRENCE, KANSAS P.O. BOX 25 TELEPHONE VI 3-5277
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 5
WELCOME ALUMS
11
Filling Prescriptions Is Our Specialty
RANEY
DRUG STORES
"Where Pharmacy Is a Profession"
Hear
7
Hear KU Football and the JACK MITCHELL SHOW Dial KLWN 1320
VINCENT'S Home Furnishings
Carpeting Furniture
Appliances Electronics
720-26 Mass. VI 3-2011
57
15
Edmonds Food Store and Frozen Food Lockers Rent a Locker - And Save 1903 Mass. VI 3-6011
The Lawrence Coca-Cola Bottling Company 646 Conn.
SHARK TANK
Coca-Cola
119
BOTTLES
THIS IS A NEW GAME.
HUSK the HUSKERS
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Fridav. Nov. 9.1962
SUA Provides Much Social Opportunity
The Student Union Activities (SUA) offers the KU student an opportunity to further his social, recreational and cultural life, said John Neal, Hutchinson senior and president of the SUA.
This year as we execute our philosophy we are planning concerts and a feature speaker series. A jazz festival and contest is planned for the spring of 1964.
FRANK BURGE, director of the Kansas Union said, "SUA is a dynamic organization doing a big and important job for the students."
Burge said the SUA had always been closely tied to the Union in expansion and progress.
SUA is an arm of the student union, as the name implies, and most if its activity centers around the Union. It affects both the city of Lawrence and people associated with the University.
Burge said he did not know what the Union would do without SUA to represent and carry out the students' ideas.
THE KANSAS Union was finished in 1928 and the SUA was organized about the same time.
TODAY THE SUA is composed of over 600 students who are interested in participating in SUA projects. Today, the SUA is governed by a board composed of ten chairmen and four officers.
Officers are Neal, president; Breon Mitchell, Salina junior, vice-president; Bruce Null, Grand Island, Neb, junior, treasurer, and Melinda Hall, Coffeyville senior, secretary.
CHAIRMEN ARE Ruth Mover. Shawnee Mission senior; Bob Mourier, Creendale, Mo., junior; Dave Cassell, Bartlesville, Okla., junior; Phil McKnight, Wichita senior; Tom Ericson, Leavenworth senior; Suzi Reynolds, Wellington senior; Nancy Lindecum, Prairie Village junior; Sonra Ewald, Kansas City, Mo.
senior, and Holly Walters, Prairie Village senior.
Each chairman is responsible for a certain area of operations while the board itself is responsible to the Kansas Union Operating Board.
The Kansas Union operating board is composed of representatives of the ASC,union staff, faculty,alumni association and SUA board.
THE OPERATING board is also responsible for working out and approving the budget of the SUA.
According to Neal, most of the events sponsored by the SUA are free and when there is a charge it is kept as low as possible.
He said charges for events are only necessary when expenses are high. In determining prices, SUA strives only to meet the total cost of the programs.
THE ACTIVITIES of SUA include forums, dances, receptions, concerts, exhibits, special events such as the SUA Carnival, tournaments, and films.
This year the SUA Carnival will return between $1,500 to $7,000 in profits to the living groups which participated
SUA present annually the Homecoming and Relay dances, spring concerts, election night parties, Chancellor's Reception, the activities carnival, and the traditions dance.
Carrots Won't Cure Blindness
CINCINNATI, Ohio — (UPI) — Lots of carrots or carrot juice won't cure night blindness or cataracts. Drs. Ira A. Abrahamson Sr. and Ira A. Abrahamson Jr., of Cincinnati, caution.
The dermatologists, reporting in the Archives of Ophthalmology, said carrots and carrot juice, while not the most expensive therapy, is the most useless. What's more, drink enough carrot juice and you'll get hypercarotenemia, a yellowish-orange discoloration of the skin.
Pineapples Grow in St. Louis, But Need Constant Care
ST. LOUIS — (UPI) — Florist George O. Schoenelau's hobby is growing plants not native to this area, like big pineapples.
Schoenau, 65, has grown a dozen pineapples, starting them in his
Then he planted them in a mixture of peat moss, sand and lava stone and added some fertilizer.
greenhouse 18 months ago. He bought a dozen fresh pineapples last year and cut off the tops.
"In May, I put them in 10-inch pots and moved them outside," he said.
In time, Schoenlau had his pine-apples.
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds
Tell everybody to
take their car to
FRITZ Co.
It's the best service
station in town
Welcome Old Grads — Stop in and Say "Howdy"
FRITZ CO.
8th & New Hampshire — VI 3-4321
Open Thursday 'til 8:30 p.m.
DOWNTOWN — NEAR EVERYTHING
CITIES SERVICE
CITIES SERVICE
CITIES SERVICE
SANDY'S THRIFT AND SWIFT DRIVE-IN
SANDY'S
THRIFT AND SWIFT DRIVE-IN
2120 W. 9th
ACROSS FROM HILLCREST
HAMBURGERS 15c FRENCH FRIES 10
2120 W. 9th
Sandy's
HANDBURGERS - SHAKES
HAMBURGERS 15c
Friday. Nov. 9. 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
100% BACKING FOR KU FROM
miller hall...
---
...pearson hall
jolliffe hall...
... grace pearson hall
carruth o'leary hall.
...battenfeld hall
j. r. pearson hall...
---
---
...watkins hall
douthart hall ...
图
... hashinger hall
corbin hall...
---
JAYHAWKS WIN!!
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962
Flasks, Decanters, Figures Highlight Bottle Display
By Nilofer Ahmed
An object from the past may often be viewed in many different ways—as an objet d'art, a fragment of history, or the embodiment of a social custom.
This was applicable to a collection of bottles from an earlier era displayed at the University's Museum of Art. The exhibition concluded Oct. 28 after a two-month showing.
The least attractive, but perhaps the most important historically, was the group of bottles classed as "Flasks." Used for liquor, and probably as common in their age as the present-day Coke bottle, these flasks often carried illustrations and inscriptions relating to some important topical event or honoring a person of distinction.
Flasks decorated with likenesses of Gen. Taylor, Gen. La Fayette, George Washington and Jenny Lind were among those on display, as also one with the interesting legend, "Success to the Railway" — hailing the meeting of United States railroads from the East and the West.
In sharp contrast to the flasks, made purely for utilitarian purposes, were the highly ornamental decanters, ruby-stained, dark blue light blue, of opaque and clear glass. Many were adorned with intricate overlay.
THIS METHOD of ornamenting glass vessels originated with the early Roman glass-makers. A glass design of contrasting color was moulded to form a bas-relief and was overlaid on the glass vessel so that the design stood out. The glass
was then reheated until the two were fused together.
Other ornamental bottles on display were those classed as "Figures." Many of these artistic, elaborately fashioned bottles were evidently designed as perfume containers for aristocratic toilet-tables. Typical of these bottles was one in the shape of a woman holding a pitcher, the pitcher forming the receptacle.
Bottles for whiskey, for bitters and for use by apothecaries, designated "Store Bottles," formed another highly interesting part of the collection.
In this group was the well-known Booz's Whiskey bottle, the name believed by some to have been the origin of the word "booze" (a conjecture that, however, finds no support in the dictionary where the origin of "booze" is traced to the Middle English "boussen" which, in turn, is stated to have been derived from the Middle Flemish "busen," to tipple).
AN ELOQUENT commentary on some of the ways and values of the 19th century was provided by the many bitters bottles in this part of the collection. The drinking of bitters has been described as something of a mania in the 19th century.
Containing a high percentage of alcohol, bitters were peddled as "medicines" and effectively appeased the consciences of many who regarded taking alcoholic drinks, as such, to be a sin. Authorities on the subject tell us that though consciences were quietened sufficiently to make the contents acceptable, empty bitters bottles were often broker,
to destroy incriminatory evidence!
Such hypocrisy, we are told, was
what led to the disappearance of
bitters bottles, so that not many are
found today.
An uncommon and remarkable object which, though not a bottle, was displayed as part of the collection, was a glass cane. Literary-minded spectators may have recalled that such a cane was the subject of G. K. Chesterton's essay "The Glass Walking Stick."
"When we have given up valuing life for every other reason," Chesterton wrote, "we can still value it, like the glass stick, as a curiosity. For the universe is like the glass stick in this, at any rate: it is unique."
Illinois To Honor Fifth State Capito
SPRINGFIELD — (UPI) Illinois' fifth capitol in Springfield was sold to local Sagamon county in 1869 when the state decided to build a larger building.
The two-story domed building turned out not to be large enough for the county either so the entire building was lifted in the air and another floor was built at ground level.
The building is now back into the hands of the state, for the development as a state shrine.
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
'Rock Chalk, Jayhawk, KU' Among Many KU Traditions
By Jan Piekarski
"Rock Chalk, Jayhawk, KU!"
Rock Chalk, Jayhawk, KU. This school yell, selected the most famous college yell in America, is one of the oldest KU traditions.
The Rock Chalk yell was originally the Science Club yell with the words, "Rah, Rah, Jayhawk, KSU". Later, with the discovery of chalk strata on Mt. Oread, the Science Club changed the wording from "Rah Rah" to "Rock Chalk" — and besides Rock Chalk rhymed with Jayhawk.
"Crimson and the Blue," written by Prof. George Barlow Penny, was adapted from the old English folk song, "Annie Lisle." It was intended only to be used on a concert tour, and was replaced with a new alma mater upon the group's return. Several songs have been suggested since 1891, including one by Fred Waring, but "Crimson and the Blue" has remained the official alma mater.
The traditional KU colors, crimson and blue, were selected in 1891 after it was announced that maize and sky blue would represent the University. The bolder, brighter crimson and blue were selected after the KU football team defeated Missouri that year and inspired the alma mater, "Crimson and the Blue."
With the exception of a few changes of words in the verse, "Crimson and the Blue" is much the same as when it was first heard.
Order Personalized Greeting Cards Book Nook 1021 Mass.
Another symbol of KU is the soon-to-be-replaced landmark. Fraser Hall (formerly University Hall) named in honor of John Fraser, first chancellor of KU. Fraser Hall, opened in 1872, was the first building on the now sprawling KU campus.
Fraser Hall is known, not only by KU students, but by the people of America as the place where Horace Greeley made his famous speech "Go West, young man, go West!" At the turn of the century, Fraser Hall was the cite of the annual Maypole Fight, a skirmish between men of the various classes who tried to raise the flag of their class in front of Fraser Hall.
Peanut Curing
COLLEGE STATION, Texas — (UPI) — Learning to control temperature and humidity are key factors in curing peanuts artificially, an agricultural engineer at Texas A&M College says.
W. S. Allen says air entering the peanut drying bin should not exceed a temperature of 95 degrees Fahrenheit and relative humidity not less than 55 per cent.
Portraits of Distinction
Artist
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
Welcome Home!!!
Welcome Home!!!
COACH HOUSE
SCORING RIGHT DOWN THE LINE!
everything for the sophisticated coed!
PERT FOR PLAY CASUAL FOR CAMPUS
DEVASTATING FOR DATES
• KANSAS CITY
• ON THE CAMPUS, LAWRENCE
• DES MOINES
COACH HOUSE
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 9
Come On Jayhawks Shuck Those Huskers
KU
KU
928 Mass.
AUDIOIRONICS
RADIO TV PARTS-PA SYSTEMS-HIGH FIDELITY
VI 3-8500
Frank's Furniture
808 Mass. VI 3-1389
Ramsey's Decorating Service
818 Mass. VI 3-4075
Daniels Jewelry
914 Mass. VI 3-2572
Brien & Bales Plumbing, Wiring & Heating Co.
304 W. 6th VI 3-2575
Page 19
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962
Physical Therapy Lab Treats More Than Student's Aches and Pains
The physical therapy department—the only such clinic in Douglas County—is one of the many divisions within Watkins Hospital designed to provide KU students with the best possible medical care.
Miss Betty J. Sanders, assistant professor of physical medicine and head of the physical therapy department, defined the nature and purpose of physical therapy;
"Physical therapy is part of the medical profession which treats the disabled and the handicapped by the use of physical agents.
"Physical therapy is concerned with any disability which has impaired an individual's physical function and attempts to restore as much of the physical function as possible."
PHYSICAL THERAPY, said Prof. Sanders, does more than treat ailments such as stiff necks, sprained backs, and broken limbs. More importantly, it is concerned with the treatment of afflictions such as cerebral palsy, multiple sclerosis, arthritis, and amputation.
The KU physical therapy department is fully accredited and is staffed with two qualified physical therapists ready to serve the many patients referred to them by their physicians.
The physical therapy devices include deep heat machines, infrared lamps, hydro therapy, electrical stimulation, ultra sound, exercise, massage, and mechanical equipment such as pulleys and bicycles.
THE DEPARTMENT treats about 25 to 30 patients a day, Prof. Sanders said. And of these, 15 to 20 are KU students.
Prof. Sanders holds the unique position of physical therapist and faculty adviser-instructor. She said that approximately 80 students have expressed desire to enroll in the physical therapy program.
Students in physical therapy, after completing preparatory courses, begin professional course study the second semester of their junior year and transfer to the Medical Center in Kansas City to complete their studies. The students receive a B.S. degree in physical therapy upon graduation.
Student Hitchhikes in Alaska-
(Continued from page 2)
mail into the interior by dog sled. Although not necessarily a great "attraction," the people of this part of the continent are perhaps the most memorable part of a visitor's trip. These people are much more friendly and accommodating than in the "lower 48" — not in the manner that one would expect from the bell captain at the Statler, but rather in the manner of a close friend. The
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
Having a Party?
Going to serve a meal?
Let us help you!
BIG BUY
VI 3-8225
teenagers seem more mature, relaxed and friendly. The children are especially friendly, in what one might even call an aggressive manner. In Skagway, where everyone knows everyone else, someone not recognized must be a visitor. The greeting of "Hi, I'm so-and-so; who are you?" became familiar.
Portraits of Distinction
摄影师
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
STATE
BANK
Our New Bank and Drive-up Facilities on 9th Street Between Kentucky & Tennessee
DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK
Lawrence's Progressive Bank
Welcome Grads to Homecoming
Homecoming Greetings to Kansas University: We are proud to grow with Lawrence and KU. We would like to extend a grateful thank-you to the Students of Kansas University for their patronage.
Friday. Nov. 9. 1962
University Daily Kansan
Page 11
THE 1962-63 JAYHAWKERS
BASKETBALL PREVIEW
Friday, November 9
I am very happy to have been a part of this remarkable team. I will be remembered fondly by all who knew me.
Allen Field House (TIP-OFF TIME 7:00 P.M.)
Freshmen vs. Varsity
Coach Ted Owens will have 6'-10" (plus) Walter Wesley to spearhead his talented and tall frosh squad.
(1962-63 ID Cards Will Admit Students to this Game)
1963
Nine returning lettermen give Coach Harp fine depth and experience, led by Guard Nolen Ellison (averaged 18.1 points per game last year) and George Unseld at the pivot.
PROBABLE STARTING LINEUP
F HARRY GIBSON 6'3" Jr.
F LOYE SPARKS 6'4" Sr.
C GEORGE UNSELD 6'7" Soph.
G NOLEN ELLISON 6'1" Sr.
G JIM DUMAS 6'1" Sr.
F FRED CHANA ... 6'6"
F RINEY LOCHMANN ... 6'5"
C WALTER WESLEY ... 6'10"
G SHERMAN STIMLEY ... 5'11"
G DEL LEWIS ... 6'1"
A Visitors Welcome to Homecoming 1962
On behalf of the entire athletic department staff, I extend a heavy and cordial welcome to every Alumnus, Parent, Student, and Visitor who will be on our campus this weekend.
We sincerely hope that your visit to our campus is an enjoyable one and that you will return again soon.
M. J. S.
Varsity-Freshman Basketball Friday, Nov. 9----7:00 p.m. Allen Field House
ARTHUR C. "DUTCH" LONBORG Director of Athletics The University of Kansas
HOMECOMING ATHLETIC EVENTS
Kansas-Nebraska Football Game Saturday, Nov. 10----1:30 p.m. Memorial Stadium
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Friday. Nov. 9, 1962
Geology Research Indicates Antarctica Was Tropical
Today it is a barren wasteland covered by many feet of snow and ice and supports only the meagerest plant life. But, over a million years ago, Antarctica was a tropical region which flowered with abundant plant life.
The proof of this little-known and perplexing fact is one of the projects that are currently being worked on by KU geology graduate students.
THE EXPERIMENT consists primarily of measuring Antarctic marble samples in a machine that charts
Dr. Edward J. Zeller, professor of geology, and Luciano B. Ronca, assistant instructor, have traveled twice to Antarctica, in 1958 and 1959. Studying thermoluminescence, the earth's accumulation of light, they are trying to determine how long Antarctica has been cold. The discovery of petrified wood and coal layers in this area has proved that the South Pole has not always been glaciated.
the thermoluminescence, or light. When these samples are heated, a "photo-tube" plots the light intensity on a graph. This intensity, worked out in a mathematical formula, can give the length of time a sample has been at a certain degree below zero degrees centigrade. In this manner the experimenters may compare rocks from all parts of the world.
As Mr. Ronca enthusiastically explained in his thesis, it has become evident that scientists may be able to further discover exact times of prehistoric ages by this method of light measurement. Mr. Ronca said the tropical condition in Antarctica probably occurred one to two million years ago.
ANOTHER AREA of endeavor was explained by the Mrs. Laura Turner. This is the forthcoming three-month Puerto Rican trip by her husband, Mort D. Turner. Mr. Turner was chief geologist for the Puerto Rican government for four years
He has been given a grant by the Office of Naval Research for strategic field mapping in the San Sebastian area.
Mr. Turner will leave in November for the Central American country, continuing work on his Ph.D. in geology. Dr. Frank Foley, professor of geology, plans to join him this winter for two weeks. Mr. Turner has also traveled to Antarctica with the National Science Foundation.
Another busy graduate student is Max Reams, who plans a career in teaching. He is attempting to determine the process of chemical solutions which have formed large, vertical openings in dissolved limestone. Asked this was of importance to geologists, Dr. Wakefield Dort, professor of geology, explained that these holes may contain petroleum or rich ore deposits. Mr. Reams is presently conducting field studies in Mammoth Cave, Kentucky.
The statue, standing before Green Hall, is inscribed, "In Memory of James Woods Green, 1842-1919. Forty Years Dean of the School of Law: Erected by Those Who Loved Him."
'Uncle' Jimmy Green-A Memory in Brass
Jimmy Green is given, by biographer Cyrus Crane, the credit for promoting the organization of KU Law School and for working later to get a law school building.
His sister-in-law, Miss Kate Stephens, claims that not Green, but his father-in-law, Judge Stephens, is responsible for the organization of the School of Law. Judge Stephens was offered, but declined, the
Jimmy Green's hand rests on the shoulder of a young student, modeled after Alfred C. Alford, the first KU student slain in the Spanish-American War.
WHAT KIND of a man was "Uncle" Jimmy Green? His knowledge of law, his ability, and his simplicity and clarity of exposition gained him admiration.
But the basis of his strength was his love for the students around him.
position of dean of the school, she says.
At the June, 1924, unveiling of Daniel Chester French's statue, Crane restated the purpose of the statue.
"WE LEAVE IT with the earnest hope, with the heartfelt prayer, that it may be an inspiration to lofty ideals of helpfulness and service; that it may reiterate the old, yet off so forgotten truth, that learning culture and knowledge are vain and barren things unless transfused with human kindness and sympathy . . . and above all, that it may keep in living memory throughout the timeless future, that wise, tender and manly soul, whom we lovingly, gratefully — even reverently — called our 'Uncle Jimmy Green.'"
We Rent Most Anything
ANDERSON RENTAL
812 N. H.
Co-ops Make America Strong!
Co-ops make America's farms strong and healthy. The strength of America is reflected in the strength of her farms.
At Cooperative Farm Chemicals Association, we are constantly searching for better methods to develop new and more efficient fertilizers to make America's farms stronger and more productive.
COLORADO
Co-ops Make America Strong!
Co-operative Farm Chemicals Association
Lawrence, Kansas
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962University Daily Kansan
Page 13
Felix Moos Was Born in Germany Raised in China
By Carol Lathrop
An Indian skull, which stares from its place on the desk, and a Japanese autumn scene, which hangs on the opposite wall, decorate the office of Felix Moos, instructor of anthropology.
These decorations are symbolic of the study of man and his culture. This study comprises the interests of Moos, like other anthropologists, concerns himself with man's physiques, with his societies, and with his languages and cultures.
Mr. Moos obtained the Indian skull while doing his graduate work in the department of anthropology and the Far East Institute at the University of Washington in Seattle. Following this, he served in the Korean War from 1950 to 1953.
MR. MOOS HAS had several opportunities to observe first-hand the languages and cultures of different societies. He was born in Germany, but lived in China when he was a small boy. In 1949 he came to America, where he took his undergraduate work at Ohio State University and the University of Cincinnati.
He attended the University of Tokyo from 1958 to 1960 under a Fulbright grant, and then taught for a year in Japan for the Far East Division of the University of Maryland. In 1961 he joined the KU faculty.
Education becomes a status symbol which impowers anyone who holds a bachelors degree. This is, he felt, the misuse of education.
Rather, education should be one phase of a person's development as an individual.
MR. MOOS strongly feels that education is the means of bridging the gaps of cultural changes. He also feels that many people use education as the end instead of a means in obtaining a goal.
Mr. Moos firmly believes that mass education establishes a system of communication which permits a fuller, richer life.
KU Students Enjoy Pizza
We all know what the "student's favorite beverage" is, but how many of us have bothered to stop to think about the "students favorite Sunday evening meal?"
By Jean Bowans
One bright, cheerful day. I stopped several people on campus and posed the question: "What do you eat for Sunday evening meal?"
WITH THE exception of one student who informed me that he always flew to New York and ate steak, I found that most KU students prefer that "baked Italian dish consisting of a breadlike crust covered with a spiced preparation of tomatoes and cheese."
Because pizza reigns as king of the campus in the food popularity race, there are several business enterprises vying for the privilege of setting the steaming delicacy before the students.
THE MEAT order (hamburger and sausage) for one establishment which is well-attended by University personnel will often be as much as 125 pounds for a Friday, Saturday or Sunday. On weekdays, the order drops to around thirty pounds.
If you happened to work at this pizzeria, you would soon learn that an average of 160 "pies" are made on a week day and 1,200 may be cooked during a weekend, that the ovens are kept heated all the time at 600 degrees, and that it takes about eight minutes to get a perfectly-toasted pizza.
Armed Truce
ST. LOUIS — (UPI) — Mrs. Carl Borrensen has three pets in the house — a cat, dog, and a squirrel, all keeping their distance from each other.
The "class" of '62 is in TOWN & COUNTRY SHOES
Wigwam Black/Brown
Brown Kid
Apron tie Black Kid
"Bunny Blacks" Black Kid
Sizes AAAA to B to 10 $8.95-$9.95
Royal College Shop
837 Mass.
VI 3-4255
Page 14
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Nov. 9, 1962
Politicians' Image Changes With Parties
By Jackie Stern
The image of politicians on a national level is one that has changed considerably and favorably since the turn of the century. Not only has this happened nationally, but the KU politician has also made a favorable metamorphosis.
Around the turn of the century the politician was stereotyped as a man whose plastered smile and baby kissing was a cover-up for ward-heeling politics based on patronage. At KU the political emphasis was formerly centered around ballot snatching and generally using campus elections to further certain small groups.
TODAY THE Boss Tweed approach to politics is in the background and the creation of the image is the theme for success. On campus the ballot stuffers are now thinking of ways they can improve the student status and conditions.
To get a picture of the KU politician in evolution it is best to start with the formation of the first political party — the Men's Student Council.
In that year, 1909, the campus was sparked with a political fervor that resulted in fights between fraternity and non-fraternity factions.
The conflict became so prevalent that in 1920 the University Senate withdrew much of MSC's power.
WHILE TONED down, these factional fights have not disappeared. The Greeks and the independents have been opposed for most of the 52 years of University politics.
The impact of national politics on campus government was seen early in 1912 when pro-Wilson, proRoosevelt and pro-Taft clubs appeared on campus.
The pro-Taft group formed the Society of the Pachacamae which adopted the rising sun as its emblem. It was to remain the dominant party for 43 years.
PACH WAS never known to observe clean politics in its years of existence. In 1935 campus debate it was compared to the Tammany Tiger of New York fame. Other political parties accused Pach of poll blocking, double and triple voting, ballot stuffing and booth peaking,
The first party to oppose Pachacamac was Black Mask, a Greek-independent coalition which lasted from 1915-26. Chet Shore organized the "Dollar and Cents" party in 1922. He used a three-piece jazz band, salted peanuts and Eskimo pies in his price-slashing campaign. His plank rested on raising the price of Bull Durham, lowering the price of Camels and establishing a rest and smoking room for men. Pach won the election anyway.
IN 1935 the Progressive Student Government League (PSGL) was formed and won the spring elections. It lost the next three to Pach, tied one and lost three after that.
Pach won five elections in a row after the war before the First Actually Construct Ticket Society (FACTS) won in 1951. Pach never really recovered from this defeat although they won by a slim majority in 1952.
Three parties competed with the Pachacamac in the 30's. The Oread party was composed of anti-Greeks while the Kayhawk Club consisted of anti-Pach independents. The KU progressives "were pledged to the interests of the non-fraternity man."
The Allied Greek-Independent Party (AGI) and the Party of Greek Organizations (POGO) split Pach which went out of existence in 1852.
TODAY PACH exists as a secret society which exerts influence over the Greeks.
POGO disbanded in 1957 after some ballot box stuffing was discovered. In 1958 Vox Populi was organized by Jim Austin, Bob Linn and Dave Wilson. It swept the spring elections by winning the student body presidency and 17 seats on the Council.
Early in 1959, AGI disbanded and for a time KU was a one-party campus.
Fred Morrison, Charles Menghini and Mike Thomas organized
Walking Around KU Takes Many Forms
By Helen Coburn
Walking is one of the simplest and more available forms of exercise. If you attend Kansas University and live at the bottom of the hill on 14th street, walking is more than available. It is forced upon you.
Have you ever noticed some of the ways your classmates take this walk? Here are some examples:
The elephant walk, going slow and easy. One foot is slowly picked up and slowly set down in front of the other with a deliberate following of the body.
The cowboy stride with legs bowed and feet set far apart. The feet are swung alternately in an arc, with the arms swinging in unison.
BOBBING SAM uses less exertion as he places all of his weight on flat feet, then with a bobbing bounce, he raises his body to a quick shift of weight to the ball of his foot. At the same time he puts the other foot forward, ready for the one-two action of the forward uplift.
"THE LEANING TOWER of Pisa" keeps her body parallel with the hill as she faces the walk. Her feet are at an angle, sliding steadily upward without disturbing the forward thrust of the body.
"ZOOMBIE ZOE walks with his body still and erect. He swings his legs straight from his hips and plants his feet firmly on the walk, giving a jerky robot action up the hill.
TWISTY TESS uses a modified version of the twist. This girl swings first the right hip, leg and foot forward a step, followed by a repeat of the left hip, leg and foot. Ah one — ah two — ah one
PUMPER JOE holds his body erect also. But Joe uses a rapid pumping action, jacks his knees up and down as he quickly ascends or descends the hill. His arms echo the same pumping up and down motion, leaving his trunk the one quiet connecting part of his body.
— ah two — On up the hill she goes.
MOUNTAN CLIMBER LIZA turns her feet at a slightly inward angle. Leaning forward, she digs her toes into the ground or against the walk. Then with face set in grim lines, she steadily gains footage on her upward climb. For added balance, she holds her arms ahead of her in a slightly bent position, hands outspread ready to break any slin or fall.
SWAYING JANE tries to lessen the steep upgrade. She does this by weaving from one side of the walk to the other as she goes up hill. This tends to relieve the strain of the straight upward grade.
Many of the same movements are used going down the hill, with the exception that they are in reverse. For example:
MULEY JONES, clinching one fist and taking a firm grip on his brief case with the other, leans backward parallel with the hill. He throws a leg forward, digging in his heels in a balky breaking action. Then he throws the other leg forward in the same action. Balk, step, balk, step. On down the hill he goes.
BUMPER JACK lets the downward pull of the hill have control. He leans backward while the feet and legs jaggle loosely ahead, propelling the body jerkily downhill. One by one the parade goes on. And who is to say which is the most successful way to conquer that hill?
the University Party in 1960 and once again two-party politics were back on campus. In the '60 fall elections, the University Party emerged from its first election with 10 seats on the Council while VOX added six with Vox still retaining its majority.
THE UNIVERSITY PARTY has stood up well over its three-year
predecessor — Vox Populi. Last spring the vote narrowed to a 10-8 Vox margin on the Council.
Once again debates, strategy meetings, car pools and election propaganda have infiltrated the campus.
Despite the usual conflicts, the two political parties have contributed greatly to the University. Besides rallying interest in political
activities, Vox Populi and the University Party have been the primary force behind many reforms for the benefit of the student. Among these are the development of the Student Health program, extension of closing hours at the library, stop day, increase of street lights in women's residence areas, and reserved seating at football games.
'33 Homecoming Highlighted By Torchlight Parade, Rally
(This is a reprint from the Nov.
26, 1933, Daily Kansan.)
Color, brilliant pageant, and spectacular setting, will mark the second annual Homecoming Torchlight Parade which will wind through the main streets of Lawrence Wednesday night at 7:15 and terminate at the intersection of Eighth and Vermont, where the big Homecoming rally will be held. This parade will be set against a background of enthusiastic students and alumni and compounded of such unusual features as a circling airplane with a neon sign screaming, "Beat M. U." and fireworks of sound bombs and sky rockets.
The "flying billboard," as the advertising airplane has often been called, is to start circling Lawrence with its neon sign of "Beat M. U." about 6:30 Wednesday evening and will continue its maneuvers until after the rally. The plane, which is a Curtiss Fledgling, will be piloted by Charles Toth from the Fairfax airport, Kansas City, Kan. From 5 until about 6 p.m., the
airplane will fly over Kansas City, Kan., and Missouri with a neon sign reading, "K.U.-M.U." game.
Fireworks to Begin Early
The sound bombs and starshell fireworks will be fired at South Park before 7 o'clock, and again as the parade begins to move down Massachusetts, these fireworks will be shot from the north end of the street by the bridge.
The parade will start to form at 7 p.m. Wednesday night in South Park on the west side of Massachusetts street, and will move out into Massachusetts promptly at 7:15, under the direction of General W. S. Metcalf. '97.
The procession will march down Massachusetts street to Eighth street and will turn left, there, and go to Vermont street where they will stop at the intersection by the Jenny Wren building and hold the rally which will begin at 7:35 and be broadcast over station WREN.
The parade will be headed by General Metcalf, Captain Harry Frazee, '26, and Captain Sam Moyer, former student in 1916, who will be mounted. After them, riding in a car, will be Major W. C. Koenig, head of the R. T. T. C, and the honorary colonel, Rowena Longshore, s534, followed by the R.O.T.C. color guard, then then the R.O.T.C. unit, and then the University of Kansas band.
Enrollment at Lawrence Sets Record
University officials report this year's enrollment of 10,500 students at Lawrence a record. The freshman class, the largest, totaling 2,576, is 45 less than last year.
No more than 244 separate the largest from the smallest. The senior class with 1.746 is smallest.
have not been included in this graduate class.
The Rally at 7:30 at the intersection of Eighth and Vermont will be broadcast over WREN and will consist of cheers, yells, speeches and songs. The University of Kansas band will play for the broadcast, also.
The 1,990 graduate class is second in class size, an increase of 151 despite freshman medical students who have moved to the KU Medical Center in Kansas City.
Second in size is the graduate class with 1,990. This is the first year that first year medical students, who now do their preliminary work at the KU Medical Center;
The junior class, also record size, jumped 357 over last year's enrollment. 1,981.
The smallest gain was in the sophomore class which increased 81 to 1.884.
The annual torchlight parades were first started last year. The campus political parties have long used torchlight parades in campaigning. Last year being a political one, various such political parades having been conducted throughout the country, the Home-coming committee devised the scheme of having a torchlight parade for Homecoming.
HIXON STUDIO
Portraits of Distinction
摄影师
Bob Blank
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
WELCOME HOME ALUMS!
Help Our Team Crop the Huskers
16
Beat
Nebraska
Cornhuskers
... enjoy a wonderful weekend both students and all the alumni.
ST MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF Lawrence
Friday. Nov. 9, 1962
University Daily. Kansas
Page 15
Best suit for fashion credits . . . the Traditional Suit with Vest!
All fashion knowing university men agree that only certain vested suits embody correct tradition. The fabric, cut detailing of ours are accorded And our price is in agreement requirements.
Page 16
University Daily Kansan Friday, Nov. 9, 1962
KU
BEAT NEBRASKA
KU
40
40
40
30 91
13
9
20
Welcome Back Alumni
We Combine to Wish All of You the Fun and Excitement Due You on Homecoming. Stop in After the Game for Friendly Service and a Bit of Victory Talk at These Friendly Lawrence Service Stations.
Bucheim Service Station 1901 Mass. VI 3-9804
Hartman Standard Service 1300 Mass. VI 3-8072
Hillcrest Standard Service
914 Iowa VI 3-9667
Art Kerby Mobil Service
900 Ky. VI 3-9608
Sawyer's Texaco Service 23rd & Barker VI 3-9628
George's Tenneco Service
545 FI. VI 3-9690
Broyle's Texaco Service
600 Fla. VI 3-9785
Potter's 66 Service 1401 W. 6th VI 3-9891
Motor-Inn Service
827 Vt. VI 3-4955
Ned Medlen Standard Serv.
12 E. 11th VI 3-6322
KU
BEAT NEBRASKA
KU
KU
N T
NEW
Minist
day t
States
Indiair
with
Ameri
arms
A J man s a few the r of To strette Walo
The that bsidera
On ported two n ing at areas
A agen
shelle
sature
Towa
dian
100 r
The
The also s air dr over 0
patronear He sforce
He wour ment ualtie
THE both India vicin the near
"Et tier a was Jang "Our aggro
NE ceivei from sonic liverw would lish a
Botain Com have arms feud the c
Ne
Ame
arriv
THE tails plane State
So laya grou to ta othe
Ye teem cutta prep
B
"F stat sev port Art.
mor asso and beer base
P
cou
cau
Nehru Asks U.S. To Supply Planes
NEW DELHI — (UPI) — Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru said today that India has asked the United States for military aircraft to bolster Indian defenses in the border war with Red China. He also asked for American machinery to produce arms in India.
The U.S. Embassy here confirmed that both requests were under consideration.
On the fighting fronts, India reported its troops had driven back two new Chinese Communist probing attacks in the northeast frontier areas during the weekend.
A DEFENSE MINISTRY spokesman said the engagements took place a few miles northeast of Jang, in the region of the monastery town of Towang, and in the far eastern stretch of the northeast frontier near Walong.
A Communist New China news agency broadcast said Indian troops shelled Communist forces heavily Saturday in both the Walong and Towang areas. New China said Indian heavy artillery fired more than 100 rounds on Chinese positions.
The broadcast heard in London also said Indians have increased their air drops of supplies as well as flights over Communist positions.
The spokesman said two Indian
See related story on page 8.
patrols contacted Chinese Red troops near Walong and fire was exchanged. He said the Chinese troops "were forced to withdraw."
THE REPORT INDICATED that both Chinese Communist troops and Indians remained active in the vicinity of Walong, 16 miles south of the disputed McMahon line frontier near the Burma border.
He said four Indian soldiers were wounded in the weekend engagements but Chinese Communist casualties were not known.
"Elsewhere in the north east frontier agency (NEFA), a Chinese patrol was seen a few miles northeast of Jang," an Indian communique said. "Our troops engaged the Chinese aggressors and they withdrew.
NEHRU ALSO SAID he had received firm assurances "recently" from Moscow that Soviet supersonic MIG 21 fighters would be delivered on schedule and that Russia would fulfill its promise to establish a MIG factory in India.
Both announcements seemed certain to create an uproar in Peiping, Communist Chinese officials already have denounced American small arms aid to India and have been feuding with the Soviet Union over the conduct of the cold war.
Nehru spoke to a group of visiting American and other newsmen who arrived Saturday.
THERE WERE no immediate details on what type or how many planes India wants from the United States.
So far the border war in the Himalaya mountains has been limited to ground action but it would be likely to take to the air if one side or the other finds itself driven too far back.
Yesterday Nehru warned that such teeming population centers as Calcutta, Bombay and New Delhi must prepare for the possibility that they
"might be bombed by the Chinese," New Delhi Mayor Huruddin Ahmend announced that air raid precaution committees would be formed shortly. Officials were reported considering 1,100 shelters for the capital.
NEHRU SAID India did not have any plans to ask that an American military assistance group establish a training and technical unit in India.
As for V. K. Krishna Menon, who was eased out of the job of defense minister and then out of the cabinet altogether, Nehru said it was doubtful he would return to his former United Nations job—"but I am not dead sure."
Nehru had been scheduled to talk to the newsmen for five minutes but
Prime Minister Nehru
he spent an hour with them.
SPEAKING AT a mass rally in New Delhi yesterday, Nehru said the country quickly is getting to a war footing and that in the past three weeks India's ordnance factories have boosted production 300 per cent.
For the first time he openly denounced the Communist Chinese repression in Tibet that eventually forced the Dalai Lama to flee to India.
"THE CHINESE swallowed Tibet 12 years ago and they thought they would also be able to grab our territory," Nehru declared. "They will see that they are wrong."
Latest reports from the northern border indicated the struggle had entered another period of relative quiet.
A defense department spokesman said there was an exchange of gunfire between patrols in the Northeast Frontier Agency over the weekend but no casualty reports had been received.
"Otherwise the situation both in the NEFA and Ladakh areas remains unchanged," the spokesman said.
Last week the Indians threw back three attacks on the extreme eastern end of the border near Burma and dislodged Chinese Communist forces which were attempting a flanking movement.
THE PRIME MINISTER told newsmen India also has asked the United States to provide machinery for the manufacture of arms, but again he did not give specifics. He said new requests are "being put forth continuously."
He said he was "quite satisfied" with the U.S. and British responses to his Oct. 27 appeal for support to nearly every nation. Both countries have sent small arms which Indian defenders badly need.
Bronze Statue Stolen From KU Art Museum
"Resurrection," a 30-inch bronze statue of a woman — valued at several thousand dollars — is reported missing from the Museum of Art.
The loss was discovered Sunday morning by Miss Marilyn Stokstad, associate professor of art history and acting museum director. It had been removed from its stone base in Weaver Fountain Court.
Monday, Nov. 12, 1962
POLICE BELIEVE it was taken between 5 p.m. Saturday and 11 a.m. Sunday, following the Kansas-Nebraska game.
Prof. Stokstad said the price could not be pinpointed exactly because of differences in prices between New York and Germany, where it was obtained in 1959. It was a gift from Arthur Weaver, Lawrence merchant.
Her reference to Manet alluded to the theft of a $40,000 Manet painting at the end of August. She said she sees no connection between the two thefts.
The acting director said she could only estimate the loss at "several thousand dollars."
"BUT IT'S definitely not in the Manet range, by any means," she said.
"I think the sculpture was taken as a prank by someone who didn't
(Continued on page 12)
Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
60th Year, No. 42
He said that all offensive weapons had to be withdrawn before this country would lift its naval blockade or promise not to invade Cuba. He noted that Soviet IL28 jet bombers still are in Cuba and are considered offensive weapons by Kennedy.
Kennedy and Advisers Review Cuban Position
WASHINGTON —(UPI)— President Kennedy met today with his top U.N. aides and National Security Council advisers for a major review of the Cuban crisis in view of the removal of Russian missiles from the Caribbean island.
U. N. AMBASSADOR Adalai Stevenson, Charles D. Yost, U.S. Security Council representative, and John J. McCloy, Kennedy's special adviser on Cuba, were called from New York for the meeting.
The President met jointly with the U.N. group and the executive committee of the National Security Council shortly after he returned from a weekend with his family at Middleburg, Va.
Deputy Defense Secretary Roswell L. Gilpatric said yesterday that 42 Russian missiles had been removed from Cuba. This was the number the Soviet Union claimed it had sent to the island.
STEVENSON, McCloy and Yost were expected to report to the President on the progress of their talks with U.N. acting Secretary-General Thant and Soviet First Deputy Foreign Minister Vasily V. Kuznetsov
Negotiations for on-site verification of the removal of Soviet missiles from Cuba was expected to be a major topic of discussion in the meeting.
But Gilpatric said that the United States had no proof that all such missiles had been removed and would never be sure unless on-site inspection was permitted.
"WE HOLD THE SOVIETS responsible for the types of military equipment which it has furnished to Castro and as of the present time we regard removal of those bombers as within the capacity of the Soviets to bring about," Gilpatric said.
Gilpatric indicated the United States would not accept any Soviet argument that Cuban Premier Fidel Castro would not give up the nuclear-capable jet bombers, which have an 800-mile range.
the three U.S. negotiators have met three times with Kuznetsov since their last conference with Kennedy a week ago Saturday.
Gilpatric's remarks were recorded 'or a television interview after U.S. warships made visual checks at sea
See related story on page 7.
Friday and Saturday of Soviet freighters taking missiles away from Cuba.
KEATING SAID it would be "perfectly easy to hide not only the missiles but the mobile missile-launching equipment, as well as nuclea warheads" in the numerous caves in Cuba.
The U.S. demand for on-site inspection got strong support today from Sen. Kenneth B. Keating, RN.Y., who warned of the Soviet missile buildup two months ago.
CRC Chairman Plans Trip to Montgomery
"It is imperative—absolutely esa Ph.D. candidate at Boston University and a civil rights worker throughout the South. The invitation followed.
PETER HENRY BARNES
Don Warner, Topeka senior and KU Civil Rights Council (CRC) chairman, has accepted an invitation to teach at a Montgomery, Alabama, conference considering nonviolent protest methods.
Warner came to the attention of the Association through a recommendation from his brother, John.
During the Institute's week-long session, Dec. 3 to 9, Warner will talk to Southern Negro college students and instruct them in non-violent protest methods.
Don Warner
The Montgomery Improvement Association — organized in 1955 by Rev. Martin Luther King — asked Warner to attend its annual Institute on Nonviolence.
CONTACTED yesterday, Warner said he is aware of the hostility which Northern whites encounter in the South.
"I realize that my knowledge of Southern life and problems is not
"However, I gathered from a letter the Association sent me that whites in the South who are willing to work actively at such work are not many." Warner added.
as complete as it might be," Warne said.
Warner said that he was willing to go since he had been invited and said he believed the experience
(Continued on page 12)
sential—that we have complete inspection of this on the ground," he said in a copyright interview in U.S. News & World Report.
Keating also said he was "positive" that the information on which he based his first charge last August of the missile buildup in Cuba was available to administration leaders at that time.
"THE SOURCES WERE either (A) sources in the U.S. government, or (B) other sources—less than 5 per cent of which were Cuban refugees—all of which were verified through official sources of the U.S. government before I made any statement," he said.
Gilpatric said yesterday the Administration had acted "immediately" after receiving intelligence reports that the missile bases were being built.
To draw support from other American republics and from its allies throughout the world, Gilpatric said, the United States had to have a "hard case" for its blockade of Cuba.
"We had to have good evidence of this threat and without the kind of photography which our surveillance planes supplied beginning on October 14, I doubt that we would have had this support and that we could have been as effective in our policies," he said.
GILPATRIC EMPHASIZED that any U.S. pledge not to invade Cuba would depend on the Russians upholding their part of the agreement as established by President Kennedy and Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev.
So far, he said, there had been only a "partial fulfillment" of the Soviet commitment to remove offensive weapons from Cuba. He said, "they have simply removed what they say were the missiles that we brought in."
GILPATRIC REJECTED Republican criticism that a U.S. promise not to invade Cuba would bolster the Castro regime. He said the Castro problem was there before the Soviet bases were established and would remain after they were removed.
In another television interview former Postmaster General James A. Farley said that Kennedy's strong stand against Cuba was only a preliminary step toward Castro's downfall.
Geologist Says Antarctic Causes Strange Hallucinations
Being at the bottom of the world can cause a man to do everything from dream of pastry shops to "crack-up" from loneliness, an Antarctic scientist said last night.
Edward Zeller, associate professor of geology and three time adventurer to the Antarctic, described the land with slides and then told the Anthropology Club about "Polar Madness."
A CROWDED HOUSE listened to the scientist tell about the unusual hallucinations and dreams that occur in this land of -104F temperatures.
He related experiences of past expeditions and his own experiences at McMurdo Sound and the now "closed down" Little America.
He said while he and his assistant were out on a glacier strange one day they heard strange sounds, like chirping and whistling at different times.
Zeller said that one German, who had lived through the bombing of Hamburg during World War II, "cracked-up" and became violent.
OUT IN THE open, he said, there is nothing but silence. There are no birds, animals or trees to make noise.
He had to be put under sedation for one year.
The unusual isolation of the land caused one man, who hated the place, to never leave bed except to eat. Others would work all day because of the sun circles Antarctica and never sets.
HE SAID THAT in earlier expeditions incomplete diets caused weird dreams to occur.
Because of a lack of flour and bread in the diet, men had dreams of pastry shops.
He said that during his stay in the region he developed a craving for citrus fruits.
Problems between the men also develop, Zeller said. One geologist who was always insulting the Navy men stationed at the camp found himself out on the ice with diesel fuel to use in his cooking stove.
HE RETURNED alive. Zeller said, but he and his assistants' faces were as black as the "ace of spades."
Hallucinations are often experienced by not just one man, but groups. He said that men will often think they see returning parties, which turn out to be Emperor Penguins.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Mondav. Nov. 12. 1962
Student Elections
The Guest Editorial which is reprinted in the lower right-hand corner of this page presents one view of campus elections. This is not an uncommon view and one which must be recognized and, to some extent, appreciated.
If the Alabama Crimson-White wishes to hold to the position presented, fine. But the question put to it is: If there are no campus elections what group is going to administrate and coordinate student activities and represent the student body?
WITHOUT STUDENT ELECTIONS there could be no All Student Council. With no student council there would be no student representation of the students. This would place the student population completely at the mercy of any number of forces.
In order to give the students, for whom the entire concept of university level education is designed, the privileges and voice necessary there must exist some functioning governmental body. At KU this is the ASC. Maybe there is no similar functioning group at Alabama. It is hoped that this last idea is the reason for the opinion expressed in the Guest Editorial.
One reason why the Crimson-White blast strikes so hard is that the KU student government is without question one of the best and most operative in the country. This makes it difficult to imagine a school which can so publically betray the opportunity the student body has for representation.
TOMORROW AND WEDNESDAY there is the annual fall general election to select members for the ASC. Last week there was little interest evidenced by the student body over the primary voting. Possibly the students were right; there is no need for the primary. But now the student voter is faced with a chance to elevate fellow students to a position which can be beneficial to the entire student body. This opportunity should not be denied any voter by himself.
There is a great need for a body like the ASC as long as it works in positive directions as it has been doing in the past few years.
THERE MAY NOT BE any momentous issues in the election of the membership of the ASC or any pressing need seen by many people on campus for such a body. But, what would happen if there were no student elections and therefore no student government? For one there would be almost no extra-curricula activities through which a student can gain considerable experience and education and provide a diversion from studying. The faculty certainly would not assume the role now played by student committee chairmen to perpetuate the many activities.
The conclusion thus is that, at least on this campus, there is a definite need for the elections of tomorrow and Wednesday and to participate means better student government and therefore a more rounded college career for all students.
Bill Sheldon
Image of Mao Tse-tung Faltering
By Arthur C. Miller
The image and being of Mao Tse-tung stood dominant for many years as an omnipotent leader to the masses of Communist China. Today, hunger and poverty have destroyed much of that image. Mao is old and often is unable to cope with the problems of China as he did in his earlier years.
As a young man, Mao led his Marxist comrades on the "Long March" northward in the 1920's. He led them into the "Great Leap Forward" in the 1950's. Yet in the 1960's his leadership has faltered.
MAO'S SCRIPTURES, written years before, were once accepted as the justification for his every action and policy. The writings of Mao were to the Chinese what the Bible is to the American fundamentalist—a view of what once happened, what is happening and what will happen, without cognizance of the present.
Mao's writings reflect the preatomic period in which most of them were formulated. They are
out of contact with the present world. They reflect his belief in his own infailibility and they are unable to stimulate the production that will quiet the growling stomachs of the millions.
The 69-year-old "Chairman's" leadership has been marking time as has that of the 19-member Politburo which controls the Chinese Communist government. The average age of that body is now 64 and those leaders have lost much of the imagination and vigor which enabled them to manage past crises.
RICHARD L. WALKER, head of the department of International studies at the University of South Carolina, recently cited several indications of deterioration and tired bewilderment among the top leadership of China, including Mao. He says:
- Since the failure of the "people's communes," there have been no great drives or innovations such as once spurred Mao's subjects forward at a reckless pace.
For three years there have been no major doctrinal pronouncements from Peking. Even in its ideological differences with the Soviet Union, Communist China has been unable to come up with the kind of fresh interpretation it developed only six years ago in dealing with de-Stalinization.
- Internal policies and discipline have been allowed to drift and weaken in the fact of growing domestic problems.
- The National People's Congress which met last March and April failed to come up with any concrete proposals for solving the present agrarian dilemma.
With the aging leadership in mainland China rapidly dying off, what is in prospect for the future? The ideology of Mao, and thus Communist China, has become frozen and stagnant. As the "Chairman's" physical and mental health worsen, the policies of China will probably follow a course of indecision and strict adherence to Mao's pre-atomic age dogma.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
THERE'S ONE IN EVERY CLASS...
OH, IT WAS AN EASY TEST, BUT I JUST DIDN'T STUDY FOR IT.
ISN'T THERE ANY WAY I CAN MAKE UP THIS "F" ON MY FINAL?
LETS TAKE ANOTHER LOOK AT THAT L'IL OLE FINAL SCHEDULE.
THERE'S ONE IN EVERY CLASS...
OH, IT WAS AN EASY TEST, BUT I JUST DIDN'T STUDY FOR IT.
ISN'T THERE ANY WAY I CAN MAKE UP THIS 'F' ON MY FINAL?
LET'S TAKE ANOTHER LOOK AT THAT L'IL OLE FINAL SCHEDULE
C-70
© 1962
YET THIS MAY be for the best, since the past practices of Mao have been marked with caution unless absolute victory was assured. It is likely, then, that as long as Mao lives, Chinese policy will not become reckless.
There will, no doubt, be a period of unstable leadership when Mao dies. There also is the possibility of a power struggle. In any case, the new leader of the Chinese masses will be faced with the same problems, including that of feeding the hungry millions.
There is equally little comfort to be found in the eventual replacement of members on the Politburo. The middle-ranking members of the Chinese Communist party have had little applied foreign experience and fewer of them have had the benefit of education in the West. Most have confined their activities to party work and military command.
THE QUESTION of exactly what will happen upon the death of Mao Tse-tung cannot, of course, be answered. Mao might well become to the Chinese what Lenin is to the Russians. Or he might become a Chinese Stalin. The latter is unlikely.
Sound and Fury
One thing can be said with some feeling of certainty; Mao's doctrines are deeply ingrained in the Chinese and it may be some time before that "mightiest of nations" leaves its despotic past to join the modern world.
Soviet Journal Attacks 'Subversive' Textbook
Last year, right wing groups both in and out of the University attacked the "liberal, socialistic" tendencies of the Department of Economics of the University of Kansas. One of the main attacks was directed against the use of Paul A. Samuelson's Economics: An Introductory Analysis as a text in some sections of introductory courses.
PROF. SAMUELSON is head of the Department of Economics at MIT and informal economic advisor to the President. His book, now in its fifth edition, is the most widely used introductory economics text in the United States.
Nevertheless, from the campus YAF to Kansas State Senators, it was maintained that Samuelson's treatment of economics amounted to an advocacy of socialism, and the polemic took on such proportions that one could not help but feel that the use of the book was just what Uncle Khrushchev ordered.
IN LIGHT OF these accusations and in light of the fact that this semester alone more than 500 of my students are being exposed to this "subversive" book in their introductory courses, it may be interesting to see what the Soviet Union thinks of the book. Samuelson's Economics was reviewed in 1959 in Vestnik Leningradskogo Universiteta, Serilia Ekonomiki, Filosofii i Prava — the Journal of Leningrad University, Economics, Philosophy and Law Series. Let me give you just a few quotes from this review, to show you how much the Soviet Union appreciates our efforts here at KU to subvert the minds of innocent students. (For those interested, the complete English translation can be found in Problems of Economics, April, 1960, pp. 54-57, available both in the main library and in the Business Research Center Reading Room):
"Samuelson's textbook is instructive in regard to the new method of capitalist apologetics utilized by the contemporary bourgeois
"SAMUELSON'S 'INTRODUCTION' may be regarded as a classic illustration of the definition of vulgar political economy as presented by Marx. . . In our day, the bourgeois economies . . . concern themselves with belittling in every way possible the socialist economic system and seeking to denigrate the economic achievements of the countries of the world system of socialism. This aspect of the matter is present in abundance in Samuelson's 'Introduction.'
"THE BOURGEOISE PRISM of business holds the student's thought, masks exploitation, conceals the actual economic relationships and the understanding of the objective laws of capitalism. The second characteristic of the method of this text is that of approaching the solution of all of the problems it poses from the viewpoint of the entrepreneur . . .
"The method of 'studying' contemporary capitalism proposed by Samuelson is characteristic of bourgeois vulgar political economy as a whole.
"Samuelson's textbook, which has been erected on the basis of a synthesis of the dogmas of vulgar bourgeois political economy of the nineteenth and the early twentieth centuries, and of Keynesian theory, clearly reflects the modern tendency in bourgeois political economy. . . Written in the spirit of 'neoclassical synthesis', (it) illustrates the contemporary methods of apologetics for state monopoly capitalism."
Harry Shaffer
Pr In
Assistant Professor of Economics
The has a wife fc stan tf is lega a wife also a would see th
This ford I politic Facult
Aren't Elections Nice?
School elections are here again and the excitement generated by them is almost nil. Unfortunately, this is exactly the way it should be.
The major purpose, it seems, for these elections is that someone decided elections are nice, per se. No one thinks that the people running for these offices should be expected to actually do anything.
"STUDENT LEADERS" cry out in anguish about apathy on the part of the student body. We say, nonsense. The first prerequisite for a state of apathy is that there exists something worthy of enthusiasm.
PRO
self in
had hi
talk
slides.
Prof
form
One burqa,
the w would
phistic man
ir village
Are school elections worthy of anything more than apathy from the students? We think not.
A great deluge of campaign posters is not going to remedy the disinterest in the elections, nor do sound trucks and hand shaking junkets constitute the answer to the problem.
THE SOLUTION should be painfully clear, even to the candidates themselves. Either a reason must be found for the existence of school officers or they should be abolished.
PRO
versity
the K
their t
There are many opportunities for purposeful activities by school officers. None of these have ever been tapped. Furthermore, these opportunities will never be tapped as long as the only things these prospective officers require of themselves are bigger and better election techniques.
Crimson-White, University of Alabama
Daily Newsan
Pesl Prof. never Most divide city, h
University of Kaasas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Telephone Viking 3-2700
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.
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Prof.Ketzel Provides Insight Into Pakistani Way Of Life
The American married man who has a habit of stepping out on his wife for a weekend would find Pakistan to his liking. In that country it is legal for a man to have not only a wife in town during the week but also a maiden for the weekend who would live in the country and never see the other woman.
This neea was illustrated by Clifford Ketzel, associate professor of political science, yesterday at the Faculty Club.
PROF. KETZEL presented himself in native Pakistani habit and had his two "wives" with him for his talk which was accompanied by slides.
One of the wives wore a black burqa, a habit that completely veils the woman. Prof. Ketzel said she would be his town wife, more sophisticated than the other. The woman in the white burqa would be his village wife.
Prof. Ketzel was a Fulbright professor in Pakistan last year.
PROF. KETZEL taught at the University of Peshawar, which is near the Khyber Pass. Mrs. Ketzel and their three sons went with him.
Peshawar has about 150,000 people. Prof. Ketzel said, "although you'd never believe it driving through it." Most of the cities in the area are divided into the old city and the new city, he said.
The predominant religion is Islam, but there are some Christians, Prof. Ketzel said.
He also showed pictures of a number of mosques. As he showed one of them, he remarked:
"YOU FIND most of the Christians at the lower economic level, however," he said.
"While we were there, the trick-shaw or quickshaw replaced the tonga," he said. The trickshaw is a small passenger bus, holding three or four people.
"If you want to go to a place and be popular, take a microbus (a small bus), Prof. Ketzel said. "My wife and I were invited to tribal dinners, special services and such because we had transportation."
"I found that most Moslems were not any better Moslems than most Christians are Christians. This mosque was not very full that Friday."
PROF, KETZEL said the principal mode of transportation in Pakistan was the tonga, a two-wheeled carriage run by manpower.
THE SANITARY conditions were less than ideal, Prof. Ketzel said, as there was no sewage disposal of any kind. "It is not a desirable life from a westerner's point of view." he said.
"We measured our baths by the number of buckets," Prof. Ketzel said. "If one person took a bath, he
could have a six-bucket bath. But if two took a bath, each could have only three buckets." he said.
Prof. Ketzel said he found English was spoken all over Pakistan, as well as native languages.
"MOST MOSLEMS, if they can afford it, send their children to a primary and secondary school where the main language is English, because you can't get very far over there without English," he said.
Prof. Ketzel found the Pakistani tobacco shops especially agreeable, he said.
"One of the nice things about Pakistan is that there is a cigarette for every pocket book," he said.
Jayhawker to Issue First Section Soon
The first section of the 1962 Jayhawker will be distributed during the last week of November, Thomas W. Tatlock, Wichita junior and editor of the Jayhawker, said in a recent interview.
"A new feature will be the paintings by John Norman on the covers of the four magazine sections," Tatlock said.
Monday, Nov. 12, 1962
Education Students Learn of Employment
The Teachers Appointment Bureau (TAB) has announced two final employment sessions for prospective teachers will be 4:30 p.m. tomorrow and 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Bailey Hall Auditorium.
TAB urges students seeking employment in the educational field by September, 1963 or sooner, to attend one of these sessions to learn of TAB office procedures and employment practices.
Landesman To Speak Today
Charles Landesman, associate professor of philosophy, will discuss the philosophical implications of Ayn Rand's "Atlas Shrugged" at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Music and Browsing Room of the Kansas Union.
His talk will be the first SUA Modern Book Forum of the year.
[Image of a man's face with a bow tie]
Pooped . . but must carry on? Snap right back and keep going! Take Verv$ continuous action alertness capsules Effective, safe, not habit-forming.
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
Roller Derby
EVERYONE'S ON THEIR WAY TO
Sandy's
Thrift & Swift Drive-in
ACROSS FROM HILLCREST
Hamburgers
15c
French Fries
10c
Official All-Student Council Notice
ALL STUDENT COUNCIL
ALL STUDENT COUNCIL OFFICIAL 00 BALLOT SERIAL NO.
General Election, Fall, 1962 Living District 00
DIRECTIONS TO VOTER: MAKE MARKS- NOT CROSSES OR FIGURES
MAKE A HEAVY PENAL C Mark in THE FIGURE C BENEATH THE NAME OF
YOUR FIRST CHOICE. PLACE A MARK IN THE FIGURE C BENEATH YOUR SEC
OND CHOICE, ETC. MARK ONLY ONE CHOICE BENEATH EACH NAME DO NOT MARK
THE SAME CHOICE BENEATH DIFFERENT NAMES YOU SHOULD MARK ONLY AS MANY
CHOICES AS THERE ARE CANIDATES
IF YOU SPOIL THIS BALLOT, RETURN IT TO THE OFFICER IN CHARGE OF
BALLOTS AND GET ANOTHER.
Dorothy Darling
MARK CHOICE 1 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
John D. Doe
MARK CHOICE 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Joe E. Brown
MARK CHOICE 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Johnathon Anybody
MARK CHOICE 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Susan Someone
MARK CHOICE 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
--- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- --- ---
FILL FIGURE COMPLETELY WITH A HEAVY BLACK MARK.
1234 N° 09C 4
Explanation of Voting Procedure
In the sample general election ballot at left, the voter has selected John D. Doe as his first choice for the ASC. Dorothy Darling is his second choice, and Johnathon Anybody is third.
This ballot will be counted in the following manner: Doe will be given one vote. If it is necessary to re-distribute the ballots in this district, in order for the various candidates to receive quota, this ballot may be re-counted, this time counting the second choice as a first place vote. This would happen only if Doe had been declared elected or defeated. The ballot might be re-distributed through all the choices on the ballot, if necessary, to obtain quota for one of the candidates still in contention after the first few counts.
It is extremely important, therefore, to mark as many choices as there are names on the ballot, since an election may be decided by one fifth-place vote.
Excerpts from ASC Elections Rules:
1. It is illegal for a student to vote more than once in the general elections.
2. It is illegal for a student to attempt to vote while impersonating another student.
3. No student without a valid KU-ID card, with current receipt, shall be allowed to vote.
4. Candidates and Parties must check with Elections Committee Chairman for their regulations, restrictions, and limitations.
General Elections
Tuesday, November 13
8:00 a.m.-5:15 p.m.
Wednesday, November 14
8:00 a.m.-5:15 p.m.
POLLS LOCATED:
Strong Hall, 1st floor Murphy Hall, Main (West) Lobby Kansas Union, Main (North) Lobby
Penalties for Violations
1. Parties shall be fined minimum of $50 and maximum of $100.
2. Individuals shall be fined minimum of $10 and maximum of suspension from school for one semester.
JOHN STUCKEY
ASC Elections
Committee
Chairman
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Monday, Nov. 12, 1962
Microscopic Drill Used In Research
Rv Phillin Magers
A drill bit three times smaller than a human hair is one way the Engineering Research Service is keeping up with the "Space Age."
The service, which is housed in Fowler Shops, was organized three years ago to aid in the design and construction of research equipment on a university wide basis.
To carry on the work necessary in todays age of minuturization the service bought a micro drilling machine three months ago.
THE DRILL, which is only about one and one-half feet tall, can drill into steel with bits so tiny the human eye cannot see them.
The drill can only be used with a microscope to direct drilling and handling of the bits. A microscope and small light are attached to the drill to aid in drilling.
Paul Hausman, associate professor of engineering manufacturing processes and director of the service, has a story about the tiny bits.
HE SAYS WHEN the bits were first received one of the students opened a box of bits, which were standing vertically in the box. The
student said, "There aren't any bits in there," then swept his hand across the box, breaking every costly bit in it.
Although the drill is very small it is highly accurate. Holes can be located by co-ordinates to an accuracy of .001 inches—the size of the bit.
BUT THIS unusual drill is not the only piece of special equipment housed in the special air-conditioned room devoted to the work of the Engineering Research Services. The room also houses precision lathes, drill and measuring equipment.
Three specialists work full time for the service.
- Robert Gilmore, who is a specialist in manufacturing operations,
is a member of the staff.
- Paul Sliffe, who is an expert machinist and expert welder, is one of the three. He has also worked with Werner Von Braun on the U.S. missile program.
- A. L. Smith is another expert machinist on the staff.
Prof. Hausman and Howard Rust instructor in engineering manufacturing processes, plan all projects carried out in the shops.
Many times ideas are brought to Hausman and Rust and they aid in developing the best and most economical way to carrying out the project.
They are aided by other men who work in Fowler. Their aid is usually necessary in special areas such as plastics and precision measurement.
PROF. HAUSMAN says that in the past few years their work has increased 20 per cent each year.
"Last year we built 417 projects
for various departments involved in research at KU," Prof. Hausman said.
In the past few years work of the service has included accessories for the Nuclear Reactor, equipment for the Hydraulics Laboratory, special crucibles for research in high temperature metals and testing devices for the psychology department.
Prof. Hausman said that they also do work for outside industries. "Right now we are working on some special gears," he said.
The service is self sustaining, Prof. Hausman said, and is not supported by the state.
There was no immediate explanation of the objective of the bombings.
Katanga Makes Air Attack
Katanga, under President Moise Tsbome, has fought the central Congolese regime and U.N. forces backing the central government.
D&G AUTO SERVICE VI 2-0753 1/2 blk. E. 12th & Haskell
Casualty reports were not available, but U.N. operations officers in the Congo dispatched a doctor to treat wounded.
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.—(UPI) Aircraft of secessionist Katanga Province heavily bombed areas of northern Katanga Saturday, a United Nations spokesman said yesterday.
He said the road junction of Kaseya-Lubunda was bombed five times. The latest attack was on Saturday evening.
Reports indicated that 10 Katangese DC3 and Air Brouse planes took part in the bombing, the U.N. spokesman said.
EVERYONE READS AND USES WANT ADS
Campus Problems to Be Theme Of Student Speech Contest
The orators of KU will have the chance to mount the stump in the 38th annual Campus Problems Speaking Contest Nov.29.
The event, which is the oldest forensic contest at KU, has been directed by E. C. Buehler, professor of Speech and Drama, since 1935.
Prot. Buehler says that in these "oral editorials" we try to give the students the opportunity to express their ideas on campus problems in an articulate way.
After the tryouts 8 students will be chosen to enter eight minute speeches in the finals.
Tryouts for the contest will be held at 4:30 p.m. on Nov.27 in room 114, Strong Hall. Tryout speeches will be six minutes.
Any student is eligible to enter the contest. But he must be sponsored by a organized or independent living group and a group can sponsor only two orators.
Topics can be on any campus problem or subject. Prof. Buehler's suggestions include traffic control booths, English proficiency exams, faculty competency, the John Birch Society and the football reserve seats plan.
Fraternity Jewelry
Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals
Balfour
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
AL LAUTER
For Best Results Use Kansan Classified Ads
Beginning Bridge Lessons
Wednesday Night at 7:00 in the
Jayhawker Room at the Student Union
Everyone Invited!
Lessons Given By Mrs. Virginia Seaver
$1.00 FOR 7 LESSONS
Morning & Night
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, CINCINNATI 14, OHIO
Page 5
Women Foreign Students Discuss American Coeds
Ey Joanne Prim
Everyone knows that women the world over like to talk — especially about other women.
Proof of this was provided when women international students, in recent interviews discussed their American counterparts.
"The main difference between Latin American and North American women is their relationship toward the opposite sex." Bee M. Strehler, Buenos Aires, Argentina, freshman, said.
"Latin American women are more dependent on men. In a marriage, the husband really wears the pants. Here, the husband and wife are on more of an equal basis, more like friends.
Annnarie G. Hoffman, Hannover, Germany, freshman; said, "I agree with Bee that American women are more independent.
"Modern civilization demands this sort of relationship." she said.
"But it's not really just the women's fault. Dating in nine out of 10 cases is just a game.
"SOMETHING is missing — a serious concern for the other person. A boy who goes out with a girl 10 times, for example, should be concerned if he can help her with her schoolwork.
"Girls go out with a boy because he has a car or is good looking. Sincerity is missing in the game. This lack has been developed on both sides.
"American girls are independent but it takes courage to appear in public and take responsibility.
"HOWEVER, in their personal life, they are very insecure. They don't know what kind of life they want.
"Not that they're shallow, but
emphasis is not placed on the important things.
"This is a symptom of a wealthy society," she commented. "People can swim along without struggling too hard."
Elizabeth G. Paissiou, Athens,
Greece, graduate student expressed a viewpoint similar to Miss Strehler's;
"Sometimes a woman decides at home. But in Greece, men have the first and last word.
"I prefer a situation where two persons can discuss a subject and find a solution together."
MISS PAISSIOU said the Greek women are "more feminine — in their actions and in the way they speak.
"Greek women are also more artistic than American women. They are more interested in poetry, music, and theater."
"Even if a Greek woman is not educated, she attends the theater very often. There are many theater groups.
"One more thing. American women are afraid to be sincere, to give a little tenderness or sentiment. For me, this is very essential," she said.
ANA MARIA FIRPO, Montevideo,
Uruguay, graduate student, seemed
to contradict Miss Paissiou's statement.
"American girls are very,very sincere." Miss Firpo said.
"They don't care what they say, but if they feel that way, they say it.
"Ferhaps the women are more feminine at home," she remarked. "The reason is the way they dress. It is very common to wear heels at a university."
Speaking of appearance, Miss Hoffman said, "American girls are
Conference to Discuss Care Of Released Mental Patients
The first conference on the care of psychiatric patients in Kansas after they are released from the hospital will be Wednesday and Thursday at the University of Kansas.
The meeting will center on what the Kansas community mental Health bureau has called a "problem of great urgency"—the relapse of mental patients after leaving the hospital.
University Daily Kansan
State Department of Social Welfare figures show 1,147 re-admissions to the six state psychiatric hospitals and schools for the re
tarded in the 1962 fiscal year. This compares with 1,647 new admissions and 2,729 discharges.
Among those invited to participate in the conference are physicians, ministers, probate judges, public health nurses, social welfare workers, Kansas Association for Mental Health members, and hospital and mental health center personnel.
Community mental health services in the State Department of Social Welfare and the University of Kansas Extension are sponsoring the meeting.
the most well groomed girls I've ever seen — except for their makeup, which is too noisy. The lipstick is too loud.
It's greasy, by George! But Vitalis with V-7 keeps 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 it today!
"THEY ARE extraordinarily well-dressed except concerning bobby socks. The custom of wearing them everywhere can be carried to extremes."
Miss Strehler praised the neat hair and well-pressed clothes of American girls.
"You seldom find anything wrong with their appearance," she said.
Vitalia
V.P.
HONEY & SPICE
SWEET MINT
CHERRY BLACK
TOOTH POWDER
"Although Latin American women are fashion conscious, too, they don't pay so much attention to a detail such as if the skirt and sweater match exactly."
KUOK Staff Named For Fall Semester
Fourteen students have been named to the executive staff of KUOK for the fall semester.
John Stuckey, Pittsburg junior, was named station manager and program director.
The other positions are held by Susan Flood, Hays junior, society editor; Pete Wellington, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, music librarian; John Nance, Wichita sophomore, sales manager; Ron Jones, St. John junior, production manager; Cale Puckett, Garden Plain junior, assistant production manager.
Fred Aldrich, Osborne sophomore, publicity director and station representative; Judy Doyle, Kansas City, Mo., junior, traffic manager; Jerri Lee Weaver, Milford junior. Business manager; Tom Miller, Fort Scott senior, chief announcer and assistant news director; Jerry Smith, Omaha, Nebraska senior, news editor; Kenneth Costlich, Oak Park, Ill., junior, continuity editor; Richard Herold, Altamont sophomore, sports editor; and Mike Bush, Glendale, Mo., junior, special events director.
Vicar Defends Experimental Sex
PLEASLEY HILL, ENGLAND — (UPI)—The Vicar of St. Barnabas Church shocked many of his parishioners recently when he defended couples who "experiment sexually" before marriage.
"They often make more faithful
partners than those who come to their marriage absolutely pure," said the Rev. Percy Powlesland, 49, in his parish magazine.
The Vicar said he had no objection to performing a marriage ceremony for a girl who was pregnant.
ENTER THE
L&M GRAND PRIX
BUY 2 PACKS
GET 1 FREE
CHESTERFIELD
L & M - OASIS
NOV.14,1962
STUDENT UNION
A
"Bunny Blacks"
Royal College Shop
837 Mass.
Touch & Go
Black or Camel Leather
AAAA to B
$11.95
You're at home in the country
in Oldmaine Trotters newest flexible casual with the low-cut moccasin stitch . . . the little beveled heel. This is the authentic soft light country look that's sweeping the out-of-the-city fashion world! It's time to arrive with the first crocus in beautifully grained and waxed leathers.
NATURALLY oldmaine trotters
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Monday, Nov. 12, 1962
Kafka's The Trial' Well Done By KU's Experimental Theatre
By Rose Elen Osborne Franz Kafka's "The Trial" is a good portrait of a bad dream.
The University Experimental Theatre production which opened Sunday guided its fascinated audience through a maze of bizarre people and places in a nightmare search for justice.
KARL DOERRY, German graduate student, was compelling as Joseph K., the man who finds himself wriggling his hands and racking his brain to determine his crime.
In Kafka's pseudo world Doerry awakes one morning to find himself under arrest by the courts. He looks to others for guidance and comfort, but he is hampered by his own inability to communicate with society.
Bill Evans, Clarkedale, Miss. graduate student and director, doesn't miss an opportunity to inject anerie atmosphere into the play. Sombre music and effective lighting transport the audience from a lonely boarding house to a busy bank, the sickroom of a lawyer, and a depressing waiting room filled with bent, broken people who have been pleading their cases for years.
SIX SKELETON frames of walls are shuffled here and there on the stage forming the various settings and allowing the audience to follow two or three actions occurring simultaneously.
When the scene shifts to a cathedral, perhaps to symbolize this modern Job's search for and desperate need of God, all the walls are moved off stage. A single shaft of
light from above creates a churchlike atmosphere.
Paul Broderick, Overland Park freshman, is the grave priest who attempts to explain man's search for justice to the lonely bank clerk.
BUT JUSTICE is a fleeting thing as portrayed by Rick Friessen, Kansas City sophomore and court artist.
Friessen, a somewhat eccentric painter, makes his appearance in a full-length paint-splotched night-shirt. As the humorous element in the play, he is pestered by two unbelievably devilish streeturchins, Marilyn Belton, Lost Springs junior, and Jane Hess, Rogersville, Mo., graduate student.
While the painter explains how he can use his influence to help the accused, he is scouring the room on all fours searching for pants and tattered sneakers. The effect is so comical and absurd that it serves as a point of relief in the series of tense happenings.
DOERRY PORTRAYS Joseph K. as always alone and always searching. His only close contact, another human being in his world is with Leni, the sad-eyed servant girl who finds all the accused men beautiful. But Joseph K. cannot stop his pursuit long enough to form a real bond with the doleful girl played by Karen Duffy, Albanv. N. Y., senior.
One of the most effective scenes in the play comes shortly before Joseph K.'s execution. He has been tried by "the court that controls everything" and sentenced.
The entire cast, dressed for a masquerade ball, rushes on the stage and throws confetti at Joseph K. and exits. He is quickly stabbed and left sprawled on the ground where the dancers in their grotesque masks find him later.
Laird Points Out Ways To Promote Civil Rights
A professor of political science said Friday that students should take measures to insure that the Negro is not made to live "like a lesser being."
Roy D. Laird said at the Current Events Forum that "civil rights are only as good as the convictions of citizens and leaders and the game must be played according to the rules."
TERMING CIVIL rights the "backbone of a civilized society," Professor Laird suggested three ways in which students should promote civil rights They are:
- Speak up regarding whatever they feel, remembering that it is most important to abide by Constitutional rules of procedure.
- Refuse to belong to a club that practices discrimination and make their reasons known openly and publicly at every opportunity.
- Believe that human dignity is more important than anything else.
"Many, if not most people feel frustrated because they can't do anything about the South," he said.
"WHEN I WAS A CHILD, I thought that I would like to get a machine gun and sneak up on a Klu Klux Klan meeting."
"My distaste is still as great, but fortunately it was tempered by the recognition that, unfortunately, many of these people believe just as strongly that the Negro is . . . not deserving of human dignity."
To bring new members into unions, Reuther said, the labor movement must give them "a sense of consciously participating and shaping the great issues that will determine the kind of society in which we are all going to be living."
Reuther Tells Labor to Work Harder On Social Problems
NEW YORK — (UPI) — Organized labor will have to devote more attention to general social problems than wages in the years ahead, AFL-CIO Vice-President Walter Reuther said yesterday.
The AFL-CIO leader proposed creation of a "technological clearing house," in which labor, industry and government would work together to determine the future impact of automation.
REUTHER'S comments were made in an interview conducted by Donald McDonald, dean of the College of Journalism at Marquette University, and published by the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions.
ORDER
Personalized
Greeting Cards
BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass.
REUTHER SAID in the past decade the average rate of union victories in bargaining elections declined from 75 per cent to 55 per cent, partly because of actions by the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) in former President Dwight D. Eisenhower's administration.
"ITS AN AFFAIR of the law; it doesn't concern us," the artist says, and the dancers freeze in their positions.
Under Eisenhower, Reuther charged, the NLRB made it "more difficult for unions seeking bargaining recognition. The board permitted delays in elections," he said, "so that by the time one was held the company had already carried out a program of brainwashing and intimidation."
What does it all mean? What is Joseph K. really searching for? Don't be logical. Just ride the wave of emotion and apply its meaning to yourself as an individual is the thought of Evans.
"It's the weirdest thing I've ever seen." commented one theatre-goer.
STUDENTS
Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing
Grease Jobs . $1.00
Brake Adj. . . . 98c
7 a.m.-11 p.m.
PAGE CREIGHTON
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd
A Fulbright scholar-violinist will perform in a Faculty Recital at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Theodore Johnson, assistant professor of music theory, will play songs of Corelli, Martinu and Brahms at the recital.
Prof. Johnson has been a Fulbright scholar in Germany and has received the University of Michigan Stanley Award for music.
Fulbright Violinist Will Give Recital
FRANKLIN, Ohio—(UPI)—Deputies sped to the scene where a Brinks' armored truck was reported apparently abandoned yesterday.
Classical music enthusiasts can mark two dates on their calendar this week.
Two Faculty Members Plan Musical Performances
No Robbery, Just Lunch
Finding no signs of life, they banged on a window wherein appeared the surprised face of the driver who was eating his lunch.
He is also a member of the KU String Quartet.
Soprano Miriam Stewart Hamilton, assistant professor of voice, will perform at the Faculty Recital at 8 tonight at Swarthout Recital Hall.
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
Paul E. Hodgson Local Agent
State Farm Insurance
Off. Ph. VI 3-5666 530 W 23rd.
Res. Ph. VI 3-5994 Lawrence, Kan.
Prof. Hamilton will be accompanied by Richard Angeletti, piano instructor.
Prof. Hamilton has included a variety of classical numbers on the program.
She has chosen "Aria de La Demoiselle Elue," "La Voix de La Vierge Erigone," "Vox Coelestis,"
She will sing "Cécilie" "Traum Durch Durch Dämmung" "Die Nacht," "Morgen," "Befreit," "All Meine Gedanken," "Allerseleen," and "Ruhe Meine Seele" from composer Richard Strauss.
and "Ariette Oubilee" from the works of Claude Debussy.
See Us Before You Buy
Theodore Johnson, assistant professor of organ and theory, will give a violin concert Wednesday night.
TYPEWRITERS
NEW AND USED
PORTABLES STANDARDS
ELECTRICS
Sales - Rental Service
LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER
735 Mass. VI 3-3644
The New Fender Jaguar Guitar
Now, you can see and play the new Fender Jaguar electric guitar. You will find the new Fender Mute will give you wide versatility and range with simple convenience.
The Fender Jaguar and all Fender guitars are exclusive in Lawrence at:
Guitar
JAGUAR
Lawrence's Most Complete Line of String & Percussion Instruments
RICHARDSON MUSIC CO. 18 E.9th VI2-0021
Old Spice
AFTER SHAVE
The one lotion that's cool, exciting brisk as an ocean breeze!
The one-and-only Old Spice exhilarates...gives you that great-to-bealive feeling...refreshes after every shave...adds to your assurance... and wins feminine approval every time. Old Spice After Shave Lotion,
Old Spice
AFTER SHAVE
Old Spice
AFTER SHAVE LOTION
1. 25 and 2.00 plus tax.
Old Spice
AFTER SHAVE
Old Spice
AFTER SHAVE LONDON
Old Spice
SHULTON
Old Spice - the shave lotion men recommend to other men!
Page 7
Norstad Cites Deficiencies Of NATO to Conference
Norstad expressed confidence, however, that Europe can be defended. He disclosed he has ordered a mobile forward defense in most of central Europe rather than holding rear positions.
PARIS—(UPI) —Supreme Allied Commander Gen. Lauris Norstad warned today that NATO forces in Europe are "critically short" and suffer from "deficiencies of serious proportions."
NORSTAD addressed the eighth annual conference of parliamentarians of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) countries.
The supreme allied commander was to have retired from his post Oct. 31 but he was asked to stay a few months longer because of the Cuban crisis.
"The fact is, and I have made no secret of it, our forces are critically short in a number of ways—there are deficiencies of serious proportions." Norstad told the 15-nation conference.
"WE ARE STILL short certain major units. Many of those which we have are seriously short in combat and service support. There are notable deficiencies in available supplies, and there is a general lag in furnishing the modern equipment without which our forces would have to fight at a great disadvantage."
Norstad added, however, that within the limits and for the purposes of our directive from the political authorities, NATO Europe can be defended."
"BUT I MUST ADD—and hasten to add—until the goals are fully met we are subjecting ourselves to unnecessary request in the process of this defense," he added.
"What remains to be done is relatively small compared with what has already been accomplished. We have only a short distance to go but this is critical."
Norstad said he ordered the Commander-in-Chief of Allied troops in
Students Pay Expenses With Part-time Jobs
Editor's Note: This is the first article in a series of three dealing with KU student employment.
KU students are up early and late all over the campus in order to help finance their educations.
At 6 a.m., a male student employed in the kitchen of a large residence hall tumbles out of bed. At 6:30, he will be "on the job," helping to serve breakfast to 400 men.
University Daily Kansan
AT 11 THE SAME NIGHT. a woman student will return to her scholarship hall from the library where she has spent the evening working at the periodicals desk.
One woman graduate reported in 1912 her employment activities while she was a student here;
"FROM SEPTEMBER to November I washed dishes at a fraternity house and did chamber work and ironing at a club.
"I had from 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
for my classes and study. After
this, I washed the dinner and supper
dishes and gave a patient a bath
and a massage. Then I studied till
12 o'clock.
"From November to March, I was in a private family, got up at 3 o'clock every morning, ironed on studied, and got breakfast."
"During the summer vacation, nursed at $25 a week."
OTHER WOMEN during this era paid their way by making homemade candy for a downtown store, opening a small dress-making establishment in their rooms, doing simple hand sewing and repairing, and shampooing and setting hair.
KARLENE HOWELL, assistant to the dean of women, who is in charge of part-time employment for women, says that part-time jobs for the co-ed of the '60s fail mainly into the clerical or baby-sitting categories.
Job opportunities for men are more varied. Roger A. Hill, student employment counselor in the Aids and Awards office, receives calls for "everything from skilled electrical layout men to janitors."
Food handlers and fry cooks are in demand the most. he says.
PRINTERS, volunteer firemen, museum guards, genetics lab assistants and students who can work
Central Europe, Gen. Pierre Jaquot,
"to prepare his forces to conduct a mobile defense in most forward areas rather than to hold rear positions."
in yards, mortuaries, offices, drug stores, and service stations are also in demand.
About 140 women have come to Miss Howell's office for aid in obtaining a job. Approximately 85 have notified her that they have found employment. An additional 17 have been placed on the "baby-sitting list."
Hill, in the Aids and Awards office, reports that approximately 300 men students have applied for jobs through his office. An estimated 163 have notified him of their placement.
"WE DO MORE than just refer girls to a potential employer," she said, referring to the counseling function of her office.
"There are a lot of jobs students can't fill," Hill said. "We need people with unusual talents — other than dormitory and construction work.
"WHILE ADDITIONAL forces would be desirable," he said, "a forward defense can be maintained on a minimum basis if the requirements of our present program are fully met."
JOINT FORM letters from Miss Howell and Hill were sent to around 240 businesses downtown. Mr. Hill sent 125 letters to employers with "men only" job opportunities.
"From the employers, we need more common jobs," he said.
He said he recognized the idea of moving NATO defense lines forward in this fashion involves a risk.
"But I also feel on balance the effectiveness of our effort will be far greater than if we remain in a position that has been dictated by our plans up to recent months," he said.
Post cards were sent to heads of departments and to Watkins Hospital and the Kansas Union to determine the need for part-time student help.
838 Mass.
OPEN 24 hrs. a day
"I would also point out that is not the only situation which involves a risk. It is, moreover, a necessary and acceptable risk and, further, adds greatly to the creditability of the deterrent."
JIM'S CAFE
BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY
Birds on a Branch
BIRD TV-RADIO
French Foreign Minister Maurice Couve de Murville told the NATO conference earlier that Europe would have been involved if a war had broken out over Cuba.
VI 3-8855
908 Mass.
TV-
RADIO
- Quality Parts
- Guaranteed
- Expert Service
Defense Department Reveals Details of Soviet Ship Checks
It said the Navy destroyer Barry confirmed that the Anosov carried eight missiles on its voyage back to Russia and the U.S.S. Norfolk confirmed that the Komsomol carried the same number.
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The Defense Department today released a detailed account of which Soviet ships carried Russian missiles from Cuba and which U.S. ships inspected their cargoes.
Other Soviet ships involved, the number of missiles they carried and the Navy ships which inspected their cargoes were:
Labinsk, two, U.S.S. Leary and U.S.S. Newport News; Bratsk, two, U.S.S. Owens; Kurchatov, six, U.S.S. Blandy; Dvinogorsk, four, U.S.S. Blandy; Volgoles, seven, U.S.S. Vesole; and Polzonov, five, U.S.S. Vesole.
Lewis - Hashinger
Elect An Independent
PEGGY CONNER
For All Student Council
Paid for by Supporters of Peggy Conner
Now a clean-filling, smooth-writing,
money-saving Parker cartridge pen...only $3 95
New PARKER ARROW
© 1940 THE PARKER PERC 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 four instantly replaceable solid 14K gold points Gift-boxed with five free cartridges.
Maker of the world's most wanted pens
1.
University Daily Kansan Monday,Nov.12,1962
B. K. Nehru Castigates Reds; Indian Students' Help Asked
By Vinay Kothari
Indian Ambassador B. K. Nehru has urged Indian students in America to return home as soon as possible after completing their studies because of the Sino-Indian conflict.
The ambassador made the plea to Indian nationals abroad in a message in "India News," an Indian Embassy publication.
Nehru said trained mer are needed to combat 'raw, naked aggression by the People's Republic of China — a country towards which we extended the hand of friendship.
"AS CITIZENS OF INDIA we must now prepare to sacrifice for the sake of our freedom all that we can," Nehru wrote, "for it is our very survival as a free people that is at stake."
Trip Approval Still Sought
The International Club has contacted the Mexican embassy in Washington, D.C., in their third attempt to obtain permission for foreign students from 46 countries to enter Mexico.
The club has previously contacted the Mexican consulate in Kansas City and sent a letter—as yet unanswered—to the Mexican Minister of Immigration in Mexico City. The consulate refused the club's request and has predicted that they will receive a reply to their letter early in December.
Helmut Rechlet, German graduate student, and Fritz Gatzin, Swiss graduate student, think the date of the expected reply from Mexico will be too late. Helmut appealed to the Mexican embassy for this reason.
Gysin said that one-third of the people signed up for the Christmas vacation trip to Mexico would be affected by the Mexican ruling. He added that the deadline for bus reservations is Thursday. The club hopes to have a definite decision by then.
Hamilton to Sing At Faculty Recital
A KU voice professor will sing selections from the works of Robert Strauss and Debusy tonight at the Faculty Recital.
Miriam Stewart Hamilton, assistant professor of voice, will sing at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall. Prof. Hamilton joined the KU faculty in 1958 and has appeared as soloist with many major symphony orchestras and oratorio societies.
She has sung in West Germany under the sponsorship of the State Department, with the New York City Center Opera and in summer theatre presentations.
Kleinberg to Speak At Chemistry Meeting
Jacob Kleinberg, Professor of chemistry, will speak on "Some Inorganic Syntheses at Moderately Elevated Temperatures" Nov. 19 at Wayne State University, Detroit, Mich.
Prof. Kleinberg, at the invitation of the Kresge-Hooker Science Library Associates, will speak at a lecture of the "Frontiers of Chemistry Series," which presents some of the top chemists in America.
"While you are abroad you should contribute your utmost to our effort for victory," he wrote.
FAST FINISHED
Laundry
Service
RISK'S
613 Vermont
He wrote that citizens of India living abroad share the same responsibility as those at home "in this great task."
He urged the students to contribute to the National Defense Fund of India, a collection branch for monetary contributions which has been opened in the embassy.
COMMENTING ON the Chinese invasion of Northeast India, Nehru wrote that the Chinese "chose some time ago to dispute the validity of the existing boundary between our country and theirs." He wrote that "the reasons are incomprehensible to us."
"This boundary, the traditional and customary one, has been recognized in various treaties and agreements.
"In terms of law and morality, our stand is fully justified and there is no reason why we should surrender even the smallest portion of
the territory that has always belonged to us.
"FROM THE VERY beginning of this dispute we had never stinted any effort to arrive at a peaceful solution through negotiation.
"Our goodwill and our peaceful intentions have been countered with massive deceit. While talking of negotiations, China has prepared for aggression and has launched a totally unprovoked massive armed invasion against us.
"THE TIME has now come upon us when we must no longer cherish any illusions. We have a record of unremitting struggle for independence for nearly a century," Nehru wrote.
FORT WAYNE, IND. — (UPI) — Herschel D. Newsom, Master of the national Grange, told the opening session of the farm group's 95th annual meeting today that it must reddouble its drive to promote freer international trade.
He said that Indians are once again fighting for freedom, but now against an unsercupulous adversary. "Our struggle will be far more fierce and will probably take an immense toll in terms of blood, sweat and tears," he said. "We must face this with a sense of urgency and realism."
Grange Urged to Promote Freer International Trade
Newsmaintains that relatively high domestic prices are necessary to keep the farm economy in step with American wage levels.
At the same time, Newsom said, the Grange must continue its campaign to promote its "domestic parity" theory for federal farm programs, and must demand government action to protect U.S. farm exports to the European Common Market.
FOR COMMODITIES which go to both domestic and foreign markets, the "domestic parity" idea involves relatively high prices for domestic sales and lower world-market levels on export sales.
"To assume that prices and wages in America must be brought down, either in agriculture or out of agriculture, toward levels that world commerce would determine would be rank error," he said in his prepared address. Grange policy he said, was aimed at matching the economic devices which keep U.S. industrial prices above world levels.
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
NEWSOM added, however, that it would be "rank insolationism" to maintain a one-price structure for farm commodities because of the food needs of the people of under-developed nations.
Portraits of Distinction
HIXON
STUDIO
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
Photo
Engineering and Physical Science Seniors
There 's a FUTURE with...
There's a FUTURE with... SOUTHWESTERN BELL
1234567890
Here's K.U. grad Bill Johnson who is now Supervising Service Foreman at Hutchinson, Kas. Bill has 73 persons reporting to him. There are 27,000 phones served in his district.
Bill graduated in '59 with a degree in Electrical Engineering. At Southwestern Bell, he has been a Staff Assistant at Topeka, Sabetha Wire Chief, and Lawrence Plant Foreman before going to his present job.
If you'd like to know why Bill thinks there's a future with Southwestern Bell, call him collect at Hutchinson, Kas., Area Code 316 MOhawk 5-6663. Give your name and telephone number. Serious inquiries will be accepted.
Mr. H. L. Snell, Eng. '30 and Area Personnel Relations Supervisor for Southwestern Bell, will be on Campus Wednesday and Thursday November 14 and 15, to conduct interviews. For an appointment, sign the interview roster in the Engineering Office in Marvin Hall.
C
Page 10
University Daily Kansan Monday, Nov. 12, 196
3 17 31 42
The Kansas line was about as effective as a screen door in a submarine Saturday against the Nebraska forward wall. Here is
Question: What Happened?
By Ben Marshall
Maybe Nebraska coach Bob Devaney has a magic potion he feeds his players before they do battle with the Kansas Jayhawkers—or maybe KU's new white football pants with a big red stripe have a left-over Halloween whammy on them.
Last year Devaney, who was then coach at Wyoming, led his underdog Cowboys into Memorial Stadium, and Kansas was lucky to escape with a 6-6 tie. The Hawkers were wearing their old blue pants that day.
Last Saturday, Devaney brought his Nebraska Cornhuskers to town. Kansas was wearing the brand-new white pants for the first time. The Jayhawkers were lucky to get out of Memorial Stadium still wearing those pants. The Huskers grabbed everything in sight.
The score will go down in the record books:
1962—NU 40, KU 16.
But people will be talking about this one for a long time to come. Following the game, KU and Nebraska fans alike were asking, "What happened? How in the world could a team that was a 10-point favorite (KU) get mangled as badly as it did?"
- * *
This seemed to be the main topic of conversation in the KU dressing room, too. Coach Mitchell said, "It's the biggest mystery I've ever experienced. I don't know. The boys don't know. We'll never know."
MITCHELL SAID that before the game he thought that the teams were equal, and the outcome would be decided by "the bounce of the ball."
"But," he said, sipping a soft drink in the dazed stillness of the locker room, "they just lined up and whipped us. There wasn't any trickery to it—it was just straight, hard football."
And the dejected Kansas mentor indicated that part of the
mystery was in the team's attitude prior to the game.
"If we were ever up for a game, it was this one," Mitchell said.
"All week long during practice we were up. I thought we were ready. The coaches thought we were ready. And yet, you would have to say that today (Saturday) we were the flattest we have ever been."
MITCHELL SAID that the 40-16 loss to Nebraska was definitely the poorest defensive game that one of his teams has ever played.
"But," he said, "with them at their best, and us at our worst, I could never visualize anything like that first half."
By the end of the first half. Kansas was already buried, 32-0.
By the end of the first half, Kansas was already buried, 32-6. "We lined up with our goal-line defense in the middle of the field and still we couldn't hold up."
"Regardless," Mitchell said, "even if you took all of the teams in the Big Eight and put them together, they should never beat us as bad as Nebraska did."
ASKED TO COMPARE Nebraska with Oklahoma, which beat KU. 13-7. Mitchell said.
"From today's game you'd have to say that Nebraska is two or three touchdowns better—but you can't compare like that. I'd say Nebraska has more offense but is not quite as good on defense as Oklahoma."
$$
* * *
$$
The stunned players were still silent as they filtered out of the dressing room under the east stands. A slight breeze rustled discarded programs, popcorn boxes, and soft-drink cups in the empty stadium.
THE BIG JAYHAWKER on the scoreboard seemed to be frowning into the late-afternoon autumn sunlight, and trying to forget the humiliation.
He thought:
"Happy Homecoming."
Hawks Lose League CCTitle
The Kansas Jayhawkers were unsuccessful in their attempt to defend the Big Eight cross country title at Ames, Iowa, Saturday. The Hawkers finished second in the conference tussle, three points behind Colorado.
Although Nebraska runners finished first and second over the three-mile course at Iowa State, the Cornhuskers could do no better than a third-place team finish.
NU's Mike Fleming had the honor time in 14 minutes 53 seconds, and was followed closely by teammate Ray Stevens.
JAYHAWKER RUNNERS placed
fourth, fifth, and sixth in the meet. George Cabrera led KU thinclads with a 15:06 clocking, one second behind Kansas State's Pat McNeal. Paul Acevedo's 15:07 was a close fifth, one second behind Cabrera, and Charlie Hayward finished sixth in 15:10.
Bob Griffith led Colorado runners with a ninth-place time of 15:19, and teammate Bruce Degan was tenth, one second behind Griffith.
Colorado scored 60 team points, Kansas had 63, Nebraska 76, Missouri 85. Oklahoma 115. Kansas State 123. Oklahoma State 167, and Iowa State 198.
charges will defend their Central Collegiate Conference meet title Saturday at Chicago before closing the season, Nov. 26, in the NCAA meet at Michigan State.
Coach Bill Easton's cross country
Gale Sayers, the Kansas Jayhawkers' sophomore sensation, is nearing the coveted 1,000-yard rushing mark in his first season of varsity competition.
Sayers Nears 1.000
Sayers, who picked up 107 yards rushing against Nebraska Saturday, now leads Big Eight rushers with 972 net yards in eight games.
Film of game narrated by Mike Shinn
VARSITY
MOW SHOWING!
KU-Nebraska Game Movies
UNION FORUM ROOM TUESDAY----7:00 p.m. Free Admission
Explosive Adventure!
ROCK HUDSON·BURL IVES
THE
SPIRAL
ROAD
Shows At 7:00 & 9:00
SUA Quarterback Club
THURSDAY!
One Day Only —
Two Scream Pictures
And On Stage
IN PERSON
DRACULA
DIRECT FROM HOLLYWOOD
IN HOUSE OF THE LIVING DEAD
After School Matinee 4 p.m.
Evening 7:00 & 9:00 p. t.
Plus — Mack Vickery And His Twist Band!
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI3-1065
Tickets Now On Sale!
BLACK TIGHTS
It's sheer magic!
The International Entertainment Marvel
First Of The
VARSITY ART Attractions Limited 2 Days Only Fri.-Sat., Nov. 16-17
VARITY ART Attractions
Now Showing!
BOBBY and SANDRA In the Laugh Hit of 1962
* ROSS HUNTER PRESENTS
IF A MAN ANSWERS
...DONT HANG UP!
Hang around for the FUN!
Carmen COLOR
SANDRA / BOBBY DEE / DARIN
MICHELLE PRELSLE JAUN LUND
CESAR EBENERO STEFANE POWERS
Shows At 7:00 & 9:00
GREATEST ROMANCE AND ADVENTURE IN A THOUSAND YEARS!
CHARLTON SOPHIA
HESTON·LOREN
"Big as
'Ben-Hur'
...if not
bigger!"
--L. A. Times
SAMUEL BRONSTON PRESENT
BRONSTON
PRESENTS
EL CID
70 MM SUPER
TECHNIARAMA
TECHNICOLOR*
RAD WALONE-GENEWIEVE PAGE JOHN FRASER
GARY RAYMOND-HURD HATFIELD and HERBERT LOM
directed by ANTHONY MANN music by MINALOS ROSA
written by FREDRIC M. FRANK and PHILIP MOROAN
a SAMUEL BROGNSON PRODUCTION
DEAR FUN PRODUCTIONS ALLIED ARTISTS
NEXT ATTRACTION
NEXT ATTRACTION
**GRANADA**
(THEATRE ... Telephone VIKING 3-5788
Monday. Nov. 12, 1962 University Daily Kansai
Page 9
De Gaulle's Decision to Remain President Made While Relaxing At Country Home
(Editor's Note: Did President Charles de Gaulle really mean it when he told Frenchmen before last Sunday's referendum that he would quit unless they gave him a big vote of approval? Or was it just a campaign gimmick? In this dispatch a veteran reporter of French affairs examines the questions.)
JOSEPH W. GRIGG
PARIS (UFI) — Probably the most relaxed man in Franch as the final results of France's constitutional referendum rolled in last Monday was President Charles de Gaulle himself.
He was not only relaxed, he was asleep.
De Gaulle had laid his job on the line. He had warned the nation twice in the most solemn, dramatic terms that if it failed to give him a massive vote he would quit for good.
"Vote for me or I go" was the gist of his threat. Instead of voting on the method for electing future French presidents the French nation was, in fact, having to vote for or against De Gaulle.
But one reason for De Gaulle's casual, almost off-hand approach to the result was that he had taken good care to make his threat fully elastic, with himself as the sole judge whether he should go or stay.
OF COURSE, if a majority of the nation had voted "no." De Gaulle automatically would have stepped down into retirement, and left France to pick up the pieces.
But the early results announced before he retired to bed at his quiet country home at Colombeyles Deux-Eglises, plus all the advance soundings of government pollsters, virtually ruled out such an upset result.
The question, therefore, remained—for what kind of vote would De Gaulle settle?
He took care never to spell this out.
of "yes" votes was "weak, mediocre, indecisive."
But even close aides were unsure what, exactly, he had in mind. Some said he would insist on 60-65 percent of the actual ballot cast, others that he must have more than 50 per cent of the 27,500,000 registered voters.
IN A RADIO-TELEVISION broadcast to the nation Oct. 18 he said he would quit if the majority
WHEN THE results were counted, they disclosed that De Gaulle had won 62 percent of the ballots cast—but only 48 percent of the actual electorate because 6,273,000 registered voters failed to vote.
From that moment in the small house of Monday the nation—or at least its top officials, politicians and political commentators — were plunged into an hour or so of tragicomic confusion.
Would De Gaulle settle for the result or would he quit?
DE GAULLE, imperturbable as ever, aear at his accustomed hour of 7 am., read all the newspapers and studied the results.
once as planned, he stayed on another day at Colombey to think things over. Finally, that afternoon the word came from Colombey which enabled Paris afternoon papers to top their final editions with the banner headline "De Gaulle Stays."
Instead of returning to Paris at
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results
Having a Party?
Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES
---
LAWRENCE ICE CO.
6th & Vt., VI 3-0350
EAGLE SHIRTMAKERS PROUDLY ANNOUNCES A DACRON/COTTON OXFORD THAT WILL NOT PILL!
OH, given time a short-necked man with a heavy beard could pill any oxford cloth, they're that soft. But until just recently even Little Lord Fauntleroy could have pilled a DACRON/cotton oxford cloth shirt with one curl tied behind him. Which is why we didn't put out any of them. $ \star $ Sure you know what pilled means; it's when the fabric gets roughed up into little pills. $ \star $ Well, Du Pont has a brand new type DACRON that resists pilling. It came out about a year ago, but we waited until Greenwood Mills, the weavers who make our cotton oxfords produced a DACRON/cotton oxford they were proud of; a really luxuriant lofted oxford. And that brings us up to now. We are making Eagle Shirts of this new material in both a Tabsnap $ ^{®} $ collar and a button-down collar. At about $8.50.
1234567890
STANLEY
★ Tabsnaps, you may recall, are Eagle tab collars that need no collar buttons. Our button-down collars also have a property highly prized by the toney cognoscenti**: a sort of sloppy bulge. We used to call this "flare" until we noticed everybody else was too. Besides, it really isn't a flare, it's a sloppy bulge, but it's ours and we like it. ★ So if you want a drip-dry oxford shirt that won't pill perhaps you'd better drop a note to Miss Afflerbach (she says forget the footnote) and ask her where in your town you can find Eagle Shirts. This is because many fine stores prefer to put their own labels in our shirts; very flattering, but tough on Eagle eyed shoppers. Write her care of Eagle Shirtmakers, Quakertown, Pa.
*Du Pont's trademark for its polyester fiber. **That wouldn't be a bad name for an Italian fashion consultant. Say, do you suppose we could get Miss Afflerbach to change her name to Toni Cognoscenti and ...
M
A
Open Every Evening
S
Safeway
S
Key Rexall Drugs
O
T. G. & Y.
N
ACME Laundry & Cleaners
Speed-Wash
Ronnie's Beauty Salon
Malls Barber Shop
Western Auto
Little Banquet
N
Count Down House
Peggy's Gifts & Cards
Elms Sinclair Service
T
R
Maupintour Travel
Kief's Record & Hi-Fi
Shop Evenings
Monday, Nov. 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 Daly Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion.
FOR SALE
Used guitars, drums, and all instruments.
Wide selection. Richardson Music Co.
18 E. 9th. VI 2-0021. Lessons for all instruments.
11-16
'55 Ford like new, 2-door Custom Line with radio, heater, overdrive and almost new engine. New clutch, new transmission. new paint, new exterior, 7-tires, uses no oil. More than 20 mg, on the highway. $595. Phone VI 3-7642. 11-10
Seal Point Siamese kittens with American Cat Financer papers. Perfect for breeding purposes. 6 week old. $25. Call evenings or weekends at VI 3-8871. 11-15
Motorcycle; 350 cc, low mileage, cheap and dependable transportation, $260 or best offer. Call VI 3-6077 after 5 p.m. or week ends. 11-12
GUNS: LAWRENCE FIREARMS CO.
find what you want to eat all of those
dealers? See us in our elegant surround-
ing or order anything. We also do
1026 Ohio 11-12
1960 Renault Dauphine. 10,000 actual miles. Radio and heater. Side wall side three other extras. Extremely clean interior. 720 Arkansas St. or VI 2-2741. 11-13
Stereo or hi-fi diamond needles for most makes. Half price during November. Don't wait, buy them now at Pettengill-Davis, 723 Mass. tf
1955 Ford Customite; radio, heater.
1955 Ford Customite; included
V1. 3-5045 after 6 p.m.
11-20
TYFEWRITER: Remington Quiet-Riter
TYFEWRITER: Remington Quiet-Ritter
7641%2 Mass., after 4 p. Clark.
11-12
New stereo FM—new portable stereos—
new AM-FM radios—new FM radio dis-
splay—low as low as $26.97 —$31.98
monthRay Stoneback's, 929 Mac-
nibusets St. 11-20
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.
3-speed Royce Union 26" men's or ladies"
529 Mass. Used bikes 10.00 each . . . 11-12
Mass. Used bikes 8.00 each . . . 10-11
Transistor Radios! 6 transistors now $10.97! AM-FM radios—twin speaker now $45.97! FM radios now $26.97. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. St. 11-12
Sports Car Compact Owners Attention! We have all sizes of Snow treads available at our Discount Center, 929 Mass. St. 1,000 new tires at low discount prices! 11-12
All kinds of house plants. Potted . . .
Including philodendron to be used for room dividers and in picture windows.
Phone VI 3-4207. tt
TV shopping? Magnavox 24" automatic TV has a 3 year picture tube warranty, from $149.00, from just $149.00. See the magnificent Magnavox at Pettengill-Davis, 723 Mass.
Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, minimegrahed and bound for $4.00 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery, if
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.
TYPING PAPER BARGAINS: Pink typing paper $5c per ream. Yellow ink per pound. Brown ink per pound. The Lawrence Outlook: 1005 Massachusetts, open all day Saturday, tff
TYPING
Will do neat and accurate typing in my home. Experienced in themes, theses, and term papers. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Adcock. VI 2-1795. tf
MILLIKEN'S S.O.S. — always first quality typing on IBM machines, equipped with carbon ribbons. Open 24 hours a day. 1021½ Massachusetts. VI. 3-5920
Uebernehme gerne Schreibmashinecar-
beiten in deutscher, Französischer,
spanischer und englischer Sprache. Amy
Summers, VI 2-0276. 11-16
Typist experienced in theses and term papers. Prompt service, reasonable rates, electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Howard Mehlinger at VI 3-4409. tf
English major and former secretary will type themes and theses on electric typewriter. For neat and accurate work call Mrs. Melisand Jones, VI 3-5267. tf
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, reports, Electronic typewriter. Ms. McEldowney. 2521 Alabama. Ph. VI 3-8508.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, these papers, and other electronic typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8379.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tf
Experienced typist. 7 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rate. Mrs. Barlow, 204 Yale Rd., VI-1203.
Manuscripts, theses, and term papers
Also dissertations typed on wide carriage
books in paper and all legal keys
Experience in education and experience
Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. VI 2-1546. tf
Efficient typist. Would like typing in her home. Special attention to term reports, thesis, letters. Call anytime at VI 3-2651.
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast, accurate, neat work, Reasonable rates Familier with legal terms. Marsha Goff VI 2-1749. tt
Experienced secretary with electric type-
er equipment, and telephone services, et-
phone Nancy Cain at VI 3-0524.
Fast accurate typing Secretary for 51%
fast accurate typing Robinson, VI 3-58%
at 603 Lawrence Abbott
Typing — reasonable neat, neat and ac-
cumulative.
V. 3-1518 Mrs. Bodin, 825 Greever Terr.
FOR RENT
Furnished or unfurnished units, singles or doubles, Park Plaza South Apartment Inc. 1912 West 25th. Phone VI 2-3416. 11-22
Single rooms for men 1/2 block from Union. Kitchen privileges, maid service and linens. 1234 Oread—VI 2-1518, call or see evenings. 11-15
3-room apartment with stove, refrigerator and garage. Bills paid. $50. Also a house furnished or unfurnished $65. Call VI 3-
7038.
Small second floor furnished bachelor type apartment suitable for 1 person. Private bath and kitchen. Steam heat. Off street parking. $40 per month except electricity. Rogers Real Estate Co. West 14th. Phone VI 3-065 or III 2-939.
FURNISHED OFFICE SPACE is now available by the day, week or month. Reasonable Service will be Secretarial and Security Service. Call VI 3-5820 or see them at 10211 Mass.
M-W-F-1f
Very nice apartment. Large living room with bay window, Large bedroom, kitchen and private bath. Well furnished—all newly decorated—1st floor—private parking—12 minutes walking distance to KU.$$ per month. Cal VI 3-7810.
11-12
Two room, well furnished apartment just
858. 144. Vermont. Phone VI 3-6238.
11-14
TRANSPORTATION
Large attractive room for a young woman available because former resident got married. Kitchen privileges with ample refrigerator space. Only a block away from Student Union. Parking. See at 1242 La. or call V 3-9841. 11-14
Cozy 3 room furnished apartment suitable for single person. Good location. Wash and entrance, also parking. All utilities paid. $53 a month. M 1-2533. N 11-12
Four large-room apartment with private bath for 4 or 5 boys. Utilities paid. 3 beds. 2 baths. 12 each. TV 1-29834 or VI 3-7642. Ask for Mrs. Hullett. Available now. 11-12
ROOMS FOR MEN: Double room only,
room from Student Union; private entrance,
quiet, telephone and utilities paid. Call
411 for 1301 Louisiana at
4 pm, weekdays.
3 room apartment, private bath. I block
from my children to all my friends on
paid. Come and see. 142 IU.edu.
If you have any questions, please call 142 IU.edu.
Vacancies for young men in contemporary home with swimming pool, shower bath, private entrance, 5 evening meals weekly, $65 a month. Call VI 3-96353, tf
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.
Suggest making reservations Now!
First National Travel Agency 746 Mass. VI 3-0152
Travel—only a limited number of airline flights still available for Thanksgiving and Christmas Holiday.
1320
BUSINESS SERVICES
English tutoring ½ block from Corbin
and come to 1127 Abbey evening 5:30-7:00. 11-13
RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Frec delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI-31267. fletcher@sewingcenter.org
GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I study notes.
Completely revised and extremely comprehensive. $4. For free delivery call VI 3-8246. tt
DRESS MAKING and alterations. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith, $ 9391 \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. Call VI 3-5263. tf
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center. 1218
Conn. Personal service—sectionalized
birds, hamsters, chameleons, turtles,
etc., plus complete lines.
pet supplies. **tf**
7:30 a.m. ... Daily Sports Shorts
5:00 Today ___ Calling the Coaches
5:20 ___ Tom Hedrick Sports
MILLIKEN'S "S.O.S." — Open 24 hour a day. Regular Office Hours: 7 a.m.-11 p.m. • STUDENT TYPEING & TECHSIS • CUSTOM GESTETNER DUPLI-CATING & THERMO-FAX COPYING • COMPLETE SECRETARIAL & AN-CHANGE SERVICE, Office Space Available.
10211; Massachusetts Ph. VI 3-592
TYPEWRITERS — Sales, sales, rental,
electricity, Royal, Olympia, Smith Corona,
Olivetti and Remington portables. Bond
harpman Lawrence Typewriter, 735
Maple VI VT
KU SPORTS
LARRY CRUM suggests all kinds of Pancakes. T-Bone steak only 99c. We are open 24 hours a day." K"P-Cancake Grill and Sundries. 14th and Mass. tt
FOUND
1021] 2 Massachusetts Ph. VI 3-5920 M-W-F-ff
HELP WANTED
Man's jacket, Sunday at Hiltrec Lau-
mend. Cable TV call VI 3-7863 between 5:30-6:30. 11-12
Car hostess and fountain help wanted to
carry equipment for a customer who is
eligible if you can work two shifts per
week. Contact Tom Dixon, Dixon Drive
restaurant, 2500 W. 6th or phone
7446. 11-12
DIAL KLWN
RASCAL COLUMN
Will do ironing in my home. Call
VI 2-2239. 11-12
WANTED
For Sale: Economical transportation, 1857
Isetta, custom interior, engine overhaul
its pass staircase. Call VI 2-1863, aft
6 or for Dan Court at 1511 4th,
(Bob Trailer Dem.) 11-16
Indian and Lincoln pennies, any American gold. Also wanted. British, Canadian, Mexican and Russian coins. American Coin Mart, 1015 Mass. I 2-0219. 11-13
Lost: Market Research text by Brown.
Call Ext. 624. KU. 11-16
on
Lost: Zipper lighter with engraved
1-winged eagle. Phone VI 3-6971. 11-15
For rent, a lovely two bedroom apartment partially furnished. Private parking. $80 a month. Phone VI 3-7819 after 5 p.m. 11-16
Lost: Role of Advertising by Sandags and Fryberger. Call Dan Meek at Est. 376.
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
JOE'S BAKERY Open 24 Hours Night Deliveries 412 W.9th VI3-472
412 W. 9th VI 3-4720
A. C. M. R. H. S. A. G. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z.
GROW with a growing industry... the Bell Telephone System
Engineering and Physical Science Seniors *
The Bell Telephone System which has doubled in size in the last 10 years, is expanding rapidly to serve a growing nation. A growing telephone industry means new jobs, fresh opportunities for promotions, a rewarding career for you. The future is bright for young men who want to advance with a progressive industry.
*
Representatives of the following Bell System companies will be glad to talk with you. They will consider all qualified applicants for employment without regard to race, creed, color, or national origin.
- Southwestern Bell Telephone Company builds, maintains and operates telephone and other communications systems throughout its five-state territory.
Bell Laboratories
research, development, engineering and design in electronics and communications fields.
- Western Electric manufacturing and supply unit.
Sandia Corporation
- Sandia Corporation applied research, development and design for production of atomic weapons.
Bell System representatives will be on campus November 14 and 15. Sign up for an interview at the Engineering office.
SOUTHWESTERN BRIDGE
SOUTHWESTERN
DELL SYSTEM
TELEPHONE COMPANY
Page 12 University Daily Kansan Monday. Nov. 12, 1962
Theater's History Acted Out in Dramatic Recital
He introduced himself as a rogue, murderer, wanderer, a gentleman, a Robin Hood, and, in short — an actor.
He was British Hugh Miller. He discussed the theater in a dramatic recital Friday from its primitive beginning to the "modern tendency toward the primitive."
A chair and a table were his props. Sometimes he sat in the chair. Sometimes he picked up a hat from the table or a scarf or monacle to characterize his scene. Often he flipped through a book on the history of the theater on the table.
HUGH MILLER said Sophocles was "the Pulitzer prize winner of Athens."
Wheelock to Give 'Last Words' Talk
This is your last chance to say what you think needs to be said. What would you say?
Lewis Wheelock, professor of history at the University of Iowa, will give his answer to this question at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union Music Room.
This is not, of course, Wheelock's last lecture, but he will plan his speech as though it were.
Wheelock is the first speaker in the last lecture series sponsored by the Student Union Activities.
Vacation Homes Needed By P-T-P
People-to-People is looking for students who will board foreign students in their homes over Thanksgiving vacation.
Those who are interested in having a foreign student in their home during the vacation — or for Thanksgiving dinner only—should contact the P-t-P office in the Kansas Union.
Navy Officers Are Here
Students are asked to give a nationality preference of the student they would like to invite.
A female U.S. Navy officer information team will be on campus today and tomorrow to talk to college women interested in the U.S. Navy's officer candidate school.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
Christian Science Organization, 8:30 p.m., Danforth Chapel, Paul K. Wavro, C.S.B.; "How Christian Science Brings Knowledge from Limitation."
TOMORROW
KU Dames, 7.30, Kansas Room, Union,
Fashion Show put on by Higley's.
Methodist Community Worship, 9:15 p.m. Wesley Foundation
Catholic Masses, 7:00 a.m. 11:40 a.m.
government Catholic Chapel, 1910 Strat-
field
The Russian Club, 7:30 p.m., Student Union, Oread Room, Prof. Roy Laird; "Soviet Agriculture and Peasant Affairs," Public is cordially invited.
Teacher Placement Meeting, 4:30 p.m.
Bailey Hall.
Weather
The weather will remain fair with little change in the temperatures through Tuesday. The low temperature tonight will range from 30 to 35. The high for Tuesday will be in the lower or middle 60s.
Political Sportsman
DALLAS — (UPI) — Joe Foss, Commissioner of the American Football League, is a former governor of South Dakota.
"In Greek history," Miller explained, "the protagonist is the hero. The protagonist today is the mass."
He portrayed Creon and a messenger from the Theban play, Antigone.
"After the breaking up of the old world, comedy disappears," Miller went on. "It appears again in the church in religious drama."
GOING ON to Shakespeare, Miller said the Elizabethan play owed itself to no one, its jumping movement had never been seen before.
"The school had a super-human detection of the whole cycle of man's life. In Shakespeare, man is no longer a victim of fate. He is master of his own fate."
The actor flipped through the book on the table.
"The Puritans closed the theater," he added. "It next opened to the gay, charming comedy of the Restoration which gave grace to the English comedy."
Miller portrayed from this comedy a "crusty knight talking to a fair damsel."
"THAT LED to the romantic era, reflected by its cascade of poetry and characterized by the 'extreme ham' in the theater."
He characterized severa' of Charles Dickens' figures.
After the romantic era, he said,
the theater was in full decline until
George Bernard Shaw "shocked
them."
"Shaw is responsible for the innovation of woman as predator," he said. "This is the period of the 'Oh, this is so sudden!' gambit. No longer is man bowing to the woman.
"For Shaw, woman is the conscious agent of life force. Woman stalks her prey," he said.
THEFT SCENE—This pedestal formerly held "The Resurrection," stolen from the Art Museum this weekend.
Bronze Statue Stolen-
(Continued from page 1) realize its value as a work of art," Prof. Stokstad said.
SHE SAID two men could have lugged it off, but not easily. It weighs several hundred pounds.
The gallery suffered a similar loss last year when a bronze toad was taken from the garden. It was returned when the prankster realized the toad was a work of art and part of a gallery collection. The toad was placed in a luggage locker at Union Station in Kansas City and the key mailed to the gallery director.
CRC Chairman Plans Trip-
Just when the first call will be is not yet decided, but William A. Binns, clinical psychologist and chairman of the Lawrence Commission, said the first call would be soon.
Children are our speciality Call now for an appointment
Burch Higgins, Photographer
For Your Child's Christmas Portrait
One member from each group-plus a mayor appointee and an ex officio member from the Lawrence Commission—will form a committee and call on individual tavern owners.
Now is the time
We Rent Most Anything
ANDERSON RENTAL
812 N. H.
Stay bright. Fight drowsiness and be at your brilliant best with Verv® continuous action alertness capsules, Effective, safe, not habit-forming.
The two groups are the Human Relations Committee of the All Student Council and the Lawrence Human Relations Commission.
James Cahill, curator of Chinese art at the Freer Gallery, Washington, D.C., will speak on "Confucian Humanism and Chinese Art" at 4:30 p.m. today at the Student Union Activities Forum in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
King of Swat
(Continued from page 1) would be mutually rewarding
NEW YORK - (UPI) - Babe Ruth hit 300 or better in six different World Series.
"I AM NOT going there to stir up trouble," Warner said. "But I have been invited and when I return I will have a greater depth of understanding into the problem of race relations and I will also be a more valuable resource person."
Warner said he did not like reports which indicated outsiders as leaders in the Mississippi University riots, but said there was no analogy between his trip to the South to participate in a conference on Civil Rights and other whites who have gone south to create strife.
CRC Joins Forces With Two Groups
The Civil Rights Council (CRC) joined hands last week with two similar groups in its effort to end allied racial discrimination in some Lawrence taverns.
RANCH HOUSE STUDIO
"THE VERY ESSENCE of nonviolent protest is that if any violence erupts during a demonstration it will not come from the protester," Warner said.
VI-3-4575
Chinese Art Is Topic
780 Lincoln
Prof. Stokstad said she hopes "Resurrection" also will be returned when its value is realized.
He added that nonviolent theory incorporated simple notions of Christian love — "loving those who persecute you," Warner summed up.
The Montgomery Improvement Association was first organized in December, 1955, by Rev. King to protest Montgomery's then segregated buses.
"Negroes must understand they are not winning a victory over the white man but are winning justice over injustice," Warner commented.
The boycott which resulted lasted more than a year until the Supreme Court ruled the segregated buses unconstitutional.
Dr. Canuteson Attends Meet
Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of Student Health Services, is attending a meeting of the executive committee of the National Tuberculosis Association today in New York.
DOING IT THE HARD WAY by hoff (GETTING RID OF DANDRUFF, THAT IS!)
easier 3-minute way for men: FITCH
Men, get rid of embarrassing dandruff easy as 1-2-3 with FITCH! In just 3 minutes (one rubbing, one lathering, one rinsing), every trace of dandruff, grime, gummy old hair tonic goes right down the drain! Your hair looks handmade.
FITCH
LEADING MAN'S
SHAMPOO
somer, healthier. Your scalp tingles, feels so refreshed. Use FITCH Dandruff Remover SHAMPOO every week for positive dandruff control. Keep your hair and scalp really clean, dandruff-free!
FITCH
KIDS CARE
SKINCARE &
SHAMPOO
Special Mist
Formula
francis
francis SPORTING GOODS
731 Massachusetts
choose the best, choose Converse "All Star" Oxford 7.95
- heavy white army duck
- permanent set eyelets
- non-marking, non-slip outsole
- sponge insole, cushion heel, arch support
- men's, white, sizes 6-13
- high cut style, also 7.95
"Everything for the Outdoorsman"
JOHN HENRY BROWN
Tuesday, Nov. 13, 1962
Daily hansan
VOTERS—Two students cast their ASC general election ballots in the poll box in the Strong Hall Rotunda. They are Nancy Partin, Shawnee Mission junior; and Vic Zuercher, Whitewash senior. The election will end tomorrow.
Eurich WU Plan Much Discussed
The much discussed Eurich-report plan to change Wichita University to a State Universities Center was termed today a "framework for progress" by University of Kansas Chancellor, W. Clarke Wescoe.
"The Eurich report provides a framework for progress for higher education in Kansas," he said.
THE CHANCELLOR SAID he hoped the report would be read in its entirety, and said that there was some misunderstanding about the specific recommendations.
He said that newspaper reports which said Wichita University would become an extension school of KU and Kansas State University are not accurate.
The Eurich report suggests that the University of Kansas and Kansas State University "establish a State Universities Center at Wichita under a new Board..."
"THE FRAMEWORK (the Eurich report) or blueprint," Chancellor Wescoe said, "would provide equal educational opportunities under state sponsorship for all the young people of Kansas. This equality of opportunity everyone has supported in the past.
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
"I would hope the report would not be rejected out-of-hand." Chancellor Wescoe said.
The Eurich report was adopted by the State Board of Regents and is now scheduled for consideration by the State Legislature.
THE REPORT SUGGESTS methods for operating Kansas' system of higher education, with particular attention given to the possible uses of existing programs and facilities.
The report recommends an extension of classroom and laboratory hours, the introduction of an 11-month school year, and deals with problems of waste and duplication in additions to a Kansas-oriented view of problems related to higher education.
APPARENTLY. THEY BELIEVE that a "Universities Center" means that Wichita would lose its identity as a university and become a satellite extension school for the two larger State universities.
WU officials agree that Wichita U. should enter the State system of higher education but are not in favor of Wichita's establishment as a "Universities Center."
WU Regent Sidney Brick, as quoted in a UPI dispatch, said at a meeting last night, that as long as Wichita is to be given a "lower stature" under the plan "it is obvious that we are not prepared to turn Wichita University over to the state system."
60th Year, No.43
Candidates Confident "Other Fellow" Will Lose
By Jackie Stern
If optimism is the key to success, all 34 candidates vying for All Student Council seats will emerge victorious in the general elections which began this morning.
University Party and Vox Populi leaders and candidates last night were sure that they would unseat one another in elections today and tomorrow.
LAST FALL UP gained one more seat than Vox. Vox gained 8 seats to 9 for UP. Vox politicians last night predicted a reversal in the two-year fall election trend which has favored UP.
The final makeup of the ASC following last fall's elections was still 16 to 11 in favor of Vox. Vox has traditionally out-scored UP during the spring elections.
Roger Wilson, Wichita senior and Vox president. said:
"Vox Populi is in the best position it ever has been during fall elections. We should come out with more seats than the University Party."
NANCY LANE, Hoisington senior and independent UP co-chairman, said:
"All our candidates are qualified and a good number of them have had political experience.I feel quite confident we are going to win," she said.
Bob Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla, sophomore and Greek UP cochairman, shared Miss Lane's view.
Although the majority of candidates appeared optimistic, some doubt was expressed by both party members in the small men's dormitory districts.
A VOX candidate outlined three possible outcomes in that district voting. Depending on the size of the vote turnout, he predicted either one UP representative, one Vox representative and one UP representative, or two Vox representatives would be elected.
He said either way the vote would be close with 10 votes representing the difference.
In the small women's dormitory district where UP has a stronghold with three affiliated houses and one non-affiliate, a Vox candidate said a party-line vote would work against her.
Her UP opponent expressed confidence in her chances of winning in the district because of her party's strength.
(Continued on page 8)
Heavy Vote Predicted
Students began streaming to the polls shortly after they opened at 8 o'clock indicating a heavy vote in the All Student Council general elections.
John Stuckey, Pittsburgh senior and ASC elections chairman said voting was heaviest in Strong Hall, with the greatest number of students voting between 10:30 and 11:30.
As the polls opened in Strong Rotunda, 20 to 25 voters waited to begin the assembly line voting process of picking up their dean's cards, getting their ID cards stamped and receiving their ballots.
ber in charge of the Murphy polling district, said 25 or 30 students voted in the first 20 minutes after the polls opened and several more were in line.
Holly Thompson, Ottawa sophomore and elections committee mem-
One hundred eighty-five students voted in Murphy this morning.
"This is quite a voting increase from a comparable period in last week's primary elections," she said.
See voting tabulations on page 4. "I only had six or eight students vote all morning in this district the first day of the primaries."
"Though it is still too early to tell," Stuckey said, "I think my prediction of a heavy voting turnout will be carried out."
Ogilvie Says Election Ruling Hurts His Hopes
By Jan Piekarski
A University Party candidate has accused the elections commission chairman of making a ruling which will hurt his chances in the election. In a conversation this morning, Art Orilvin, North Kansas City, Mo.
In a conversation this morning,
Art Ogilvie, North Kansas City, Mo.
SALVATORE DI BOLLO
John Stuckey
senior, and UP candidate for the Professional Fraternity and Cooperative district, said John Stuckey, the Elections Commission chairman, made a ruling which curtails his chances of winning the ASC seat.
"Stuckey is playing partisan politics." Oglivie said.
STUCKEY RULED that Theta Tau and Triangle cannot vote in the Professional Fraternity and Cooperative districts.
Ogilvie said that in previous years, both Theta Tau and Triangle have been allowed to exercise their own choice as to whether they would vote in the Social Fraternity district or the Professional Fraternity and Co-operative district.
"IN MY OPINION," said Ogilvie, "Stuckey, a Vox member, saw that I have strong support in the Theta (Continued on p. 8).
(Continued on page 8)
Lack of Jobs Deters KU Student Employment
(Editor's Note: This is the second in a three-part series on KU student employment.)
By Joanne Prim
The student employment picture at KU has had a zig-zag pattern reflective of the nation as a whole.
How does the employment situation look now?
"IN SCHOOLS of this size, the demand is always greater than the supply."
"There definitely aren't enough jobs to go around," Roger A. Hill, student employment adviser, said.
He said although some students are without jobs, there are some unfilled positions requiring a special skill—such as an experienced shoe salesman or an electrical technician
He added that they may be limited by the terms of their fellowships.
Clark Coan, assistant to the dean of men and foreign student adviser, said, "There are plenty of jobs available for foreign students."
They may lack the necessary background, or they may not find a job to their liking.
RAYMOND NICHOLS, vice chancellor in charge of finance, and Keith Nitcher, comproller, feel there is a direct relationship between increased enrollment and the need for additional student help.
Eventually more assistance becomes necessary in all departments. Hashinger Hall, opened this fall for upperclass women, created jobs for 81 students and added $2,113.20 to the payroll.
The total payroll for part-time student employment on campus for October of this year was $46,251.76, paid to 1,030 graduate and undergraduate students on an hourly basis and 1,079 graduate students on a monthly basis.
THE PAYROLL for October 1961
was $36,941.36 allotted to 859 graduate
and undergraduate students (hourly)
and 1.030 graduate students (monthly).
The hourly pay scale for undergraduates is 70 cents, freshmen; 75, sophomores; 80, juniors; and 85, seniors. The scale is often adjusted, depending on the training and experience of the individual employe.
Most of the hourly employees are undergraduates. Their average wage was $43.76 per month. Of these, 454 work in the residence halls where they live, and 129 work at the library.
OF THIS YEAR'S monthly employs, 73 graduate students are on scholarships and 51 are on trainee grants. They performed no services, although they are listed on the payroll.
If those 124 graduate students are omitted, 955 actual employees are left. Most of them are assistant instructors, graduate assistants, research assistants, or teaching assistants.
The average pay for graduate students is about $211-$222. The rate is $111 for one-quarter time.
STUDENT EMPLOYES listed on other payrolls are 115 by the Kansas Union, 22 by the Center for Research in Engineering Sciences, 20 by the athletic office and nine by the bookstore.
Miss Karlene Howell, assistant to the Dean of Women in charge of part-time employment, reports 12 women serving as student assistants in Lewis and Hashinger Halls. Another 23 are counselors in Gertrude Sellards Pearson and Corbin. They are paid $70 a month.
There are 35 counselors in men's residence halls, according to figures from Arthur McEthenie, assistant to the Dean of Students, Templin and Joseph R. Pearson Halls each have 12. Carruth-0'Leary has six; Oread, four; Grace Pearson, one. They receive $45 monthly.
Women's salaries are higher than men's because the duties in a women's hall are more extensive.
Both Mr. McElhenie and Miss Howell are presently making surveys concerning student employment.
ACCORDING to a survey a year ago among men's residence halls, 189 men were employed at an average wage of 81 cents per hour for an average of nine and one-half hours a week. These figures did not include student counselors or University teaching assistants.
According to incomplete returns from Miss Howell's survey this year, more than one-half of the residents of large halls are employed within the hall.
"It's just easier to work where you live than to go out on the hill," Miss Howell said. "There is also more flexibility. Girls can work in the evening and on weekends.
"A lot of girls work during the summer," she added.
Some are limited by their scholarships or do not prefer to work while going to school.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday. Nov. 13, 1962
Thank You, Mrs. R.
They buried Eleanor Roosevelt Saturday.
She died Wednesday. She died of exhaustion not of old age; she was ageless. She simply exhausted herself in more than 70 years of crushing labor.
When she left the White House in 1945 she went on a 140-hour-a-week schedule—20 hours a day.
SHE TRAVELED. She wrote.She fought for controversial causes.
There was the tractors-Cuban prisoner of war exchange deal which fell apart.
There was the invitation to the Soviet Premier for another United States tour.
There was the syndicated column.
There was the chairmanship of the United Nations Human Rights Commission.
There were the honorary chairmanships of the A.D.A.
Many praised her actions.
AND, LIKE HER dead husband, she was hated and ridiculed by many. They called her silly, senile, doddering—that ugly old fool.
But, by God, they respected her.
Stevenson and Ike, Truman and Barry. Khrushchev and Vishinski—they all respected her and praised her.
But there is another group of men who cannot forget her. They are middle-aged now. No one knows how many there are.
But 21 years ago she lifted their hearts.
They were kids then—17, 18, 19 and 20; kids thousands of miles from home. They were racked with pain. They shook in agony and tried to keep from calling "Mother."
Just scared, torn up kids—sailors and Marines.
A TART OLD admiral—now dead—told the story in his memoirs, "Admiral Halsey's Story."
Bull Halsey, then Commander, South Pacific, describes her visit to his headquarters on a Godforsaken island called Noumea. Mrs. Roosevelt inspected the hospitals.
"When I say she inspected those hospitals," he wrote, "I don't mean that she shook hands with the chief medical officer, glanced into the sun parlor, and left.
"I mean that she went into every ward, stopped at every bed, and spoke to every patient: What was his name? How did he feel? Was there anything he needed? Could she take a message home for him?"
"SHE WALKED for miles, and she saw patients who were greviously and gruesomely wounded. But I marveled most at their expression as she leaned over them. It was a sight I will never forget.
"She accomplished more good than any other person or groups of civilians who had passed through my area."
Eleanor Roosevelt was a do-gooder. She was not a silly do-gooder—there really is no such thing.
Scott Payne
From My Pigeonhole
Editor;
Regression in university community planning and architecture was proudly displayed on the front page of a local newspaper prior to the 1962 Homecoming. The monotonous horizontal skyline pictured, created by Templin, Lewis, Hashinger and Ellsworth halls, reminds the observer of the ancient civilization of prehistoric cliff-dwellings.
THESE MONSTROSITIES reveal further regression, for no such opportunities for communal behavior and interchange as existed at Mesa Verde or other past American Indian civilizations are provided in the KU dormitories. Their unbroken horizontal lines compel the student to identify with a layer, rather than with the living group. The lack of adequate stair space and elevators is surpassed only in Summerfield Hail, where intercommunication is further bottlenecked by stair doors that open into the traffic flow.
... Letters ...
THE CAFETERIA, the single focus of communion and intermingling, protrudes from the rectangle proper as a hasty architectural afterthought. An immense lounge with a few slippery, imitation leather chairs hugging the walls discourages conversation and social interaction. An occasional TV room provides for the monomania of hypnotic worship of the idiot's lantern.
MASS EDUCATION reduces the student to a digit on an IBM card. He or she is pigeonholed into a cubicle on one of the several layers of the dormitory. The student becomes but one more click of the cheeker's counter in the growing cafeteria line.
During the golden age of democratic Greece it was believed that education flourished when developing minds met and intercommunicated. The KU dormitories, by discouraging social dialogue, belie this thesis. They stand in classic testimony to the isolation
of the student and the denial of democratic exchange of ideas.
John Bav
Topeka graduate student
Pigeonhole 340
Layer 3
J.R.P. Cliffdwellings
C-18 © Mez
"IT'S A WONDER HE LETS ME STAY IN THE CLASS - I SEEM TO REQUIRE SO MUCH INDIVIDUAL ATTENTION."
Editor:
From Toronto
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
Received letter from friend on latest happenings in Kansas: good old Kansas, where you can choose to support any shade of political thinking from very moderate Conservatism to absolutely full-Blooded Conservatism.
Here at Toronto University the range of political variety available is much broader than at KU. There are Social Credit, Conservative, Liberal, Socialist, and Communist clubs. Naturally, they all enjoy equal academic freedom and protection. The essential "soundness" of the Kansas sophomore might be spoiled by such a rich intellectual diet, and it is a wise tradition which protects him from himself, during such a sensitive period of his education.
From the standpoint of the stimulation which it might have provided — the change in the character of Action — the nearest thing to a dedicated Liberal group on the campus, last year, can only be regrettable. It is a pity to see it succumbing to mistaken arguments of expediency in the shape of a catch-all "Moderationism." One wonders whether the catch-all, will, in fact, catch anyone, given the pre-dynastic quality of Kansas Conservatism?
Denis Kennedy
P. S. Some literary critics might quarrel with the word pre-dynastic, but it certainly suits the eleven members of the ASC who voted against censoring Governor Barnett. They remind me of the Mummies in the pyramids: from their point of view conditions can only get worse.
Alumnus
UNIVERSITY
Dailu Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904,
triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Telephone: 512-3700.
Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 Street, New York, United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the weekdays on Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
COMMENT A Chance to Live
Mrs. Suzanne Vandeput, a young Belgian mother, killed her eight-day-old baby daughter last June by putting a barbiturate in the child's milk. The baby girl, named Corinne, was a "thalidomide baby," born without arms.
As a result of this act, Mrs. Vandeput and four other people, including the doctor who prescribed the barbiturate, were charged with the baby's death.
DURING THE EMOTIONAL trial, held in a courtroom filled with cheering supporters of the defendants, the defense attorney called Mrs. Vandeput's act "one of love."
He said the mother "could not imagine that baby growing up and being unable to play because of lack of arms."
The prosecuting attorney labeled this statement false logic. He asked the jury to consider the "thousands of mothers who kept their children alive in spite of malformations."
THE DEFENSE REPLIED, "You said they (the defendants) were alone in having decided to kill their baby. You do not know whether or not they are alone. You only know that so far they are the only ones who have been tried for it."
(During the trial, the defense said hundreds of letters had been received from mothers of other thalidomide-deformed babies and that "some approved us; others understood us, but not one condemned us.")
In his closing remarks, the prosecuting attorney told the jury that the defendants had not given Corinne Vandeput a chance at life.
"EXCEPT FOR HER very grave malformations, that baby was fit to live," he said. "You must bring in a verdict of guilty because you must affirm that the principle of respect for life is sacred. The accused did not commit euthanasia. They never seriously examined the chances of this child in this world . . . you cannot acquit them."
But the members of the jury, all of whom were parents except one man, did indeed acquit the defendants. In effect, they established a dangerous and amoral precedent.
An expert witness for the defense had testified that babies exhibiting Corinne Vandeput's symptoms had "only one chance out of ten to live more than one or two years and usually died sooner."
The jury's verdict denied that one in ten chance to other babies like Corinne Vandeput.
USING THE JURY'S logic, the club-footed Lord Bryan would never have been given the chance to write his masterpieces nor would the malformed Toulouse-Lautrec have had the chance to paint the Paris he knew so well.
Using the jury's logic, all the soldiers ever maimed or wounded in battle should be put out of their misery, because no one can "imagine them being unable to play without arms" or legs or with shrapnel in their eyes.
Corinne Vandeput will never see a sunset or hear a bird in a tree. She will never smell a circus or watch her father light the candles on her birthday cake.
CORINNE VANDEPUT is dead, and with her has gone the potential every child is born with. She might have grown up to become a fine woman. She might have invented a cure for cancer or written a great novel.
At the very least, Corinne Vandeput might have overcome the one in ten odds she was born with and lived out her life in spite of a bad physical handicap.
But Corinne Vandeput is dead. One cannot help but wonder if her death was truly an "act of love."
-Zeke Wigglesworth
BOOK REVIEWS
ADVENTURES OF A YOUNG MAN, by John Dos Passos (Popular Library, 50 cents).
In a catalog of the proletarian novels of the thirties this volume should occupy an important place, along with Dos Passos' other books and the writings of Steinbeck and Farrell. It also is important in its depiction of what was happening to Dos Passos himself.
For an early-day enchantment with communism was becoming grim reality for Dos Passos. For his hero, Glenn Spottswood, grim reality comes with the Spanish Civil War. He has been a fiery idealist, a party organizer, a worker throughout the Midwest and the East. Then he goes to Spain, as many young leftwingers were doing in the thirties, and his growing "deviationism" brings him death at the hands of his former comrades.
In style and form, "Adventures of a Young Man" is like the narrative segments of "U.S.A." It is an important novel that seems to have been lost in the shuffle—CMP
Barry Asks JFK To Fire Stevenson
NEW YORK—(UPI)—Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., suggested last night President Kennedy fire U.N. Ambassador Adlai Stevenson and other "civilian thinkers" who he said have been wrong from start to finish in cold war recommendations.
Page 3
In addition to Stevenson, Goldwater specifically named Chester Bowles, Arthur Schlesinger Jr., and Richard Goodwin.
to reassuring to the American people, now that Presi-
"It would be reassuring to dent Kennedy has demonstrated the worth of a policy of action based on American strength, to rid his administration of those who have consistently urged a soft policy toward Communism, in Cuba and elsewhere throughout the world.
BOWLES is the President's special adviser on Asian, African and Latin American affairs; Schlesinger is a special Presidential assistant and Goodwin is deputy assistant secretary of state for inter-American affairs.
"The men responsible for convincing the President that he withhold air support from the Cuban invasion can no longer serve any useful purpose in our government."
Goldwater, in addressing the Wings Club here, said Kennedy "should dispense with the advice of men who have developed a guilt complex over America's military superiority."
GOLDWATER, leader of the GOP's conservative wing, is a military jet pilot and a major general in the air force reserve.
At a news conference prior to the address, Goldwater explained that "this is no reflection on Stevenson's loyalty or patriotism. These people have shown their inability to understand the modern world."
The senator said that only a few weeks ago there was disturbing talk about the military establishment growing so powerful that it constituted a threat which could be turned against this country.
Heather Foils Speedster
SALFORD, England — (UPI) — A 16-year-old motorcyclist was fined yesterday for speeding.
He told the judge he just returned from Scotland and "could not see my speedometer because it was covered with heather."
Beauty and wisdom are rarely conjoined—Petronius
Rusty Crane, Independence senior and club president, said an organizational meeting of the Psychology Club will be held at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow in Room 108, Green Hall.
Psychology promoters have formed a new campus club.
Psychology Club Plans 1st Meeting
The club will elect other officers, adopt by-laws and plan the year's activities.
Crane said the meetings and club membership are open to all interested persons.
WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY ONLY
The club's aim is to promote an interest in psychology and to bring stimulating lecturers to the campus, he said.
He mentioned a field trip to Menninger's in Topeka and an information service for graduate students as future club projects.
Howard Baumgartel, associate professor of psychology, will sponsor the club.
SALE
SKIRTS and SWEATERS 40% OFF
Lots of Styles & Colors in Every Size—6-16 (sizes)
Sale at
Prisoner Escapes Through Bars
University Daily Kansan
The CAMPUS
Jay SHOPP8
12th & Oread
RUSHVILLE, Ill. — (UPI)
Charles Williams, 21, squeezed through the window bars of the Schuyler county jail yesterday and escaped in the same stolen car in which he was arrested.
Authorities described Williams as "pretty skinny."
12th & Oread ONLY!
Be at KUOK "Election Central" tomorrow night for-
- Live interviews with candidates and politicians.
KUOK Election Night Party
- Instant reports on returns
- Free coffee and donuts.
- Swinging music and D.J.s.
- KUOK open house.
5 o'clock on
Wednesday Night
CUOK
KUOK Studios, Basement of Hoch Auditorium, South side.
Greetings 1992
1962 Christmas
Greetings 1962
Use Christmas Seals...
Tuesday, Nov. 13, 1962
Fight TB and Other Respiratory Diseases
Official Bulletin
Methodist Community Worship, 9:15 p.m. Wesley Foundation
Tau Sigma, 7:00 p.m. Robinson Gym.
Teacher Placement Meeting, 4:30 p.m.
TODAY
The Russian Club, 7:30 p.m., Oread Room, Student Union, Pref. Roy Laird; "Soviet Agriculture and Peasant Affairs," Public is cordially invited.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
Kappa Phi, 7.00 p.m., Danforth Chapel.
Guest speaker
Radio Production Center, 7:30 p.m.
Rm. 220 Flint, Executive Comm. Meeting.
SUA Modern Book Forum, 4:30 p.m.
Reading and Browsing Room, Student Union, Dr. Charles Landesman, Philosophy Dept. Discussing Rand A's "Atlas Shrugged"
Catholic Masses, 7:00 a.m. 11:40 a.m.
State Religious Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford
Rd.
Le Cercle Français, Mercredi le 14 novembre, à 16 h. 30 dans la salle Jayhawk de l'Union. Compute-rendu de l'Institut d'éte en France. (Illustré)
Analytic - Inorganic - Physical Chemistry Colloquium. 3:30 p.m., 122 Malott, Dr.Benjamin Chu; "Molecular Forces for Scattering Measurements."
State Farm Insurance
Paul E. Hodgson Local Agent
Off. Ph, VI 3-5866 530 W 23xL
Res. Ph, VI 3-5944 Lawrence, Kan.
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
MAIL
I don't know how they do it ..but this is what I call convenience. You'll agree—when you pay all your bills by mail with a ThriftiCheck personal checking account.
Douglas County State Bank
ThriftiCheck
Available in this area exclusively at
9th & Kentucky
V13-7474
SUA
CLASSICAL FILM SERIES
Presents
Rudolph Valentino
in
"Blood and Sand"
at
Wednesday, Nov.14, 7 p.m.
Admission 60c at door
FORUM ROOM OF UNION
Page 4
University Daily Kansap
Tuesday, Nov. 13, 1962
M. R. S. GANDHI
Prof. Jose Maria de Osma
Prof. Osma Dead; At KU Since 1917
Jose Maria de Osma, KU professor emeritus of Romance languages, died Saturday after attending the KU football game.
Prof. de Osma retired in 1950 after 39 years in the KU Romance language department.
He was born in 1886 in Barcelona, Spain. He graduated from the University of Barcelona and studied in Paris at the Ecole des Beaux Arts.
After several years in Paris he moved with his family to Costa Rica. He spent several years there as an instructor in Latin American schools.
Prof. Osma came to KU as an instructor of Romance languages in 1917. He became an assistant instructor in 1919 and a professor in 1928.
Drill Team Rookies Smite Smoke a Blow
Last night 15 khaki-clad, steel helmeted, white-spatted Pershing Rifle pledges kept back a surging throng . . . one woman reporter.
The pledges appeared after an assistant professor of military science, reported a fire in the military science building.
Tau Sigma Dancers Present Programs
Tau Sigma dance fraternity-sorority will present a program explaining modern dance for the International Club at 8 p.m. Friday in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
"Modern dance is something truly American," Carol Philippi, Salina senior and a member of Tau Sigma, said. "We want to explain by showing the International Club what modern dance is."
Fish Bit on Pen
Miss Phillippi said the program Friday is a pre-program appearance before their regular dance program December 11 and 12 in the Experimental Theatre.
FORT MADISON, Ia. — (UPI) — Although it's a "fish story," this anecdote from George Schenck, a Bradenton, Fla., motor court operator, sounded good to a local pen manufacturer.
Lodged in the throat of a 13-pound black grouper he caught on a recent fishing trip, Schenck reported, was a Sheaffer fountain pen. When wiped off and uncapped, it proved to have a full supply of ink and wrote perfectly, he said.
Student Ambassador Plans To be Discussed Thursday
Plans for the "Student Ambassador Flight" abroad will be announced at the second all-student People-to-People meeting at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Kansas Union.
Schaeffer said the new American Field Service sub-committee will be explained.
William Schaeffer, Shawnee Mission senior and KU P-t-P chairman, said last night tentative plans for the summer direct job exchange will also be discussed.
The exchange, he said, will provide summer jobs for foreign students in Kansas as well as send American students abroad for summer employment.
The AFS sub-committee plans to sponsor high school foreign student
for a weekend visit to KU this spring. The sub-committee will also screen prospective student chaperones for an AFS summer bus tour throughout the U.S.
Aircraft Engineer to Speak
An electronic group engineer from McDonnell Aircraft will speak at a meeting of AIEE-IRE (American Institute of Electrical Engineers-Institute of Radio Engineers) at 7:30 tonight in the Kansas Union.
C. F. Stolwyk of St. Louis, Mo., will speak on "Manned Spacecraft Communications" and show a movie on Gemini (two-man) spacecraft.
T
The PIT crew EAGERLY awaits to serve you!
8" PIZZA AND CHOICE OF BEVERAGE
Mon.-Thurs.
AFTER 8 p.m.
89c
SOUTHERN PIT 1834 Mass.
Quality Watch Repair
Lowest Prices
DANIEL$
Minutes later, the fire trucks, the firemen, the pledges and the reporter left the "danger" area.
Three Lawrence fire trucks and sight firemen rushed to the scene.
Firemen had picked up the "fire" (smouldering refuse enclosed in a three-foot deep concrete pit) and tossed it aside.
A fire department official said later the blaze apparently started when someone dropped a lighted cigarette into the pit.
Election Returns
No damage was reported.
the noon count taken from all four
countries, showing breakdown of
voltage by districts;
JOE'S BAKERY
Open 24 Hours
Night Deliveries
412 W.9th VI 3-4720
District today's numbe total electe Fraternity 267 2
Society 92 1
Men's Large Dorms 125 1
Women's Large Dorms 117 1
Men's Small Dorms 52 1
Women's Small Dorms 14 1
Freshman Women's Dorms 80 1
Professional Fraternities and Cooperatives 14 1
Married-unorganized 8 1
Unorganized-Unmarried 49 1
Total voting 818
Freshman ballots 277
CLASS OF '66
Don't be fooled by spectacular campaigns — vote for sound leadership and ability —
LARRY BAST . . . PRESIDENT
JIM LEWIS . VICE-PRESIDENT
MARY LASELY . SECRETARY
MARY MEEK . TREASURER
"Strong Unity Through Strong Leadership"
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
T & C's "BLACK MAGIC"...
Elegant Peau de soie
Elegant Peau de soie
Wear it, and you'll discover
it IS sheer magic...So
perfect for daytime
or evening!
WISHBONE
$10.95
VIP
$10.95
TOWN & COUNTRY SHOES
LEATHER INDUSTRIES OF AMERICA
AMERICAN SHOE DESIGNER AWARD
1982
"Bunny"
Royal College Shop
"Bunny Black's"
Royal College Shop 837 MASS.
JV
Junior Jayhawkers Whip Mizzou, 30-13
Page 5
By Roy Miller
Pain of KU's humiliating loss to Nebraska Saturday was softened somewhat yesterday.
The KU freshman team defeated Missouri, 30-13, in a game played in Memorial Stadium.
The frosh, down by a touchdown until the last minute of the first half, were led by the running of halfbacks Mike Johnson and Sims Stokes and the passing of quarterback Steve Renko.
THAT TRIO alone accounted for 183 yards rushing and 46 yards passing.
Missouri opened scoring in the game on a 45-yard pass play. After recovering a Kansas fumble, Tiger quarterback Jack Alton hit Kenneth Boston, who was in the clear in the center of the field, for the score.
With 49 seconds left in the first half, the Jayhawks took the ball on the Missouri 37 and scored on the first play from that point. Renko hit Robert Reid with a pass and Stokes ran for the two-point conversion.
KU picked up where it left off early in the second half, scoring on the first play from scrimmage. Stokes raced 65 yards on a slant off tackle. Jim Shanks' placement made the score 15-7.
FULLBACK KENT CRAFT capped a 14-play 61-yard drive with a one- yard scoring plunge. Shanks kicked for the extra point.
Down 6-22, Missouri scored early in the fourth quarter. Alton passed to Charles Murphy for four yards,
Sport Shorts
Injuries have put three prominent Jayhawkers on the doubtful list for Saturday's return match with California here. The trio includes fullback Ken Coleman and guards Duke Collins and Ron Marsh, all of whom have been starters at various times during the season. Coleman and Marsh came out of the Nebraska holocaust with knee injuries; Collins with a sprained ankle.
Kansas will face the best passer it has tackled since TCU's Sonny Gibbs in Cal sophomore Craig Morton. The 6-3/2, 210-pound underwent a knee operation during pre-season practice, but, in his debut, hit 20 of 28 passes for 274 yards in the 21-23 loss to Penn State. He added 11 yards rushing for a new single-game Bear total offense record. Cal basically is a wing-T team with balanced line, but throws effectively from a double slot split-end alignment.
THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR
THE
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
MONITOR
AN INTERNATIONAL DAILY NEWSPAPER
Subscribe Now at Half Price*
You can read this world-famous daily newspaper for the next six months for $5.50, just half the regular subscription rate.
Get top news coverage. Enjoy special features. Clip for reference work.
Send your order today. Enclose check or money order. Use coupon below.
The Christian Science Monitor P-ON One Norway St., Boston 15, Mass.
Send your newspaper for the time checked.
6 months $5.50 1 year $11
6 months $5.50 1 year $11
College Student Faculty Member
The last score in the game was a 31-yard pass play from Renko to Stokes. A play earlier, Renko connected with a pass to Buford for a 33-yard gain in moving the ball from the Kansas seven in five plays.
but Boston's run for the extra points failed.
Johnson, of Garden City, was the game's leading rusher with 100 yards in 18 carries. Stokes reeled off 77 yards in five attempts.
RENKO, a fullback in high school completed four of eight passes for 116 vards.
University Daily Kansan
Kansas completed the abbreviated frosh season with an undefeated record, having earlier defeated Kansas State, 30-0. The Tigers finished with a 1-1 mark, winning 21-0 over Iowa State.
None
Address
City Zone State
*This special offer available ONLY to college
students family members and college librarians.
The most obvious weakness of Coach Tom Triplett's crew yesterday was pass defense. Although the Tigers completed only five passes for 68 yards, at least three passes, had they been caught, would have allowed the receiver to score untouched.
Mike Johnson was the Jayhawks top ground gainer for the season. He finished with 184 yards in 36 carries. Stokes' season total is 129 in 10 attempts.
NAIA All-Star Team Clash with Russians
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — (UPI) — The National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) all-star basketball team staged its final workout here today before leaving for a pair of tilts with a touring Russian team.
The games will be Friday at Sioux Falls, S. D., and Monday at Mount Pleasant, Iowa.
John McLendon of Tennessee A&I State, Nashville, will coach the Americans. Jim Nelson of William Jewell, Liberty, Mo., was assistant.
The Russians were to play six games with an Amateur Athletic Union (AAU) All-Star Team and already had split the fortunes of two matches with the AAU squad.
Tuesday, Nov. 13, 1962
USC Tops Week's Ratings
NEW YORK — (UPI)— Southern California, rolling toward its first perfect-record football season since 1932, took over the No.1 ranking today in the United Press International major college ratings.
Sporting a record of seven victories in seven tries and on the high road toward the Rose Bowl, coach John McKay's Trojans received a total of 311 points in the weekly voting of the 35 coaches who make up the UPI board of coaches.
Alabama and Mississippi, two of the other three perfect-record major teams in the country, were rated second and third respectively while Dartmouth, the fourth unbeaten and untied major college eleven in the nation, did not receive a vote.
Fourth place went to Wisconsin, fifth to Texas, sixth to Missouri, seventh was shared by Northwestern and Minnesota, ninth place went to Arkansas and 10th to Louisiana State.
KU SPORTS
on
KLWN
DIAL KLWN
7:30 a.m. ___ Daily Sports Shorts
5:00 Today ___ Sports Outdoors
5:20 ___ Tom Hedrick Sports
Read and Use Kansan Classifieds
Engineering and Physical Science Seniors
There's a FUTURE with...
SOUTHWESTERN BELL
Here's K.U. grad Bill Johnson who is now Supervising Service Foreman at Hutchinson, Kas. Bill has 73 persons reporting to him. There are 27,000 phones served in his district.
Bill graduated In '59 with a degree in Electrical Engineering. At Southwestern Bell, he has been a Staff Assistant at Topeka, Sabetha Wire Chief, and Lawrence Plant Foreman before going to his present job.
If you'd like to know why Bill thinks there's a future with Southwestern Bell, call him collect at Hutchinson, Kas., Area Code 316 MOhawk 5-6663. Give your name and telephone number. Serious inquiries will be accepted.
Mr. H. L. Snell, Eng. '30 and Area Personnel Relations Supervisor for Southwestern Bell, will be on Campus Wednesday and Thursday November 14 and 15, to conduct Interviews. For an appointment, sign the interview roster in the Engineering Office in Marvin Hall.
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Nov. 13, 1962
Cuban Crisis Coverage "Unique" Says Reporter
"This is unprecedented, really, nobody was anywhere."
That was a statement made by a reporter for The Kansas City Star last night as he explained the press coverage during the recent Cuban crisis.
JOE LASTELIC, a member of the Star's Washington bureau, told members of Sigma Delta Chi, men's honorary journalism fraternity, that there were no war correspondents reporting during the crisis unlike former conflicts or rear-conflicts.
"Here was a whole war that went by." Lastelic said, "and it wasn't reported."
Relating the activities of the firs
Chinese Art Humanistic
The Confucian idea that thought should be concentrated on man, forms the basis for the humanistic style in late Chinese art, a Chinese art expert said yesterday.
JAMES CAHILL, curator of Freeer Gallery at the Smithsonian Institute, said yesterday as far back as 200 B.C., the Chinese had developed a humanistic approach in their art with a moral basis.
This humanistic expression in the painting was shown in depictions of people in their environment, he said.
TAOISM TOOK over the thought of the people and their art about 200 A.D., and Chinese art then centered around nature and landscapes. Cahill said.
But about the 11th century, he said, expressionism began to come back.
Art became more of a reflection of the artist, Cahill said, and the intellectuals of the country also began to paint.
Cahill will give a slide-illustrated lecture at eight o'clock tonight in Fraser Theatre. The topic will be "The Contemporary Relevance of Chinese Painting."
Postal Window Added for Future
A third service window has been added to the campus post office in Strong Hall this year along with a new floor.
"We assume we'll need the third window someday if the enrollment grows like experts tell us it will," Murry Smith station superintendent said. "Chancellor Wescoe told us this was our last chance for more space in this building, and to get it now or never, even though we don't need it at the present time.
"I don't think anything has been done to this office for 20 years," Smith said. However, he said the campus post office does not do as much business as many people seem to think.
"We do most of our business at the windows," he said, "receiving mail, most of which is hauled downtown by truck." Four times a day and twice on Saturdays the mail leaves Strong Hall and goes to the Lawrence post office.
"None of the mail goes directly from KU to cross-country trucks or trains." Smith said.
The KU post office has only two carriers, he said. One of them carries the University business route in the buildings, and the other handles the campus east of Bailey Hall and some residences.
Auto Wrecking and Junk
day of the crisis when Kennedy spoke to the nation. Lastellie said Secretary of Defense Robert S. McNamara presided at a briefing but reporters could not attribute statements to him until the following night.
"MOST MILITARY MOUTHS were closed," Lastelic said.
New and Used Parts and Tires
"What story we did miss, or didn't miss, I don't know." Lastelic said.
"The big question arises, how can you believe what Arthur Sylvester, assistant secretary of defense for public affairs, said that week. The only people who know what was going on were in the Security Council or Secretary of State Dean Rusk.
East End of 9th Street VI 3-0956
Lastestic covered Lyndon Johnson's campaign for vice-president in 1960.
"I WAS PROBABLY 'spoon-fed' with those stories—don't like to admit it. That's not the way I cover a story."
Lastolic's normal assignment is in Washington covering stories of Kansas and Missouri significance. He also fills in on stories of national and international affairs. Lastolic will not return to Washington until Congress convenes in January.
An international expert on church architecture said this week that Americans have shared the architectural sins of the Germans.
U.S. is 'Sinner' In Design Also
Speaking on "Prophetic Builders," Edward Sovik explained that the sins which the Germans have committed in their prophetic architecture are also included in American architecture.
SOVIK, who received his architectural degree from Yale University, differentiated between what is called prophetic and ceremonial architecture.
"The prophetic churches do not deny the ceremonial, but they insist on the absolute value of truth; righteousness instead of prettiness, duty instead of delight, vigor instead of charm, nobility instead of elegance." Sovik said.
HE SAID that it would be correct to say "All churches which follow the historical styles are ceremonial, but it does not follow that all the modern churches are prophetic."
NEW YORK — (UPI) — Billy Haughton was harness racing's top dash-winning driver from 1953-1958.
Dash Winner
19
Madonna and Child
"Madonna" Statue Returns to KU
Tilman Riemenschneider's "Madonna and Child" will be packed in a crate and flank back to KU from North Carolina next week.
The 16th century masterpiece has been on display with other works of the Italian sculptor from various parts of the world in the North Carolina Museum of Art in Raleigh since Oct. 6.
THE KU STATUE WAS displayed among works from the Louvre in Paris and the Germanisches National Museum in Nuremberg, Germany.
Marilyn Stokstad, associate professor of art history and director of the KU Art Museum, said approximately two-thirds of the works were shipped from Europe.
SHE SAID A RIEMENSCHNEiER
sinner to the KU Madonna sold
for $83,000 in Germany recently.
The University's statue depicts the Virgin holding the Christ Child in her arms. The Child turns in the Mother's arms, grasps her shoulder and playfully tugs at the veil draped across his knee.
Beginning Bridge Lessons
Wednesday Night at 7:00 in the
Jayhawker Room at the Student Union
Everyone Invited
Applications Open For College Bowl
Applicants are being called for by the College Intermediary Board to serve on a committee of six which will form the policy for and administer this year's College Bowl Contest.
Lessons Given by MRS. VIRGINIA SEAVER
The application forms, which can be obtained from the College Office, 206 Strong, or from presidents of organized houses, will be accepted at the College Office through Nov. 16. Applicants will be interviewed.
The contest, modeled after the television series of the same name, quizzes contestants over a wide range of information.
$1.00 for 7 Lessons
It is impossible to work from two standpoints.-Mary Baker Eddy
THURSDAY!
One Day Only —
Two Scream Pictures
And On Stage
IN PERSON
DRACULA
DIRECT FROM HOLLYWOOD
IN HOUSE OF THE LIVING DEAD
After School Matinee 4 p.m.
Evening 7:00 & 9:00 p.m.
Plus — Mack Vickery And His Twist Band!
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone V13-1065
Tickets Now On Sale!
FAST FINISHED
Laundry
Service
RISK'S
613 Vermont
GRANADA
NOW SHOWING!
IT'S JUST FOR FUN!
* ROSS HUNTER PRODUCTION
IF MAN
ANSWERS
...DON'T HANG UP!
Hang around for the FUN!
SANDRA BOBBY DARIN
MOCHI LINE PRESLE
JOHN UND
CEREMO ROMERO
SIETNAME POWERS
Patrons: COLOR
At 7:00 & 9:00
VARSITY
NOW SHOWING
VARSITY
NOW SHOWING!
EXPLOSIVE ACTION DRAMA
ROCK HUDSON·BURL IVES
THE
SPIRAL
ROAD
Shows At 7:00 & 9:00
ROCK HUDSON · BURL IVES
THE
SPIRAL
ROAD
EVEN BIGGER THAN "BEN HUR"! THE PICTURE IS COLOSSAL!
...The year's best super-spectacle. Vivid...teeming...opulent. El Cid became a legend in his lifetime. The film rises to a chilling vision as he looms above the field of battle and rides thundering into the ages.** TIME MAGAZINE
SAMUEL BRONSTON
Presents
CHARLTON HESTON
EL GID
SOPHIA LOREN
SUPER TECHNIRAMA
TECHNICOLOR
Directed by
ANTHONY MANN
PRODUCTION in association with DEAR FILMS PRODUCTIONS distributed by ALLIED ARTS
SAMUEL BRONSTON
Presents
CHARLTON HESTON EL SOPHIA LOREN
AID
Starts
SATURDAY
GRANADA
THEATRE . . . . . . Telphone VIKING 3-5783
It's Coming to Lawrence Friday!
"The Elegance of 'Red Shoes' and the Charm of 'Gigi'!" —Shelah Graham
JOSEPH KAUFMAN presents BLACK TIGHTS
It's Coming to Lawrence Friday.
"The Elegance of 'Red Shoes' and the Charm of 'Gigi'!" — Sheilah Graham
JOSEPH KAUFMAN presents BLACK TIGHTS
VARSITY ART Attractions
Explosive Adventure!
Limited Engagement
(2 Days Only)
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
Evening Performances
7:00 & 9:05
Sat. Matinee 2 p.m.
JOSEPH KAUFMAN
presents
BLACK
TIGHTS
VARSITY ART Attractions
One
A DJ
Comp
Dave
Used
Wide
18 E
strum
Tuesday, Nov. 13, 1962
University Daily Kansan
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
Page 7
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 m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion.
FOR SALE
A DX-20 transmitter Hallicrafters SX-99
Complete with antenna and key. Phone
Dave Shrader at VI 3-3944. $110. 11-19
Used guitars, drums, and all instruments.
Wide selection. Richardson Music Co.
18 E. 9th. VI 2-0021. Lessons for all instruments.
11-16
'55 Ford like new, 2-door Custom Line with radio, heater, drive and light new engine. New clutch, new transmission, new paint, new exterior, 7-tires, uses no oil. More than 20 mpg. on the highway. $595. Phone VI 3-7642. 11-16
Seal Point Siamese kittens with American Cat Financer papers. Perfect for breeding purposes. 6 week old. $25. Call evenings or weekends at I-387-881. 11-15
1660 Renault Dauphine. 10,000 actual miles. Radio and heater. Side wall side wall and other extras. Extremely clean compartment. 720 Arkansas St. or VI 2-2741. 11-13
1955 Ford Customline; radio, heater,
firewall; hydraulic system included.
VI 3-5035 after 6 p.m.
11-20
Stereo or bi-fi diamond needles for most makes. Half price during November. Don't wait, buy them now at Pettengill-Davis, 723 Mass. tf
New stereo FM—new portable stereos-
new AM-FM radios—new FM radio dis-
month, at the as low as $26.57 —
month, at Rocky Stainback's, 929 Massa-
chusts st. 11-20
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop Modern self-service. Open 8 to 13:30 p.m. week days.
All kinds of house plants. Potted .
Including philodendron to be used for
room dividers and in picture windows
Phone VI 3-4207.
tt
TV shopping? Magnavox 24" automatic
has a 3 year picture tube warranty.
It comes from Penguin or from
just from $149.90. See the magnificent
Magnavox at Pettengil-Davis, 723 Mass.
Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.00 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. if
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
WANTED
TYPING PAPER BARGAINS: Pink
typing paper 85c per mellow. Yellow
paper 100c per pound. The Lawrence Outlook. 1005
Massachusetts, open all day; Tennessee, tf
Indian and Lincoln pennies, any American gold. Also wanted, British, Canadian, Mexican and Russian coins. American Coin Mart. 1015 Mass. I-2 0219. 11-13
RASCAL COLUMN
Key ring with keys (Paris charm on key
key). Phone Kay Schultz at VI 2-3420
156-879-0555
For Sale: Economical transportation, 1957
Isetta, custom interior, engine overhauled
2-1863 L 2-1863
6 p.m. or see Dan Meek at 131 W. 6th
(Bob Trailer Court). 11-16
Lost: Market Research text by Brown.
Call Ext. 624, KU. 11-16
Lost: Zipper lighter with engraved
1-winged eagle. Phone VI 3-6971. 11-16
Lost: Role of Advertising by Sandage and Fryberger. Call Dan Meek at Ext. 376.
145-208-5000.
For rent, a lovely two bedroom apartment partially furnished. Private parking. $80 a month. Phone VI 3-7819 after 5 p.m. 11-16
General Assistant wanted to work 12 hours per week in Periodicals section of Watson Library. Start immediately. 70c per hour. No experience necessary. Apply in person at Periodicals desk in Undergraduate library. 11-19
HELP WANTED
FOR RENT
2-room kitchenette apartment—furnished
with original year月 181
or phone VI 3-7645. 11-1
Single rooms for men $1\frac{1}{2}$ block from Union. Kitchen privileges, maid service and linens. 1234 Oread—VI 2-1518, call or see evenings. 11-15
3 room apartment, private bath. J block
paid. Come and see. 1142 Indiana. tt
paid. Come and see. 1142 Indiana. tt
ROOMS FOR MEN: Double room only,
share with Law student; one-half block
from Student Union; private entrance,
quiet, telephone and utilities paid. Call
VI 3-4092 or see at 1301 Louisiana after
5 p.m. weekdays. tf
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
Small second floor furnished bachelor type apartment suitable for 1 person. Private bath and kitchen. Steam heat. Fully furnished per year. Prices paid except electricity. Rogers Real Estate Co. 7 West 14th. Phone VI 3-005 or VI 3-2929. 11-15
3-room apartment with stove, refrigerator and garage. Bills paid. $50. Also a house furnished or unfurnished $65. Call VI 3-
7038. 11-15
Furnished or unfurnished units, singles or doubles. Park Plaza South Apartment Inc. 1912 West 25th. Phone VI 2-3416. 11-23
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.
Two room well furnished apartment Just
$58. 1447 Vermont. Phone VI 3-6328.
Large attractive room for a young woman available because former resident got married. Kitchen privileges with ample refrigerator space. Only a block away from Student Union. Parking. See at 124 La, or call v 3-9841. 11-14
TRANSPORTATION
Need ride to Topeka afternoons 2:30-4:00
p.m. Call AM 6-7239 in Topeka. 11-19
Riders wanted to New York City, leaving
afternoon, November 15
VI 1-1079. 11-14
Travel-only a limited number of airline flights still available for Thanksgiving and Christmas Holiday.
Suggest making reservations Now!
First National Travel Agency
746 Mass. VI 3-0152
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES
Having a Party?
For Best Results Use Kansan Classifieds
English tutoring %1 block from Corbin
to come to 1127 Abbott
evening 5:30-7:00. 11-13
BUSINESS SERVICES
LAWRENCE ICE CO.
6th & Vt., VI 3-0350
RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. V 3-1267. tjcfb.com
GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I study notes.
Completely revised and extremely comprehensive.
$4. For free delivery call VI 3-8246. tf
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
mats by: Ola Snufft 939'9's Marmal. Call VI 9-5263.
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center. 1218
Conn. Personal service—sectionalized
paint, paints, chameleons, turtles,
guitar picks, etc., plus complete lists.
pet supplies. **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. f
TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rental.
electrics, Royal, Olympia, Smith Corona, Olivetti and Remington portables. Bond
Typewriter, W7. Wass, Phone VI 3,3644.
Will do neat and accurate typing in my home. Experienced in themes, theses, and term papers. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Adcook, VI 2-1795. tf
TYPING
Uebermehne gerne Schreibmaschinearbeiten in deutscher, französischer, spanischer und englischer Sprache. Amy Summers. VI 2-0276. 11-16
Typist experienced in theses and term papers. Prompt service, reasonable rates, electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Howard Mehlinger at VI 3-4409. tt
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, Electric typewriter. Mrs McEldowney. 2521 Alabama. Ph. VI 3-8588
English major and former secretary will type themes and theses on electric typewriter. For neat and accurate work call Mells. Mellssand Jones, VI 3-5267. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, theseas. Contact typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8379. tt
Experienced typist. 7 years experiences in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Ms Barlow, 2047 Yale Rd., VI 21-1648.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher. VI 3-0558. 1031 Miss. ff
Manuscripts, theses, and term papers.
Also dissertations typed on wide carriage.
Also pennsylvania SSPs special key
Experience in education science
Mrs. Suzanne Glbert. VI 2-1546.
Efficient typist. Would like typing in ner home. Special attention to term reports, thesis, letters. Call anytime at VI 3-2651.
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
accurate, neat work. Reasonable rates.
Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff.
VI 2-1749. tt
Fast accurate typing. Secretary for 51%
Fast accurate typing. Secretary for 3-51%
703 Lawrence Ave.
Experienced secretary with electric typewriter wishes to type themes, themes, etc. Phone Nancy Cain at VI 3-0524. tf
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
Typing on reasonable rates, meet and ac-
cquire reasonable prices. VI 3-218s
Mrs. Bodin, 825 Greeter Terr.
Kentucky Fried Chicken "finger lickin' good"
BIG BUY
23rd & Iowa
1
Engineering and Physical Science Seniors *
GROW with a growing industry... ...the Bell Telephone System
The Bell Telephone System which has doubled in size in the last 10 years, is expanding rapidly to serve a growing nation. A growing telephone industry means new jobs, fresh opportunities for promotions, a rewarding career for you. The future is bright for young men who want to advance with a progressive industry.
- Southwestern Bell Telephone Company builds, maintains and operates telephone and other communications systems throughout its five-state territory.
Representatives of the following Bell System companies will be glad to talk with you. They will consider all qualified applicants for employment without regard to race, creed, color, or national origin.
- Bell Laboratories research, development, engineering and design in electronics and communications fields.
- Western Electric manufacturing and supply unit.
- Sandia Corporation applied research, development and design for production of atomic weapons.
*
Bell System representatives will be on campus November 14 and 15. Sign up for an interview at the Engineering office.
SOUTHWESTERN BEE
BELL SYSTEM
TELEPHONE COMPANY
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Nov. 13, 1962
"Other Fellow"rigging and cited three reasons for last night's ruling.
(Continued from page 1)
VOX AND UP candidates in the men's large dormitory district gave themselves a 50-50 chance. Five candidates—three UP and two Vox—are running in the district.
A Vox candidate said he thought the voting would be large enough to elect four representatives with two representatives from each party.
Taking a more affirmative stand on his candidacy, a UP representative from the men's large dormitory district maintained UP would sweep the district.
No consensus could be obtained from the women's large dormitory district since the two UP candidates were unavailable for comments.
A Vox candidate maintained all four of the candidates—two UP and two Vox—have a strong chance of being elected if there is a good vote turnout.
ONE OF THE most competitive races will be in the freshman dormitories because of the size of the district.
Five freshman—three UP and two Vox—are vying for ASC seats.
Five freshman three UP and two Vox are vying for ASC seats. A UP candidate said she felt there was a Vox stronghold in Gertrude Sellards Pearson and a University Party stronghold in Corbin.
MORE optimism was expressed by Vox members in the fraternity district than in any other district. Vox outnumbers UP 4 to 2 in this district.
In the sorority district three Vox candidates are running against one UP candidate.
Tau Fraternity, so he ruled that Theta Tau could not vote in my district, thus giving the advantage to the Vox candidate."
(Continued from page 1)
Ogilvie Disclaims Ruling-
Bob Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore, and UP Greek co-chairman, said that "since Theta Tau is listed in the Student Directory as a professional fraternity, it seems unfair to me that Stuckey should rule that Theta Tau can vote only in the social fraternity district after the campaign has been completed."
(Theta Tau is also listed as a social fraternity.)
Stuckey denied charges of election
Great Men to Be Discussed
Arnold Strassenburg, associate professor of physics, will discuss the studies and works of physicists at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Trophy Room of the Kansas Union.
The Great Men of the 20th Century will be highlighted in discussion group on Wednesday.
His lecture is part of the "Great Men" discussion sponsored by the KU-Y. The group has recently finished a seven-week study of the Indian leader, Gandhi, and will begin a study of Albert Schweitzer next week.
- Theta Tau is a member of the Inter-Fraternity Council.
- Theta Tau has the same function as social fraternities.
- Theta Tau voted in the Social Fraternity district last year.
Mike Mead, Kansas City, Mo. senior, and Triangle president said that Stuckey's ruling came as no surprise to him.
(Triangle is a social fraternity and has always voted in the social fraternity district.)
He said, however, that Theta Tau
is considered to be a social fraternity because they maintain a house and are members of the IFC. (IFC membership is limited to social fraternities only.)
Wayne Pratt, Topeka senior, and Theta Tau president, admits he thinks Theta Tau did vote in the Social Fraternity district last year, but wants to vote in the Professional Fraternity and Co-operative district this year because of their national professional fraternity affiliation and because Theta Tau wants to support a candidate in the Professional Fraternity district.
Drip - Dry
Car Wash 98c
Wiley's Texaco Service 23rd & Louisiana VI 2-0381
Gripers Grope- The Answer: Rope
"Is this the finish of the KU line?" asked a sign found early this morning hanging by a rope from a tree in front of Flint Hall.
Arthur C. Lonberg, director of athletics, said in reply to a request for comment, "Why don't we ignore it? Let's don't dignify it by recognizing it."
George Bernhardt, assistant football coach, said in regard to the sign that "The boys don't give up; they'll just come back fighting harder."
A campus police department official, when asked about the sign, said he had no information about it.
The origin and purpose of the sign were undetermined. The sign was apparently related to the Saturday homecoming game defeat of KU's line by the University of Nebraska.
KUOK Will Have Party at 6 Tonight
KUOK will hold a combined open house-election party at 6 p.m. Wednesday.
The event, which will last until the final returns for campus elections are available, will be in the KUOK studios in the basement of Hoch
Most of the candidates for freshman class offices and the All Student Council are expected to attend the party. Special features will be:
- Beeper phone reports direct from the counting room in the basement of Bailey Hall.
- Interviews with candidates who attend.
- Profile sketches of the candidates for each office.
Alfalfa Used Freely
COLLEGE STATION, Tex.—(UPI) Alfalfa is a forage crop with a wide variety of uses for the farmer, an extension specialist at Texas A & M College said.
Ted Trew pointed out alfalfa may be grazed, dehydrated, fed as greenchop, made into silage or hay. It also is a top source of honey and a good soil builder, he said.
Wednesday Night CHICKEN SPECIAL All You Can Eat ONLY $1 drink and dessert extra
Little Banquet
Ample free parking on the Malis
Assignment: find a filter paper that works harder the dirtier it gets
in chain-drag test, truck raises heavy dust clouds to check air filter efficiency.
In chain drive
Results: Up to 30,000 miles between filter changes in Ford-built cars for '63!
The 1963 Ford-built cars you see on the road these days can eat dust and keep coming back for more, thanks to improved carburetor air filters.
The result: a filtering material made of chemically treated wood pulp and paper that permits Ford-built cars under normal operation to go from 24,000 to 30,000 miles before carburetor air filter replacement is required.
In our continuing quest to build total quality and service saving features into Ford-built cars, our engineering research staff explored the entire field of physical chemistry for new air-purifying properties in materials.
The new, tougher filter paper is accordion folded to increase surface area four-fold, permitting higher filtration in a smaller package. The more matter it accumulates, the better it filters right up to its full rated service life. It saves owners time and money. It keeps Ford-built engines livelier longer.
Another assignment completed-and another example of how Ford Motor Company provides engineering leadership for the American Road.
Ford
MOTOR COMPANY
The American Road, Dearborn, Michigan
PRODUCTS FOR THE AMERICAN ROAD • THE HOME
THE FARM • INDUSTRY • AND THE SPACE
Daily Hansan
Wednesday, Nov. 14, 1962
60th Year, No. 44
Vote Could Boost ASC Ranks by Five
All Student Council election officials predict that heavy voting today will increase ASC membership by five.
John Stuckey, Pittsburg senior and ASC elections chairman, reported that 2,066 students voted in the first day of the general elections. Nine hundred more students voted yesterday than voted in both days of last weeks primary elections, he said.
"I EXPECT THE VOTING to exceed 5,000 this election in contrast to the 3,500 and 4,000 voting figures in the past," he said.
Stuckey explained that the number of candidates elected from each district depends on the number of students voting from that district.
THE LARGEST voting district, the married students, always casts the least votes and usually is not represented on the council. Stuckey pointed out.Married student votes numbered only 17 yesterday.
"Generally, if the voting is heavy the first day, the voting will be very heavy the second day since most living groups don't get their voters out until the last minute."
"The Married Students district could elect two people to the council if only all the students in Stouffer Place bothered to vote," Stuckey said.
Prof. Harris To Give First Inaugural Lecture
An "Inaugural Lecture," a European custom, will be held for the first time at KU Friday night.
Errol Harris, the Roy Roberts Distinguished Professor of Philosophy, will deliver the lecture at 8 p.m. in the University Theatre This is the third lecture of the 1962-63 Humanities Lecture Series.
The "inaugural lecture" is a rarity in America, but is common in Europe and the British Isles. When a professor is appointed to an important professional chair, he $ ^{\textcircled{e}} $
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
gives the inaugural lecture, often to the entire faculty.
THE INAUGURAL LECTURE serves as a formal introduction of the professor to his colleagues and gives the professor a chance to present his views on matters of most interest to him as a scholar.
Edward Robinson, professor in the philosophy department which is co-sponsor of the Lecture Series with Humanities committee, says this lecture might revue the "inaugural lecture" custom in a form better adapted to KU.
See lecture story page 5
In contrast to the European style of "inaugural lectures." Prof. Harris' lecture will be open to the public and will also serve as an additional event in the well-known Humanities Lecture series.
Prof. Harris says that this form of inaugural lecture is better than a lecture open only to faculty members.
"IT IS ALSO an opportunity for me to meet the students and faculty and an opportunity for them to hear some of my ideas," he said.
While the "Inaugural Lecture" is an innovation for KU it is not for Prof. Harris.
Before he left South Africa in 1956, Prof. Harris gave an "inaugural lecture" at the University of the Witwatersrand.
His lecture was titled "Obecuvny and Reason" and it was published by the University, as is the custom in Europe and Britain.
Prof. Harris is the first Roy Roberts Distinguished Professor at KU
The professorship was sponsored through a $200,000 gift from Roy Roberts, president of the Kansas City Star. A fixed amount from the income of the professorship is a part of the salary which Prof. Harris receives.
Russians Halt U.S. Convoy
BERLIN—(UPI)—Soviet Border guards held up a U.S. Army convoy traveling to West Germany for 73 minutes today because the Russians again insisted the Army had to give advance notice of movements on the highway through East Germany.
The incident occurred shortly before President Kennedy and West German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer met at the White House today to discuss Berlin and other cold war tensions in what they agreed was an hour of great international peril.
ADENAUER particularly praised Kennedy's firm stand in the Cuban crisis. He said American readiness to meet the Soviet challenge "rendered valuable service to the freedom of the world."
In advance of their opening session, Kennedy was reported prepared to assure Adenauer that the United States would permit no choking off of civilian traffic to West Berlin by the reds.
The visiting Chancellor told Kennedy the measures he took in the Cuban crisis were "welcomed without qualification by my people and my government."
"We are firmly standing by your side and by the side of the American people." Adenauer said.
Weather
Colder temperatures tomorrow and Friday, with the likelihood of some rain tomorrow over the eastern portions of Kansas are forecast. Highs Thursday are expected to range from 65 to 70. Lows tonight will be near 30 in the west to 40 in the east.
Vote Count
By noon the voting turnout in a district breakdown is as follows; vote number District totals elected Fraternity 691 3 Sororites 314 2 Large Men's Dormitories 373 2 Large Women's Dormitories 289 2 Small Men's Dormitories 165 1 Small Women's Dormitories 60 0 Freshmen Women's Dormitories 254 2 Professional Fraternities and Co-operatives 29 0 Unmarried and Unorganized 124 1 Married 19 0 Freshman Class ballots 798 Total 3116
Frat Status In Contention
A hassle has arisen between the Elections Committee and Theta Tau, as a result of the Committee ruling that Theta Tau must vote in the Social Fraternity district.
Theta Tau, a member of a national engineering fraternity, contends it is not a social, but a professional fraternity. Members feel they should be allowed to vote in whatever district they wish. One member of Theta Tau said, "All we want to do is to vote for the candidate who is an engineer and will best serve the needs of our fraternity."
THE ELECTIONS COMMITTEE contends because Theta Tau is a member of the Inter-Fraternity Council(IFC), maintains a house, and has functions similar to social fraternities, that its status is that of a social fraternity.
Because Theta Tau and the IFC last year requested that Theta Tau be classified as a social fraternity, the Committee assumed that Theta Tau was already aware of their voting status.
JOHN STUCKEY, Pittsburgh junior and Elections Committee chairman, said, "The Committee cannot allow a house to classify itself in the district it chooses, merely on the basis of what candidate is running in that district.
JAMES CARR. Carthage, Mo. senior, and president of the Inter-Fraternity Council, said, "Theta Tau, by their mere membership in the IFC, is recognized as a social fraternity.
STUCKKEY SAID after the election, if Theta Tau wishes to change its voting status, they should bring it before the Elections Committee. He indicated that nothing can be done about it until after the election.
'Some Progress On Cuba in UN
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.—(UPI)—Acting Secretary General U Thant said today that "some progress is being made toward a peaceful and speedy settlement" of the Cuban crisis.
A U.N. spokesman relayed Thant's sentiments in a statement after the acting secretary general held an hour and 50 minute talk with U.S. ambassador Adlai E. Stevenson.
Stevenson said there were "no fundamental changes" in the crisis negotiations but that both sides were seeking to bring the situation to an "early conclusion."
Still secret was a joint Cuban Soviet proposal put before Than yesterday for ending the crisis. I was understood the Russians did not raise it in a long talk with Stevenson late yesterday.
Stevenson said Thant discussed his conference yesterday in which Soviet deputy foreign minister Vasilly V. Kuznetsov and Cuban ambassador Carlos Lechuga put forward their joint "specific proposal."
The U.N. spokesman said that was not authorized by the Soviet Union and Cuba to relay details of the joint proposal to the United States at this time, however.
"Ambassador Stevenson and the secretary general reviewed some of the more important aspects of the Cuban problem in the light of recent developments," the spokesman said.
"The general feeling was that some progress is being made toward a peaceful and speedy settlement of the problem."
The spokesman said Thant did not authorize him to go further.
Details of the Cuban-Soviet plan still were understood to be centered on Cuban premier Fidel Castro's five-point demands, chief of which was for U.S. evacuation of the Guantanamo naval base.
Reliable sources said the Cuban-Soviet proposal was not even brought up in an extended conference between Stevenson and top Soviet envoyes last night. Stevenson briefed Thant on those talks today and the U.N. chief filled in the ambassador on details of the conference at which the joint proposal was made.
"We reviewed the Cuban crisis in all its details," Stevenson told newsmen after his meeting with Thant.
"Both sides are placing emphasis on bringing the matter to as early a conclusion as possible."
While the focus of activity was at the UN, in Cuba Soviet first deputy Premier Anastas Mikoyan, his formal talks with Castro apparently still in abeyance, flew yesterday to Camegue province to tour a "People's farm."
It was not certain immediately whether Castro accompanied Mikoyan on the trip, but observers here surmised that he did.
U.S. Blockade Stops 49 Ships
WASHINGTON — (UFI) — One ship has been boarded during the three-week-old Cuban blockade while 48 others have been allowed to proceed to Havana, the Defense Department said today.
The 48 were cleared on the basis of visual inspection or what the department called "clear certificates." The ship which was boarded — a Lebanese freighter under Soviet charter — also was allowed through.
In addition, the Defense Department said the blockading fleet has issued "notices of transit" to a total of 200 ships passing in the vicinity of Cuba to ports outside that country.
The single boarding action was announced Oct. 26. The ship was the Lebanese-registered Marcula which was found to have no offensive weapons aboard.
A PENTAGON SPOKESMAN, at a mid-day briefing, first said there had been no boardings in the last week. Under further questioning, he said there had been only the one that had been announced in October.
The spokesman said the quarantine blockade is still in effect, and that air surveillance of Cuba is continuing.
The department said the blocking forces have issued two "clear certificates," indicating no offensive weapons aboard to ships which requested them.
Earlier, it was disclosed that the blockaders quietly permitted eight Soviet ships to pass through to Cuban ports during the two weeks ending last Saturday.
The Pentagon said provisions for clearing ships were "visual inspection without boarding, boarding and inspection and clear certificates." Clear certificates were issued at ports of embarkation, and indicated that no offensive weapons were aboard.
Job Aid Given to Students
By Joanne Prim
This is the last of three articles.
The KU student who wants to find a
square root
- The Dean of Women's office, 220 Strong Hall, for women students.
- The Aids and Awards office, 222 Strong Hall, for men students.
- The Kansas State Employment Service, 1035 Massachusetts.
- The KU Personnel office, 133 Strong, for civil service only.
- The school or department office of his major.
- The People-to-People Job Placement Committee at the P-t-P office in the basement of the Union, and the Dean of Students office, 228 Strong Hall.
"International students who want to work must apply to the U.S. government," said Clark Coan, international student adviser.
"If their employment would displace American workers, their application may be turned down. Applications are seldom approved during a student's first six months over here.
INTERNATIONAL students must enroll in a full course load and make satisfactory progress, he added.
The Dean of Women's office has always handled women's part-time employment, but the men's employment service has been shifted from office to office. It is presently located in the Aids and Awards office.
Fred Ellsworth, executive secretary of the Alumni Association, recalls when the Men's Student Employment Bureau was in his office, from 1932 to 1941. Before that, the KU-Y handled men's employment. After 1941, it was shifted to the Dean
"Students must show the U.S. government when they get their visas that they will be able to finance their stay here. If they apply for work, they must show how their situation has changed since they got their visas."
of Men's office and finally to the Aids and Awards office.
"Students needed jobs terribly during the depression," Ellsworth said in a recent interview.
"THEER WAS a kid from Atchison who could hardly pay his fees. When he did, he didn't have any money left, so we found him a job. That paid for his room, but he still didn't have anything to eat.
"He got a job selling peanuts at the football games. He sold them at 5 cents a sack, but when he checked in at the end of the first afternoon, he discovered that he should have sold them at 10 cents a sack. So he didn't make anything. In fact, he owed money . . . and he still didn't have anything to eat over the week-end.
"He called me and explained his situation. I called a professor who wanted someone to paint his house and I asked if he could make an ad-
(Continued on page 10)
Page 2
University Daily Kansap Wednesday, Nov. 14, 1962
'Busy Work' Abounds
Any day now, doctors in the Lawrence area should begin to notice a twice-annual phenomenon.
There will be requests for Benzedrine and Dexedrine, two drugs with a number of uses and at least one thing in common: take enough of them and you can go without sleep for days.
There will be another run on tranquilizers. Tranquilizers, of course, calm you down.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
THESE DRUGS will be desired by students. Some of these students will be tired, some of them nervous and irritable, a few of them dangerously overwrought, and all of them weighted down with the same problem—KU "busy work."
"Busy work"-that descriptive term for work neither stimulating nor worthwhile, only time-consuming-abounds here. The University seems to specialize in it.
HE'S TOO BUSY cramming for the next quiz, worrying about the next round of hour exams, and grinding out the latest hurriedly-done and superficial term paper.
So proficient has the University become, in fact, that the typical KU undergraduate rarely has time for any reflective thinking or serious scholarship.
It's hard work, this "busy work."
Sometimes, in the process of running the academic obstacle course, the KU student falls behind, which calls for a quick dose of Benzedrine
to speed him up, or he becomes tense and overanxious, which calls for a quick dose of tranquilizers to slow him down.
Unless he's careful, he may go through the semester, alternately slowing himself down and speeding himself up, and all the while girding himself for the supreme obstacle—final week.
IF HE'S LUCKY—if he bluffs his way through a dozen or more hour exams, if he hacks his way through the underbrush of countless quizzes, if he grinds out several term papers under deadline pressure—he may make it through the semester.
But how much does he learn?
More important, to what extent has he been able to reflect on himself, to gain insights through unhurried study into today's world and his place in it, to gain an appreciation of and an attitude toward life?
PERHAPS IT IS unrealistic to expect this or any other American university to do anything more than reflect the fast-paced, competition-oriented society of which it is a part.
Perhaps it is even desirable that this University train its students for the hectic pace of a complex industrial society by viewing the educational process as a Darwinian struggle with the stress on stamina, not scholarship.
But it's a pity that KU students must enter the "rat race" before they've even had a chance to learn of the alternatives to it.
—Dennis Farney
Aylward Criticized
... Letters ...
If I can consider myself a representative member of the student body who has been able to affiliate himself with Mr. Aylward's club. (I joined the organization at the beginning of the year at the Activities Carnival) I shall advance the proposition that Mr. Aylward and his organization are not representing the true feelings and beliefs of any of us so-called members.
This letter is the result of my interest in the Democratic Party in the state of Kansas and particularly here at the University of Kansas. I have wondered, and I am sure that other interested young Democrats have raised the question: what has happened to the KU Young Democrats Club, and how does one affiliate himself with it? The answer to the first question is simple, it does not really exist. To the second question, however, a slightly more complicated answer is forthcoming.
Inasmuch as a true KUYD Club does not exist, it is apparent that it is impossible to become a member, but there is an organization headed by Mr. Pete Aylward which has been selling memberships, fifty of them at SI apiece, in an organization which he calls the KUYD's. This is not a recognized organization. The faculty advisor, Professor Hobson, does not recognize, nor does any other member of the administration recognize, the existence of any such club.
Aylward's organization claims to represent the young Democrats on this campus, but as was stated before, he had only fifty memberships to distribute. This seems to be a rather limited number. Mr. Aylward claims to be representing the University's entire young Democrat population, but his organization is only fifty strong. This means that not all interested people can join.
Since I paid my dollar last fall, I have never been contacted, no meetings have been held (this seems odd particularly in an election year), and no action has been taken by the club. It would appear that Aylward's organization is really not interested in the club as
TO FURTHER COMPLICATE this question. Mr. Aylward seems to have chosen most of the members of his club from members of the old organization who have supported his previous attempts at gaining control of the KUYD organization. The conclusion here is that you cannot join a legal organization, and to even join a non-recognized one you have to be chosen.
a part in the over-all Democratic organization in this state, but only in what he (i.e., Pete Aylward) can do with control of an organization which purports to be our representative.
The following are a few facts pertaining to the situation:
1) Mr. Aylward's name does not appear on the roster of the KUVD's officers filed in the Dean of Men's office. (Presently there are no officers.)
2) Mr. Aylward is not recognized by the faculty sponsor of the KUYD's as the president of the organization. (No one is.)
4) The official state convention of the Kansas YD's did not take any action towards recognizing Mr. Aylward as the official president of the KU club. The state treasurer of the KUYD's suggested on the floor of the convention when seating the KU Club's delegation that this should not be construed as giving the convention's tacit sanction to the officers who had appointed and sent the KU delegation.
3) MR. AYLWARD did not win the official election held last March, which was elected by the president and the treasurer of the Kansas Young Democrats, as well as the chairman of the Collegiate Council, Mr. Aylward. A slate of candidates headed by Mr. Barry Bennington won this election, but later was not recognized because of certain irregularities that took place in the issuance of membership cards. Bennington's ticket was not recognized as the lawful officers of the organization. (No one was.)
5) The Collegiate Convention likewise took no action towards recognizing any KU officers.
2) His election to the office of president at an illegal "rump" session held last Spring. This election has been declared illegal and is not recognized by the faculty advisor, by any official, or by any official organization at the present time.
1) The refusal of the faculty sponsor to certify the convention delegates elected at the Spring election last year.
6) Mr. Frank McDonald refused to recognize Mr. Aylward as the president of the KU club.
3) The recognition afforded his slate of candidates by the Collegiate Council of which Mr. Aylward is chairman.
PRESENTLY MR. AYLWARD bases his claim to the presidency of the club on the following facts:
4) The recognition of his delegation to the state convention.
None of Mr. Aylward's claims stand the test. He bases his claim
on half-truths. From this, one can deduce that there must be some reason for his desire to be the president of an actually non-functioning, non-recognized organization. I wish he would inform everyone what his purpose might be, in order that the club which he calls KUYD's might be appropriately renamed.
I FEEL THAT IT cannot be contested that the majority of the young Democrats on this campus are not availed of the opportunity of doing anything for their party, and God only knows it needs all the help it can get. I feel that a major reason for this is Mr. Aylward's seizing the power over the KUYD's in a period of confusion and ignorance.
On the surface Mr. Aylward's KUYD's is the young Democrat organization on this campus, and is afforded this recognition in state circles subject to some modifications. His organization can get delegations seated at the state and collegiate conventions and yet these bodies do not recognize the officers of the club. It is apparent that the state organization desires to give representation to our school, but yet recognizes that fact that there is something amiss in the KU Club. The state organization apparently has hoped that the Democrats here could solve their own problems, and I think we can.
The young Democrats have not taken a stand yet because they have been ignorant of the facts. I hope that these facts are a little more clear now, and I call upon Mr. Aylward to meet with the Faculty advisor and try to work out a solution to this mixed-up affair. The KUYD's should hold a new election and try to get our representative body into a functioning organization.
Max Logan Holliday junior
Dailu Hansan UNIT PRINT
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became blweekday, 1904,
and eventually became a weekly
newspaper.
Telephone Viking 3-4100
Extension 711, news room
Extension 376, business office
Telephone VIking 3-2700
Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, University of Kansas. M.Y. News service; United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
B. C. G.
'HELLO, LOUISIE?' WOULD YOU MIND PULLIN' YER SHADES?
I GOT AN O-B-OClock CLASS TOMORROW!
the took world
SET THIS HOUSE ON FIRE, by William Styron (Signet, 95 cents).
One could charge William Styron with overt sensationalism were it not for the tremendous excitement generated by this novel, the remarkable style, the incisive drawing of portraits. This is one of the most shocking and most consistently exciting—though not really believable—novels this reader has managed to plow through in recent months.
Mason Flagg at first seems to be the hero—Mason, the rich boy, the dissolute, the superficially charming, the ultimately vile and degenerate. Soon we realize that the hero is Cass Kinsolving, who, an American artist in Italy with a taste for liquor and a family too big for one man to handle, becomes the emotional victim, the slave of Mason. It is cannibalism, in a sense, and there are some almost obscene scenes as Mason uses this essentially fine and decent boy from the South.
We get some grimy views of Italy, of a film colony there, of the decadence of Americans both here and abroad. We can only cheer at the ultimate climax, even though it has been arrived at in such a brutal fashion. This novel is not for the squeamish, the easily shocked, or the prudish—CMP
* *
ALICE ADAMS. by Booth Tarkington (Signet Classics, 60 cents).
Tarkington, as many readers know by now, doesn't date well. He holds up about the way Sinclair Lewis does. The world of "Alice Adams" is a world we don't recognize today.
Alice is the small-town girl whose parents and their social position keep her quite out of local high society. So Alice has to conjure up a social world for herself, and dream and imagine. She continues her fantasies when she falls in love with a young aristocrat, and her world is rudely shattered, as it should be.
The conclusion of "Alice Adams," by the way, represents one of the strengths of Booth Tarkington. Though his situations are romantic, they seem cloaked in realism. Always, at the end, he brings his characters down to earth, in this novel, in "The Magnificient Ambersons," even in "Seventeen." He knew small town America of 40 to 70 years ago, but he never knew it deeply enough to write a first-rate novel about it—CMP
--- --- ---
A MODERN INSTANCE, by William Dean Howells (Riverside, 95 cents).
American literature departments should pick up a course sometime called The Forgotten Novel, and present this fine book. For it is one of the best that Howells wrote, and it is a sharp and discerning story of manners and morals in the Gilded Age.
This edition has a good introduction by the playwright William M. Gibson which stresses "A Modern Instance" as a pioneering novel about divorce. True, it was, and this was quite an accomplishment in 1882. It is not anti-divorce, but it is anti-shallow morality. The young people whose lives are shattered in this tale were not greatly different from many in America of the seventies and eighties.
Its hero, if one can call him that, is Bartley Hubbard, a smooth, glib, irresponsible young journalist who captures the heart of a village belle in Maine, takes her to Boston, and slowly makes her life a living hell. Meanwhile he is caught up in the sensational journalism of the period, and the one-time newsman Howells makes some telling observations about newspapers in the period when yellow journalism was about to emerge.
P
A p
cators
ed a p
of his
But accept The r will nures. that their cation sing f
TH Wichi City-
proxi state's preseven receiv
Ever their and a plan realiz ita w will i its rol advan
"A Modern Instance" well contrasts village life with that of booming Boston. It is a quiet, well-tempered book, one well worth reading.-CMP
Wid added the in scient
1+ L P
Ri Califo woul gave
N re-el 1956, Kenr
M
recer
for N
be fi
A But v the r
P right in ne
T Shor gove old t "Nixe nixe
N
recer
"win
fair
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
People Must Be Sold on Eurich Plan
A panel of some of the best educators in America has recommended a plan for the sweeping updating of higher education in Kansas.
But will the recommendations be accepted by the people of Kansas? The report admits that the changes will necessitate additional expenditures. Are Kansans ready to spend that extra money to insure that their state will have adequate educational facilities for already pressing future needs?
THE REPORT SAYS that the Wichita-Hutchinson and Kansas City-Topeka areas will provide approximately 89 per cent of the state's college enrollment from the present to 1985. The changes, and even the added cost in taxes, should receive support from these areas.
Even the people of Wichita, after their feelings have been soothed and a serious evaluation of the plan has been completed, will realize that the University of Wichita will not be losing stature. It will be gaining prestige because of its role in a bigger, better and more advanced educational system.
Wichita will gain because, as the added emphasis on research and the increased salaries attract more scientists and professors, area industries will have a choice of better educated graduates.
WICHITA IS not the real problem area. The cities of Kansas, with their industry and informed residents, are more aware of the need for improved higher education and will be willing to accept the additional cost involved.
The people of western Kansas are a long way from Lawrence and Manhattan. They are a long way from what actually happens on the campuses of the state's schools. They are extremely susceptible to attacks on the Eurich plan and the "dangers" it will impose.
But what of the residents of western Kansas? Many of them already view KU and the other state-supported schools with suspicion.
The people of western Kansas can stop the plan from being achieved. They can either bring about the approval or disapproval of the plan, because the unequal apportionment of the state legislature is in their favor.
THE BOARD of Regents should institute an educational program of its own. It should educate the people of Kansas, eastern and western alike, on the advantages of and the need for the proposed changes. It should show why this
It Looks This Way
Richard M. Nixon, after his defeat in the race for Governor of California, lashed out at the press. Nixon said he wished the press would have given his various opponents "the same going over you gave me."
Press Unfair to Nixon
Nixon won a U.S. House of Representatives seat in 1946. He was re-elected in 1948 and won a U.S. Senate seat in 1950. In 1952 and 1956, he was elected vice-president. He lost to President John F. Kennedy by a little more than 100,000 votes in 1960.
AFTER HIS RECENT DEFEAT. Nixon obviously was bitter. But was his bitterness the only reason he made scathing remarks to the press? Possibly not.
Maybe the press has been unfair to Nixon. Before and during the recent general election, the press reported that it was "win or die" for Nixon. The press said he had to win in California or he would be finished politically.
Possibly Nixon is finished. However, the press did not have the right to say so, for prediction and editorial judgment do not belong in news stories.
TIME MAGAZINE regarded the Nixon campaign as a joke. Shortly after Nixon announced that he would be a candidate for governor, he was ridiculed on Time's front cover. On the cover, an old tattered "Nixon for President" poster was covered by a new "Nixon for governor" poster. Time Magazine regarded his bid for governor as a joke.
Nixon has received more than his share of ridicule during this recent campaign. Unfortunately, the press overemphasized the "win or die" struggle for the sake of human interest. This was not fair to Nixon or to the reader.
Murrel Bland
RECEIVING
There is no need for you to dress up just because you have some business to transact with our bank. Just come as you are.
JUST COME AS YOU ARE
We're used to hard-working folks. You may be certain we will work hard to take care of your needs.
1ST MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION FIRST NATIONAL BANK or Lawrence
]
state should start looking to the future — the long, distant future — instead of the immediate future.
The Board of Regents should educate the state legislator through briefings by the panel members. Area newspapers should run articles thoroughly explaining the report. The people should be made to understand the report.
This is just one more chance for Kansas to move ahead. But the question is will we be ready to take the step?
—Jerry Musil
We get the impression that the best instruments to use in producing a best selling record these days are a dog and a horsewhip.
Short Ones
BUSINESS MACHINES CO.
The secret of being a bore is to tell everything. - Voltaire
Cultural exchange is a useful contribution to world peace, as long as it doesn't descend to the level of a race in which we and Russia try to out-culture each other. — Bill Vaughan
912 Mass. — VI 3-0151
PORTABLES - $49.50 up
SERVICE SALES RENTALS
All Kinds Office Equipment
Printing, Mimeographing
and Duplicating
Pick up — Delivery
ONE-STOP Travel Service
MAUPINTOUR
711 W.23rd St.
THE MALLS SHOPPING CENTER
Lawrence, Kansas
VI 3-1211
MEMBER
AMERICAN SOCIETY
ASTA
OF TRAVEL AGENTS
We're agents for steamships, airlines, hotels, sightseeing companies throughout the world.
So, whether your planning a detailed vacation or just want reservations for your holiday travel home-contact us.
(P.S.) Space is filling up fast for the Thanksgiving and Christmas holidays.
- Make Your Reservations Now -
He's got the look they like!
"IVY"
Styling
by After Six
It's the "Playboy," with that natural "Ivy" look...natural shoulders, slender lines, unpleated trousers. It's the "casual" look of luxury!
This is the look and feeling of comfort you'll like, too! In very lightweight Dacron*-Rayon.
Black—of course! 49.95
Cummerbund and Tie Sets from 3.95
After Six
BY RUDOFKER
"IVY"
Styling
by After Six
After Six
BY RUDOFKER
After Six BY RUDOFKER
*Dacron-Du Pont's polyester fiber
THE University Shop ON THE HILL
THE Town Shop DOWNTOWN
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Nov. 14, 1962
Dag Stamp Devaluated Day Defends Action
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Postmaster General J. Edward Day today defended his decision to print 400,000 additional "upside down" Dag Hammarskjold stamps to drive down the rarity value of at least 400 misprints issued previously.
"The Post Office Department isn't run as a jackpot operation," Day said in reply to critics who contend that the few purchasers who bought the 400 flawed stamps should be allowed to profit from their luck.
He recalled that when the stamp commemorating astronaut John H. Glenn's space flight was issued without advance notice, the Post Office deliberately had issued a number of first day covers from Cape Canaveral so that no collector would derive special advantage from being in the Cape Canaveral area.
IN AN NBC television interview, Day said he ordered the issuance of the special 400,000 Hammarskjold stamps to protect "the rank and file" stamp collectors which he said is made up of small children and amateurs.
Day said other countries have
Firmness Assured
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — You who poke apples at the supermarket to see if they are firm are wasting your time.
Apples that go through federal state inspection, reports the U.S. Department of Agriculture, already have been "poked"-by inspectors. They press the apples gently with their thumbs or, in borderline cases, use a mechanical plunger to check firmness.
Manager Still in Business
NEW YORK — (UFI) — When Frederick C. Neuls, a business consultant, was making arrangements for his daughter's wedding reception at the Stanhope Hotel, he sighted John F. Isard, whom he didn't know was recently named general manager.
taken similar steps to nullify printing errors.
Isard had made the arrangements for the wedding reception of Neuls and his wife in 1938 when he was with the Savoy Plaza Hotel.
"WE AREN't running a lottery," the Postmaster General said. If we are to give someone something of excessive value in this instance, we ought to make a deliberate error on every issue."
He also minimized the potential value of the 400 stamps which were sold by error. "The value was never close to $10,000." Day commented. "It would be $300 at most and maybe less if more of them got out."
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
Despite the special printing, experts expressed belief that those with the original 400 can still get a healthy price if they act fast.
SAN FRANCISCO — (UPI) — Britain's Prince Philip, the husband of Queen Elizabeth, has at least one thing in common with many non-royal husbands: He's befuddled by modern art.
The Prince viewed a display of modern British art yesterday after he attended a session of the English-speaking Union of the Commonwealth in San Francisco.
Prince Puzzled by Modern Art
Trailed by a platoon of security officers, Philip walked through the
Fire Fighters Prepared
PHOENIX, N. Y. — (UPI) — Volunteer firefighters in this up-state New York town what they consider is a novel fire alarm system.
The 56 members of the department recently had automatic alarms installed in their homes and connected to the fire house.
Beginning Bridge Lessons
Wednesday Night at 7:00 in the
Jayhawker Room at the Student Union
Everyone Invited!
Lessons Given By
Mrs. Virginia Seaver
$1.00 FOR 7 LESSONS
SUA
CLASSICAL FILM SERIES
Presents
in
Rudolph Valentino
"Blood and Sand"
7:00 P.M. TONITE
at
Admission 60c at door
FORUM ROOM OF UNION
exhibit of modern art at the San Francisco Museum of Art. He kept up a steady barrage of slightly irreverent comments.
Kentucky Fried Chicker
Tub . . . $3.50
BIG BUY
23rd & Iowa
Looking at a three-dimensional work entitled "Relief Construction, 1661," which had pieces of wood protruding from the framed subject, he said, "It looks like something to hang a towel on."
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
WARNING
On Campus with Max Shulman (Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf", "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.)
GLOOM AT THE TOP
Oh, sure, you've been busy, what with going to classes, doing your homework, catching night crawlers, getting married—but can't you pause for just a moment and give thought to that dear, dedicated, lonely man in the big white house on the hill? I refer, of course, to the Prexy.
(It is interesting to note here that college presidents are always called "Prexy." Similarly, trustees are called "Trixie." Associate professors are called "Axy-Pixy." Bursars are called "Foxy-Woxy." Students are called "Algae.")
But I digress. We were speaking of the Prexy, a personage at once august and pathetic. Why pathetic? Well sir, consider how Prexy spends his days. He is busy, busy, busy. He talks to deans, he talks to professors, he talks to trustees, he talks to alumni. In fact, he talks to everybody except the one group who could lift his heart and rally his spirits. I mean, of course, the appealingest, undearingest, winsomest group in the entire college—you, the students.
It is the Prexy's sad fate to be forever a stranger to your laughing, golden selves. He can only gaze wistfully out the window of his big white house on the hill and watch you at your games and sports and yearn with all his tormented heart to bask in your warmth. But how? It would hardly be fitting for Prexy to appear one day at the Union, clad in an old rowing blazer, and cry gaily, "Heigh-ho, chaps! Who's for sculling?"
WICKHO, CHAPS! Who's for Sculling?"
Heigh-ho, chaps! Who's for Sculling?
No, friends, Prexy can't get to you. It is up to you to get to him. Call on him at home. Just drop in unannounced. He will naturally be a little shy at first, so you must put him at his ease. Shout, "Howdy-doody, sir! I have come to bring a little sunshine into your drear and blighted life!" Then yank his necktie out of his vest and scamper goatlike around him until he is laughing merrily along with you.
"Whv. hev?" he will say curiously.
"Yes, I should," you will say, "because this package is a carton of Marlboro Cigarettes, and whenever I think of Marlboro, I think of you."
Then hand him a package and say, "A little gift for you, sir." "For me?" he will say, lowering his lids. "You shouldn't have."
"Because Mariboros have taste, and so do you," you will really
"Aw, go on," he will say, blushing furiously.
Aw, go on. He will say, "Something." "It's true," you will say. "Moreover, Marlboro has a filter, and so do you."
"In my swimming pool, you mean," he will say.
"Yes," you will say. "Moreover, Mariboro has a soft pack,
and so do you."
"My limp leather brief case, you mean," he will say.
"My limp leather brief case, you mean," he will say. "Yes," you will say. "Moreover, the Marlboro box has a flip-top and so do you."
"But you will," you will say. "Just light a Marlboro, and taste that tasty taste, and you will surely flip your top."
"But I don't have a flip-top," he will say.
Well sir, you will have many a good chuckle about that,you may be sure. Then you will say, "Goodbye,sir, I will return soon again to brighten your lorn and desperate life."
"Please do," he will say. "But next time, if you can possibly manage it, try not to come at four in the morning."
© 1962 Max Shulman
* * *
Prexy and undergrad, male and female, late and soon, fair weather and soul—all times and climes and conditions are right for Marlboro, the filter cigarette with the unfiltered taste.
Wednesday, Nov. 14, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Chinese, Western Art Similar, Lecturer Says
By Phillip Magers
"There is no gulf between the art of China and the art of the Western world," James Cahill, curator of the Freer Gallery at the Smithsonian Institution, said last night.
Cahill spoke on "The Contemporary Relevance of Chinese Painting" at a Humanities lecture.
ZEN BUDDHISM and Taoism are often thought to be the basis for the thought behind Chinese painting, he said. He added, there is no such "gulf" between the two art worlds. In fact, there is an affinity.
He said all the contemporary Western art ideas of variation, flating dimension, retreat from "likeness" and art as a personal expression are present in Chinese painting and have been for ages.
He said too many times people of the Western world assume that Chinese painting is full of mysticism and Chinese religious belief.
"ONE LOOKS at the painting, and sees the artist," is an old Chinese saying that has been true in Chinese art for decades, he said.
Cahill said that expression in the modern art of the Western world has been present in the art of China for centuries.
With a series of slides on color and black and white paintings by Chinese artists from the 10th to the 17th centuries, Cahill exhibited this relationship between Western and Chinese art.
Fraternity Jewelry
Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals
Balfour
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
AL LAUTER
AROUND the time of the 14th century, due to the Tartars and Mongols, many Chinese intellectuals fled to the south, Cehill said.
With the slides he showed the Chinese artist's emphasis on man and his life in the 10th century, then his later turn to the order in the universe.
This political and social upheaver showed in their painting, he said, and in many ways it is like contemporary Western painting.
Plans for the "Student Ambassador Flight" this summer will be announced at an all-student People-to-People meeting at 7 o'clock tonight in the Kansas Union.
Ambassador Flight Plans to Be Told
Tentative plans for the summer direct job exchange will also be discussed.
FORT KENT, Maine — (UPI) — It's 700 miles north of Tin Pan Alley, but there's a Rock 'N Roll Restaurant on Market Street in this Canadian border town.
Dinner Music
Be at KUOK "Election Central" tomorrow night for-
KUOK Election Night Party
- Instant reports on returns
- Live interviews with candidates and politicians.
- Swinging music and D.J.s.
- Free coffee and donuts.
$\bullet$ KUOK open house.
5 o'clock on
Wednesday Night
KUOK Studios, Basement of Hoch Auditorium, South side.
UOOK
?
Ship'n Shore
western-yoke
shirt of
distinctive
design
4.98
DENIM SHIRT
Its fine details: cluster tucking, a tiny gentry collar. Easy-care all cotton. White and new "denim tones." 28 to 38.
terriI's
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds
BROADEN YOUR HORIZONS
WITH
PEOPLE-TO-PEOPLE
STUDENT AMBASSADOR PROGRAM
SPORTS PROGRAM FORUM PROGRAM
OVERSEAS EMPLOYMENT PROGRAM
INFORMATION MEETING
THURSDAY NOVEMBER 15,1962,7p.m. UNION BALLROOM
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Nov. 14, 1962
Guests, KU Faculty To Highlight Concerts
By Thomas Winston
Concert violinist Jaime Laredo French composer Darius Milhaud and KU faculty members will highlight this semester's remaining campus concert series.
The concerts will include:
NOVEMBER 14—Theodore Johnson, violinist, Faculty Series, in Swarthout. Johnson will play Corelli's "La Folia" and Brahms' third violin sonata. Karel Blaas, will join him in Martinu's "Three Madrigals for Violin and Viola."
NOVEMBER 18—Faure's requiem mass, presented by combined Phi Mu Alpha, professional music fraternity, and Mu Phi Epsilon and Sigma Alpha Iota, professional music sororities, in Swarthout Recital Hall.
NOVEMBER 26—Marie and Joseph Wilkins, soprano and tenor, Faculty Series, in Swarthout. This concert will honor Debussy.
NOVEMBER 28 — University Woodwind Ensemble, a new group this year, Faculty Series, in Swarthout. The group includes Austin Ledwith, bassoon; John Meacham, flute; L. Don Scheid, clarinet; John McEldowney, oboe, and Kaid Freidel, a member of the Kansas City Philharmonic, French horn. The woodwind ensemble program will include three works by contemporary Frenchmen: a trio by Francis Poulenc, "Three Short Pieces" by Jacques Ibert and "Suite d'apres Corrette" by Darius Milhaud.
DECEMBER 2—University Concert Choir, James Ralston directing, in the University Theatre. Program will include a Bach motet, "Der Geist hilft unser Schwachheit auf," and Poulenc's "Figure Humaine."
DECEMBER 2—Bolivian-American violinist Jaime Laredo in the University Theatre. Laredo was scheduled to appear here last year, but cancelled because of illness. His program will include Tartini's "Devil's Trill Sonata," Schumann's rarely played "Sonata in A Minor" and Saint-Saens' "Havanaise." The program will also include works by Bartok, Mozart, Wieniawski and Gershwin.
DECEMBER 5—University String Quartet, Faculty Series, in Swarthouth. Members include Raymond Cerf, first violin; Theodore Johnson, second violin; Karel Blaas, viola, and Raymond Stuhl, cello. The program will include Dvorak's "American Quartet," Beethoven's quartet Op. 18, No. 6 and the Samuel Barber quartet.
DECEMBER 9—University Symphony, Robert Baustian conducting, in University Theatre. Composer Darius Milhaud is scheduled to attend. The program will include Bach's concerto for three pianos, Brahms' "Tragic Overture," Milhaud's "Suite Provencial" and Stravinsky's "Petrouchka." Pianists will be John Perry, Richard Angelletti and Marian Jersild Lott.
DECEMBER 10—Graduate organ recital by Norma Smith Pettjohn, Topeka graduate student, in Hoch Auditorium. This will be the only organ recital this year. Her program will include Bach's "Passaclia and Fugue in C Minor."
DECEMBER 12—University Brass Choir, Kenneth Bloomquist conducting, in Swarthout. The brass choir is made up of the most capable student brass players in the School of Fine Arts. Their program will include a piece for three brass choirs by Giovanni Gabrielli, a baroque composer who specialized in mammoth sounds.
DECEMBER 16—Christmas Vespers, the annual service in Hoch Auditorium. Combined University Symphony and Concert Choir will
D&G AUTO SERVICE
VI 2-0753
½ blk. E. 12th & Haskell
present a Christmas work by Gustav Holst.
JANUARY 7-Le Rondeau de Paris, a baroque chamber trio composed of a cello, a flute and a harpsichord, Chamber Music Series, Swarthout. This concert is the second event in the Chamber Series and the only event listed in this article for which students must buy tickets. Student tickets cost $1.79.
JANUARY 9—Marian Jersild Lott, pianist, Faculty Series, Swarthout. The program will include Beethoven's "Tempest" sonata, Bach's "Toccata in D Major." Chopin's "Fantasy in F Minor," Waltz in G-Flat" and a mazurka, Prokofieff's "Diabolical Suggestions" and seven early pieces, Op. 9, by Bartok.
JANUARY 13—University Chorus James Ralston conducting, Hoch Auditorium. The program will include the missa brevis by Zoltan Kodaly and a setting of Psalms 51 by Norman Dello Joio, a contemporary American composer.
KU's AWS College Fashion Board will model informal clothes from 10 a.m. until 1 p.m. at the Campus Jay Shoppe Saturday.
Fashion Board Plans Show
During the showing, women are to submit name suggestions for a modernistic symbol of a little girl which appears on the board's publication, "Tidbit."
"Tidbit" is published monthly. The one-sheet publication emphasizes current fashion trends, predicts future trends and offers grooming tips. The board distributes the sheet to all women's organized houses.
The fashion board is composed o
women majoring in some phase of fashion work usually fashion merchandising or illustration. Their purpose is to promote interest and education in fashion for all KU women.
We Rent Most Anything
Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES
STUDENTS
LAWRENCE ICE CO.
6th & Vt., VI 3-0350
ANDERSON RENTAL
812 N. H.
Having a Party?
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
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
V
UNITED STATES
SCOUT RESEARCH ROCKET...VOUGHT ASTRONAUTICS
XC-142 V/STOL TRANSPORT ...VOUGHT AERONAUTICS
VOICE OF POLARIS STATION CONTINENTAL ELECTRONICS
GYRO EARTH RATE COMPENSATOR LABORATORY TEMCO AEROSYSTEMS
LING-TEMCO-VOUGHT... BRINGING TOMORROW CLOSER TO TODAY
1970年代的科学家
Beneath the sea, beyond the sky or anywhere in between—this is the domain of vehicles, weapons and systems produced by Ling-TemcoVought. While LTV is a relatively new name to industry, the company is comprised of experienced organizations with far-reaching technical talents. Together these elements are meeting the advanced challenges of military electronics, communications, space, aircraft and missiles and have placed LTV in the enviable position of one of the nation's top ten defense contractors.
Today, LTV's activities include such programs as V/STOL, CRUSADER, SCOUT, SATURN, DYNA-SOAR and a supersonic, low-altitude missile. In addition, the company is supplying specialized military electronic equipment, superpower transmitters for the "Voice of Polaris" radio station, special purpose computers, actuators for MINUTEMAN and scores of other complex products and systems.
Because of this continuing expansion, LTV's
DALLAS...
HOME OF LING-TEMCO-VOUGH
divisions have ground-floor growth opportunities for graduates holding degrees in Aeronautical, Mechanical, Industrial, Electrical and Civil Engineering and Math, Physics or Metallurgy. Before selecting your industrial home, consider engineering climate, on-the-job orientation, professional development and location... consider LTV and Dallas—the social, intellectual and cultural center of the Southwest. We invite you to plan your future with us. For further information on career positions, contact your Placement Office or write College Relations Office, Ling-Temco-Vought, Inc., P. O. Box 5907, Dallas 22. Texas. Dallas Area Divisions:
SUPER CLEAN ROOM FACILITY TEMCO ELECTRONICS
CHANCE VOUGHT CORP./TEMCO ELECTRONICS
TEMCO AEROSYSTEMS/CONTINENTA ELECTRONICS
LING - TEMCO - VOUGHT, INC.
P. O. BOX 8907 * DALLAS 22, TEXAS * AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
LTV
2014年6月28日
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. 21. 22. 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. 29. 30. 31. 32. 33. 34. 35. 36. 37. 38. 39. 40. 41. 42. 43. 44. 45. 46. 47. 48. 49. 50. 51. 52. 53. 54. 55. 56. 57. 58. 59. 60. 61. 62. 63. 64. 65. 66. 67. 68. 69. 70. 71. 72. 73. 74. 75. 76. 77. 78. 79. 80. 81. 82. 83. 84. 85. 86. 87. 88. 89. 90. 91. 92. 93. 94. 95. 96. 97. 98. 99. 100.
S
Page 7
Macmillan To Appoint Spy Probe Tribunal
LONDON — (UPI) — Prime Minister Harold Macmillan was to announce today the names of the three men who will probe the Vassall spy case and explain the "certain new facts" that led him to appoint them.
The case, which already has led to the resignation of one top civil servant, began Oct. 22 when Admiralty clerk William Vassall, 38, was sentenced to 18 years in prison after admitting he was a Russian spy.
Macmillan first appointed three civil servants to probe the case and report if there were any other security leaks in the admiralty, which has been plagued by two major spy cases in the last 18 months.
Macmillan appeared to acquiesce yesterday when he told the House of Commons that the civil service board had been replaced by an independent tribunal.
OPPOSITION Labor and Liberal Party members charged that the civil servants did not have the power to make recommendations which could involve cabinet ministers. They called for a more powerful committee with wider duties.
Bridal 'Crash Kit' Available
The tribunal is expected to be headed by a judge and composed of two other prominent men. It would
SARATOGA SPRINGS, N.Y.—(UPI)—This city now offers a bridal kit, including soup, spaghetti and headache tablets, to couples applying for marriage licenses.
Richard Clark, deputy commissioner of the municipal department of accounts, said the kits are included in the $3 license fee.
have power to subpoena witnesses and examine under oath.
MACMILLAN said his decision to appoint an independent tribunal came after his discovery of "certain new facts" and "certain things (which) have happened over the weekend and just before."
weekend and john. He said he would explain what he meant when the house debates his motion to set up the tribunal today. Its passage was a foregone conclusion.
Vox, UP Posters Burned Last Night
A few minutes later, while Brian Grace, Lawrence junior and vicepresident of Vox, was registering a protest with members of Alpha KappaLambda fraternity, a University Party house, a group of men retaliated by setting fire to the large "UP"sign on the Alpha Kappa Lambda house's front lawn.
An unidentified man set fire to the large "VOX" sign on the lawn of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity about 10:30 last night.
Both fires were extinguished quickly.
Bob Englebrecht, Trenton, N. J., junior and a member of Alpha KappaLambda, said he was returning from the freshman women's dorms when the man set the Vox sign afire.
"I was about half-way down the block when a car stopped on Louisiana by the Pike house," he said. "Someone got out and lit the fire, got back in, and drove on down Louisiana."
LOOK FOR
FREEMAN
FREEMAN
THE GOLDEN CREST
FREEMAN Hand-Sewn
Hand sewn vamps are fashioned by master craftsmen in the art as they swiftly detail the guanotone stitch. The vamp is leather the sole genuine leather and the heel rubber the sole genuine leather and the heel rubber C; 17-2 & 13 & 14; D 6-12 & 13 & 14; E 6½-12.
"Bunny Blacks"
Black or Brown, $14.95
Royal College Shop
837 Mass.
Youth to Undergo Public Whipping
DOVER, Del. — (UPI) — Superior Court Judge Stewart Lynch yesterday sentenced Franklin W. Cannon Jr., 20, to a penalty of 20 lashes on his bare back. "well laid on," under Delaware's 1717 lash law, the only one of its kind still in effect in the United States.
Lynch had sentenced Cannon to the lashing and three years imprisonment last December following his conviction on grand larceny charges. But he suspended the sentence in favor of five years' probation.
Cannon violated terms of the probation last April when he was sentenced to 60 days in jail for petty larceny and receiving stolen goods.
Lynch reinstituted his original sentence after noting the youth has spent time in a correctional institution, a boys' school and the Deleware State hospital.
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
Wednesday, Nov. 14, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Jury Debates Thoroughly
CHICAGO — (UPI) The last report by the Illinois Court Administrator said that as of April 30,1962, Cook County (Chicago) had a total of 43,267 jury cases pending.
The report said as of June 1, 1962, it took a jury case tried in regular order an average of about six years, two and one-half months to reach a verdict.
There's no such thing as atomic energy for peaceful purposes.—Abdul Gammis
Selling - Buying Need Help
For best results, use the University Daily Kansan Classified Page
Phone Ext. 376
Drip - Dry
Car Wash 98c
Wiley's Texaco Service
23rd & Louisiana VI 2-0381
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
MISSION IN A MASSIVE TURNING OF THE WORLD.
Engineering and Physical Science Seniors
GROW with a growing industry... ...the Bell Telephone System
The Bell Telephone System which has doubled in size in the last 10 years, is expanding rapidly to serve a growing nation. A growing telephone industry means new jobs, fresh opportunities for promotions, a rewarding career for you. The future is bright for young men who want to advance with a progressive industry.
Representatives of the following Bell System companies will be glad to talk with you. They will consider all qualified applicants for employment without regard to race, creed, color, or national origin.
- Southwestern Bell Telephone Company builds, maintains and operates telephone and other communications systems throughout its five-state territory.
- Bell Laboratories research, development, engineering and design in electronics and communications fields.
- Western Electric manufacturing and supply unit.
- Sandia Corporation applied research, development and design for production of atomic weapons.
*
Bell System representatives will be on campus November 14 and 15. Sign up for an interview at the Engineering office.
SOUTHWESTERN BRILLI
BELL SYSTEM
TERRESTONE COMPANY
图 2-16
2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Nov. 14, 1962
Yemen Struggle a Touchy Question
By Phil Newsom
UPI Foreign News Analyst
As wars go, the current struggle for Yemen, legendary land of the Queen of Sheba, isn't much.
But its potential for much greater trouble throughout the Middle East is enough to cause apprehension in Washington and London.
And in it, President Gamal Abdel Nasser sees his best chance for expanding his United Arab Republic since Syria's defection in September, 1961, and his own break with the Yemen monarchy a year ago in December.
THIS NEW opportunity came on Sept. 19 when Yemenite rebels under Brig. Gen. Abdullah Sallal shelled the new Imam off his throne in the medieval capital of Sanna and proclaimed a republic which would be closely aligned with Nasser's UAR.
The Imam, at first thought dead in the debris of the palace, turned
Replacement Suggested For Foley
William M. Merrill, professor and chairman of the department of geology at Syracuse University since 1958, will be recommended to the Kansas Board of Regents for the job of professor and chairman of the KU geology department.
Frank C. Foley, director of the State Geological Survey since 1954 and chairman of the geology department since 1957, has asked to be relieved of the chairmanship. Although he will devote most of his time to the Survey, he will continue to teach courses in ground water geology.
Merrill was a colleague of Prof. Foley at the University of Illinois, where he rose from instructor to associate professor before going to Syracuse.
Before and after World War II Prof. Merrill attended Michigan State University, earning his B.S. degree in 1946. He received the M.A. degree in 1948, and the Ph.D. degree in 1950 from Ohio State University.
He has been a geologist with the Ohio Division of the U.S. Geological Survey, a geologist party chief for the Newfoundland department of mines and resources, a stratigrapher for the Ohio State University Research Foundation's snow and permafrost project for the U.S. Army, and since 1958 has held an appointment from the research council of the Canadian province of Alberta.
Geological Survey Adds Two to Staff
The University of Kansas State Geological Survey has added two new members to its staff. They are William Davie, Jr., Lubbock, Texas, and Gary Stewart. Weeteka Okla.
Davie, a geologist from Texas Technological College, is doing research on carbonate rocks in the division of stratigraphy and paleontology, directed by Daniel F. Merriam.
Stewart, a petroleum geologist, completed his studies at Oklahoma State University and the University of Oklahoma. He is also in the division of stratigraphy and paleontology. He is doing research on subsurface rocks of Kansas.
See Us Before You Buy
TYPEWRITERS
NEW AND USED PORTABLES STANDARDS ELECTRICS
Sales - Rental Service
LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER
up in neighboring Saudi Arabia, and thus the stage was set for the current conflict involving the UAR and the rebel Yemen regime on the one hand and Saudi Arabia and Jordan on the other.
There was no special mourning for the fall of the Yemen monarchy.
BUT NEITHER the Jordanian nor the Saudi Arabian royal governments fancied a revolutionary government on the flank. The United States and Britain were concerned not only over the stability of the Middle East but for the rich oil fields as well.
And Britain worried also about a possible threat to Aden colony, its port at the tip of the Arabian peninsula, and the adjoining southern Arabian federation of sheikdoms and sultanates which Britain is pledged to support.
The whole area is claimed by Yemen, whose rebel leadership is appealing to the people of Aden to join them in the revolution.
735 Mass. VI 3-3644
Air strikes presumably originating in Yemen are reported to have hit both the Aden protectorate and Saudi Arabia.
THESE CARRY with them the threat that Britain will be drawn into the struggle.
On the Saudi Arabian side, the struggle is developing into a clear contest between Nasser and King Saud.
Nasser has poured men and supplies into Yemen which in turn has threatened to carry the war into Saudi Arabia.
King Saud in turn has cut off relations with Egypt and has threatened further action.
Working for Nassar is a deep split within the Saudi Arabian royal family, five of whom have renounced their titles and citizenship and pledged to work with Nasser for a "free Saudi Arabia."
FOUR SAUDI ARABIA air force planes and their crews have defected to Egypt.
At home, King Saud has reorganized his government and has named his half-brother, crown prince Faisal to head it. Faisal has launched a series of internal reforms to channel more of the nation's oil wealth into social and economic developments.
The royal family and the government believe the Saudis will rally to their side. Nasser's actions indicate he is fomenting and expects a revolution.
Tedi Farber, who refused to remove the armband bearing the slogan "world-wide strike for peace," said yesterday she would continue her studies in Syosset, a Long Island community outside the jurisdiction of the city board of education.
NEW YORK—(UF1)—A 15-year-old high school girl, suspended last week for wearing a pacifist armband to classes, has quit the city school system.
Teen-age Pacifist Changes Schools
Last Friday, Miss Farber pickedet Francis Lewis high school in Flushing, with another student. After entering the school she was requested to remove the armband because of its possible disruptive influence on other students. When she refused she was suspended from school.
State Department Recruiter in K.C.
Secretaries, communications clerks, and typists are being sought for either Washington, D.C. or overseas placement by the Department of State's foreign service.
A State Department recruiting officer is interviewing qualified men and women in Kansas City this week through November 17. Interested persons may call the State Department recruiter at the Missouri State Employment Service, 1411 Walnut Street.
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
Portraits of Distinction
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
摄影师
Engineering and Physical Science Seniors
There 's a FUTURE with...
There's a FUTURE with... SOUTHWESTERN BELL
RE
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 0
Here's K.U. grad Bill Johnson who is now Supervising Service Foreman at Hutchinson, Kas. Bill has 73 persons reporting to him. There are 27,000 phones served in his district.
Bill graduated in 59 with a degree in Electrical Engineering. At Southwestern Bell, he has been a Staff Assistant at Topeka, Sabetha Wire Chief, and Lawrence Plant Foreman before going to his present job.
If you'd like to know why Bill thinks there's a future with Southwestern Bell, call him collect at Hutchinson, Kas., Area Code 316 MOhawk 5-6663. Give your name and telephone number. Serious inquiries will be accepted.
Mr. H. L. Snell, Eng.'30 and Area Personnel Relations Supervisor for Southwestern Bell, will be on Campus Wednesday and Thursday November 14 and 15, to conduct interviews. For an appointment, sign the interview roster in the Engineering Office in Marvin Hall.
Page 9
U.S. Rushes Aid To Stricken Isle
AGANA, Guam—(UPI)—The United States today rushed massive relief shipments to the island of Guam, where Typhoon Karen Sunday caused destruction "like a whole army of workers with big scythes."
As U.S. Air Force C130 transports landed on the island's battered airfields with the first consignments of tons of tents, food, and medicine, the death toll rose to seven.
Officials said they expected to find others dead in the wreckage of buildings on the island, which received a worse battering from Karen's 200 mile an hour winds than it did from two World War II invasions.
U. S. Air Force typhoon trackers in Tokyo said Karen, its winds down to 150 miles an hour, was moving in the direction of the U.S. military bastion of Okinawa. It was about 500 miles south-southeast of Okinawa early today, moving at about 15 miles an hour.
Acting Gov. Manuel Guerrero warned the islanders against drinking water except that inspected at stations and told the 9,000 persons who lost their homes that help was on the way.
One of the first pilots to fly in with emergency personnel and equipment, Col. William H. Lewis of Pasadena, Calif., described the 209-square-mile island as seen from the air:
"It was just hell. It was total destruction. It looked to me like a whole army of workers with big scythes had just gone across the whole place and chopped down everything they could see. Everything was lying down. Smeshed. Even the forests were lying down."
Wednesday, Nov. 14, 1962 University Daily Kansan
The KU chemistry department has received grants totaling nearly $190,000 for six faculty research programs.
Large Grants To Chemistry
Robin T. M. Fraser, assistant professor of chemistry, received a National Science Foundation grant for $39,000 for three years for his project with electron transfer mechanisms.
PROF. FRAASER ALSO was awarded a $15,000 grant by the American Chemical Society Petroleum Research Fund for three years for work in redox reaction.
The Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) will renew its contract with F. S. Rowland, associate professor of chemistry, fo., a sixth year of study on a radiation -chemistry project. He will receive a $60,000 grant.
Ralph N. Adams, associate professor of chemistry, will receive $26,800 for the sixth year of his research on complex electrochemical reactions.
REYNOLD T. IWAMOTO, associate professor of chemistry, has received a $21,785 Air Force grant for the purchase of a high resolution infrared spectometer for use in two projects on the nature and behavior of ions in solution.
Joint research by Jacob Kleinberg and Ernest Griswold, professors of chemistry, will continue under their AEC contract. They received $15,400 for the eighth year of a study on unfamiliar oxidation states of metals.
Earl S. Huyser, associate professor of chemistry, received a $9,992 United States Public Health service grant for research on stereochemical aspects of free radical reactions.
Poetry Hour Tomorrow
Sidney M. Johnson, professor of German, will read a translation of Walther Von Der Volgelweide at the Poetry hour at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Music and Browsing Room of the Kansas Union.
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
To Figure '62 Election Look Back Two Years
WASHINGTON-(UPI)—Congressional returns from the 1960 election must be considered in judging last week's polling.
By Lyle C. Wilson
For example: the judges have ignored the fact that the Democrats lost 21 seats in the House of Representatives in 1960 although they elected a president.
Most or all of these were in marginal congressional districts.
MARGINAL districts tend to swing in a presidential election year. A presidential nominee who wins by a big margin usually generates political momentum sufficient to elect his party's House candidates in marginal districts.
The 1960 presidential election was a squeaker. President Kennedy barely made it. The Republican candidate in 1960 lost the White House but the Republican Party gained 21 seats in the House of Representatives.
It was these areas of tenderly balanced congressional districts that developed a tradition of American politics: that in an off-year election, the in-office party must expect to lose rather heavily in the House. The average of such off-year losses suffered by the in-office party is 40 to 50 seats.
The Republicans needed last week to gain 44 House seats to become the House majority. They didn't make it. The Republicans gained two seats; the Democrats lost 4.
WHEN AN in-office party loses that many or more in an off year, the out-of-office party reasonably may anticipate an improving chance to elect its presidential nominee two years later.
Some or all of the 21 House seats the Democrats lost in 1960 would have tended last week to swing to the Republicans if the Democrats had not already lost them.
IF THE LOT had remained Democratic in 1960 and gone Republican last week the 1962 won-lost tally would have been: Democrats lost 25 seats; Republicans won 23 seats.
In the clouded light of that calculation, Republican presidential prospects in 1964 look somewhat better, but not much. It is a fairer estimate of the immediate political climate, however, than are the comparisons of President Kennedy's first off-year election with FDR's spectacular first in 1934.
KU SPORTS
on
DIAL KLWN 1320
7:30 a.m. Daily Sports Shorts
5:00 Today Football Forecast
5:20 Tom Hedrick Sports
WE GOT 'EM
'Kansas BLAST Jackets
white
$4.95 black
light blue
Sizes to fit Guys or Gals
Lawrence Surplus
740 Massachusetts
Good Times Are No Longer Deductible
DETROIT—(UPI)—Mortimer M. Caplin, commissioner of the internal revenue service (IRS), today warned that expense account living as a "way of life" will soon become extinct.
Caplin told a convention of the National Association of Real Estate Boards a new Revenue Act passed this year makes it possible for the IRS to eliminate most of the widespread abuses which have developed through too-casual use of the expense account. He said the government has had revenue losses because of "misused or disguised
personal 'expenses as 'business 'expenses."
But, Caplin said, legitimate business expense deductions "need cause little concern."
SPRINGFIELD, ILL — (UPI) No aircraft flying over Illinois is more than 50 miles from a hard-surfaced, lighted airport. The Department of Aeronautics said this geographical spread is not matched by any other state.
Fly Safe
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results
1
EVERYONE'S ON THEIR WAY TO
Sandy's
Thrift & Swift Drive-in
ACROSS FROM HILLCREST
Hamburgers
15c
French Fries
10c
More than meets the eye...
LOOK BENEATH THE DIAMOND and if your ring does not have two spring units hidden there-you're missing plenty in comfort and protection. Only Columbia Rings come with built-in Tru-Fit . . . and only TruFit keeps your diamond perfectly centered, safe and secure.
$250 COLUMBIA TRU-FIT
TRU-FIT
$375
$225
It's O.K. to Owe RAY
It's O.K. to Owe RAY
You Buy the Rings — We'll Buy the License
Ray Christian JEWELERS
Ray Christian JEWELERS
809 Mass.
CONF. 815
Page 10
University Daily Kansan Wednesday. Nov. 14, 1962
Job Aid Given
(Continued from page 1)
vance payment to this student. He said he could.
"THIS POOR kid went over to paint the professor's house and spilled paint all over the side of it, but he got to finish the job.
"The student didn't graduate." Ellsworth concluded, "but he stayed on for two or three years and got a good job after he left. He was killed in World War II during the fighting in Italy."
One enterprising student started a window-washing business during the '30s. Another operated a successful bicycle rental service.
Ellsworth related that a club of student workers was organized. Its members helped to promote jobs. The idea grew into a national movement when Chancellor Lindley made a trip to Washington to talk to government officials about the plan.
THE MATTER was turned over to the welfare department and a name
Government Backs Nehru
NEW DELHI—(UPI)—Parliament gave Premier Jawaharlal Nehru's government a thundering mandate today to "drive the Chinese from the sacred soil of India."
Nebru received a massive vote of confidence on two motions after a marathon six-hour debate in which 165 speakers took part.
One motion approved the government's emergency regulations and the other proclaimed the Indian people's determination to oust the Communist invaders of Northern India "whatever the consequences."
IN A SPEECH winding up the debate, Nehru told parliament that no country as aroused as India has become "can ever be suppressed or defeated."
Earlier, it was announced that Canada will join the United States and Britain this week in bolstering India's defenses against the red attackers.
Meanwhile hundreds of well wishers converged on Nehru's house to wish him a happy 73rd birthday.
NEHRU, looking only slightly tired, appeared on his front lawn carrying several strands of marigold garlands and wearing his usual long brown coat, white jodphurs and white can.
For 15 minutes he patted children on the head, hugged elderly women and threw flower petals at the crowd.
More than 100 children chanted "cha cha Nebru zindabad" (long live uncle Nehru).
---
Landesman to Discuss Ayn Rand Philosophy
Charles Landesman, associate professor of philosophy will discuss Ayn Rand's "Atlas Shrugged" at 4:30 today in the Music Room of the Kansas Union. His talk will be the first of the SUA Modern Book Forum series.
The Dollar Declines
NEW YORK — (UPI) — The dollar has become the "dollarate," says the current Catholic Market magazine.
The proof: 100 years ago St. Vincent's Hospital here had a standing policy, "Terms for admission are $3 a week" was the policy.
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
GRANADA
MOW SHOWING
A Comedy Smash
ROSS HUNTER PRODUCTION
IF A MAN
ANSWERS
...DON'T HANG UP!
SANDRA BOBBY
DEE DARIN
MICHELLE PRESLEY
JOHN LUND
COSOR REMOED
STEINER POWERS
Hang around for the FUN!
COLOR: A National International Power
College Student Employment Project (CSEP) was given to the idea.
In 1938, 360 students were aided in this manner. The maximum amount an undergraduate could earn under the plan was $20 a month. The maximum for a graduate was $40 a month. The top wage rate was 35 cents an hour.
At 7:00 & 9:00
"The men's adviser (now called the Dean of Men) and the director of the Student Union worked out a scheme in which 10-cent meals were served to the men on the unfinished third floor of the Union," Ellsworth said.
"With the war, there were more jobs, but the boys went to the war and we couldn't find anyone to fill the jobs," he remarked.
Crystal Formations Are Sigma Xi Topic
Like to crystal gaze?
There won't be any fortune telling, but a demonstration of crystal formation instead at 7:30 tomorrow night in 411 Summerfield Hall.
Kenneth E. Rose, chairman of the department of metallurgy and materials engineering, will demonstrate the formation of crystals in the public meeting of the KU Sigma Xi chapter.
Knowledge of the behavior of crystals is useful to metallurgists because all solid metals are crystalline. The properties of the crystals are important in applications ranging from transistors to tractor frames.
Public Health Grant For Zoology Study
The United States Public Health Service has awarded a $14,012 renewal grant to the KU Zoology Department to further a study of the alkalinity of mice's blood.
John A. Weir, assistant professor of zoology; and Paul Kitos, assistant professor of biochemistry, joint directors of the study, will be assisted by Nick C. Gagliardi, a U.S. Public Health Service trainee and Nebraska graduate student.
State Farm Insurance
Paul E. Hodgson
Local Agent
Off. Ph, VI 3-5666 530 W 23rd.
Res. Ph, III 3-5994 Lawrence, Kan.
Local Agent
Teacher Placement Meetings, 7:30 p.m.
Bailey, Hall Auditorium.
SUA Modern Book Forum, 4:00 p.m.
Reading & Browsing Room, Student Union,
Dr. Chas. Landesman, Philosophy
& discussing Ayn Rand's "Atlas
Strugged"
Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m.
Davis Chapel
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Le Certeur Francais. Mercied. le 14 novembre,
hawk de l'Union. Compendre-tu.
L'Union. Compendre-tu.
Production Center 7:30 p.m.
Rm. 220 Flint, Executive Comm. Meet-
talk
Analytic - Inorganic - Physical Chemistry Colloquium, 3:30 p.m., 122 Malott, Dr. Benjamin Chu; "Molecular Forces for Scattering Measurements."
TOMORROW
Sigma Xl, 7:30 p.m., 411 Summerfield.
Crystal engineering, Crystal Grazing.
KU Section of the American Chemical Society Peterson, deputy assoc. laboratory director for education. Argonne National Laboratory. The Chemical Aspects of Energy"
Mathematics Staff Seminar, 3:30 p.m.
(coffee at 3:00 p.m.), 119 Strong Hall,
"Interpolation between Banach Spaces"
by Emilio Gaillardio.
Catholic Masses, 7:00 a.m. 11:40 a.m.
St. Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Strat-
ford
Der Deutsche Verein trifft sich Downerstag, den 15 November, und 5 Uhr in der Kunstschule. Der Gesang im Feuerfoerder „Gesang am Feuerfoerder“, ein Bohnenstück von Zuckmayer. Studien, die sich für deutsche Literatur interessieren, sind unsere eingeladen. Er gibt Erfrischungen.
Fireside discussion of "The Trial" with the cast. 11 p.m. Weston's Foundation, 1315 N. Church Street.
FRIDAY
Pharmacology students. 2:30 p.m. . 233 Malott, Dr. Marion de V. Cotten "Cardiovascular Responses to Cardiac Glycosides Cheolamines During Hypothermia."
Smoker Lives Dangerously
TORRINGTON, Conn. — (UPI) — William F. Brannahan, 69, was sentenced to 30 days yesterday on a drunkenness charge after police found him smoking.
Officers discovered Bannahan stretched out puffing a cigarette under two large gasoline storage tanks.
VARSITY
NOW SHOWING!
Hurry! Ends Tonite
VARSITY
MOW SHOWING!
Hurry! Ends Tonite
ROCK HUDSON • BURL IVES
THE
SPIRAL
ROAD
Shows At 7:00 & 9:00
ROCK HUDSON · BURL IVES
THE
SPIRAL
ROAD
ACCLAIMED! THE GREATEST ADVENTURE
AND ROMANCE IN A THOUSAND YEARS!
CHARLTON SOPHIA
HESTON·LOREN
"The Picture is
COLOSSAL!"
•Time Magazine
EL CID
SAMUEL BRONSTON
PRESENTS
directed by
70MM SUPER TECHNIRAMA
TECHNICOLOR*
RAF VALDONE-GENEVE PAGE JOHN FRASER-GARY RAYMOND-HURD HATHELD-MASSIMO SERATO and HERRBERT W
written by FREDRO M. FRANK and PHILIP YORDAN directed by ANTHONY MANW music by MULIOS PORSA
SAMUEL BRONSTON PRODUCTIONS
IT STARTS
GRANADA
THEATRE . . Telephone VIKING 3-5783
SATURDAY!
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY!
- The Greatest Show of Its Kind to Play Lawrence Since "Red Shoes!"
CYD CHARISSE, MOIRA SHEARER &
ZIZI JEAMMAIRE, ROLAND PETIT
introduced by MAURIOE CHEVALIAN
BLACK TIGHTS
(Special Limited
Lawrence Engagement)
A
THE INSPIRED TECHNICAL ENTERTAINMENT . . . .
Gold Medal Award of the Venice Film Festival
VARSITY ART Attractions
For The Discriminating
2 Performances Nightly
7:00 & 9:05 p.m.
Saturday Mat. 2 p.m.
NO SEATS RESERVED!
$1 — ALL SEATS
Tomorrow - One Day Only
COMPLETE SHOWS - 4-7-8:30 Stage Shows at 5 & 9:30
DO THE DEAD RETURN? DO YOU BELIEVE IN GHOSTS?
YOU MUST SEE TO BELIEVE!
ON STAGE
IN PERSON DRACULA
SEE DRACULA CHANGE INTO A BAT AND FLY INTO THE AUDIENCE AMONG YOU!
DIRECT FROM HOLLYWOOD
IN HOUSE OF THE LIVING DEAD
ALIVE!!!
ON STAGE! IN PERSON
DIRECT FROM HOLLYWOOD
2 PLUS SCREAM PICTURES
FRANKENSTEIN MONSTER
DARE YOU SEE IT!
"Horrors Of The Black Museum"
At 7:00 & 10:30
Bowery Boys in "Spook Chasers" At 4:00 & 8:30
- IN PERSON ON OUR STAGE -
MACK VICKERY
AND HIS SENSATIONAL TWIST BAND!
- EXTRA! ON STAGE! *
GIANT TWIST CONTEST
Prizes Courtesy A & P Supermarket!
Admission—Adults $.100 • Children—50c
VARSITY
THEATRE ... Telephone VKING 3-1065
-Classified Ads-
FOR RENT
2-room kitchenette apartment—furnished.
or phone VI 3-7645. 11-19
Page 11
Single rooms for men 1/2 block from Union.
Kitchen privileges, maid service and linens. 1234 Oread---VI 2-1518, call or see evenings. 11-15
3 room apartment, private bath. I block
from the street and drive through the
paid. Come and see 1142 Indiana. tl
ROOMS FOR MEN: Double room only,
share with Law student; one-half block
from Student Union; private entrance,
quiet, telephone and utilities paid. Call
VI 3-4092 or see at 1301 Louisiana after
5 p.m. weekdays. tf
Vacancies for young men in contemporary home with swimming pool, shower bath, private entrance, 5 evening meals weekly. $65 a month. Call VI 3-96835. tf
Small second floor furnished bachelor type apartment suitable for 1 person. Private bath and kitchen. Steam heat. Washing machines. Catering facilities paid except electricity. Rogers Real Estate Co. 7 West 14th. Phone VI 3-005 or VI 3-2929. 11-15
Furnished or unfurnished units, singles or doubles. Park Plaza South Apartment Inc. 1912 West 25th. Phone VI 2-3416.
11-99
3-room apartment with stove, refrigerator and garage. Bills paid $50. Also a house furnished or unfurnished $65. Call VI 3-7038. 11-15
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.
Large attractive room for a young woman available because former resident got married. Kitchen privileges with ample refrigerator space. Only a block away from Student Union. Parking. See at 124 La. or call V 3-9841. 11-14
M-W-F-tf
FURNISHED OFFICE SPACE is now available by the day, week or month. Call Us at Secretarial & Administering Service. Call VI 3-5920 or see them at 10211j Mass.
Large furnished apartment with private bath and entrance. Newly furnished and decorated. 1 block from campus. Phone VI 2-3350 or VI 3-2263. 11-21
A lovely two bedroom apartment now being redecorated. Partially furnished. Plane parking, $77 a month. Phone 51-2753 after 5 p.m. or see at 610 11W 12-21
2 bedroom house 1/3 block from campus.
Fully carpeted, screened porch, wood burning fireplace, fully air conditioned.
full basement with a large lot; $100 a month. If interested call VI 2-2202 after 5 p.m. 11-21
FOR SALE
A DX-20 transmitter Hallcrafters XS-99-
A Dave Sdriver at VI - 3-2544; $110. 11-18
Dave Sdriver at VI - 3-2544; $110. 11-18
Used guitars, drums, and all instruments.
Wide selection. Richardson Music Co.
18 E. 9th. VI.2-0021. Lessons for all instruments
11-16
'55 Ford like new, 2-door Custom Line with radio, heater, overdrive and almost new engine. New clutch, new transmission, new paint, new exterior, t-tires, uses no oil. More than 20 mg, on the highway. $355. Phone VI 3-7642. 11-16
Seal Point Slames kittens with American Cat Financer papers. Perfect for breeding purposes. 6 week old. $25. Cail evening or weekends at 6 V-3 8871. 11-15
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop nearest Pet phone VI-13-28 Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 pm week days.
Use Christmas Seals...
1962 Christmas
1963 Christmas Celebrations 1962
GROWING 1994
Stereo or hi-fi diamond needles for most makes. Half price during November. Don't wait, buy them now at Pettengill-Davis, 723 Mass. tf
New stereo FM—new portable stereos—
new AM-FM radios—new FM radio disco-
serts as low as $26.87—music for a
month, house St. Sonkach st. 925 Massachusetts St. 11-20
1955 Ford Customline; radio, heater,
radio; battery included
V 2-5035s over 6 p.m. 11-20
Fight TB and Other Respiratory Diseases
TV shopping? Magnavox 24" automatic TV has a 3 year picture tube warranty. Pick up from just $149.90. See the magnificent Magnavox at Pettengil-Davis, 723 Mass.
All kinds of house plants. Potted . .
Including philodendron to be used for
room dividers and in picture windows.
Phone VI 3-4207. tt
Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.00 per call. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. if
Printed Biology Study Notes: 70 pages,
bases, and intensive diagrams and definitions; revised
for all classes. Formerly known as the
Bachelor's Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery.
$4.50. **If**
TYPING PAPER BARGAINS: Pink
paper, 25c. ream, team.
math paper, 25c. 15c. per
per pound. The Lawrence Outlook. 1005
Massachusetts, open all day Saturday. tt
Luxurious, warm beaver fur coat, Japanese cultured pearls, alexandrite-dia-
males and rhodolite, classical reed and h-i-fi components, treasured savings, Call VI 2-1610. 11-21
A 2 bedroom house 1$ block from campus. Fully carpeted, screened porch, wood deck and staircase. Full basement with a large lot $10,500. If interested call VI 2-2202 after 5 p.m.
TRANSPORTATION
Need ride to Topeka afternoons 2:30-4:00
p.m. Call M-6-7239 in Topeka 11-19
Riders wanted to New York City, leaving
afternoon. November 15, 11-34
V-1-170
Travel—only a limited number of airline flights still available for Thanksgiving and Christmas Holiday.
11-21
Suggest making reservations Now!
University Daily Kansan
First National Travel Agency 746 Mass. VI 3-0152
TYPING
Will do neat and accurate typing in my home. Experienced in themes, theses, and term papers. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Adcock, VI 2-1795. tt
Typist experienced in theses and term papers. Prompt service, reasonable rates, electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Howard Mhlenger at VI 3-4409. ff
Uebernehme gerne Schelhelmmaschine-
beiten in deutscher, französischer,
spanischer und englischer Sprache. Amy
Summers, VI 2-0276. 11-16
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, reports. Electric typewriter. Reasonable eIDewdney. 2521 Alphab. Ph. V-3 8568.
English major and former secretary will type themes and theses on electric typewriter. For nest and accurate work call Mrs. Melsland Jones, VI 3-5267. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPEIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, these. Thesis writing, electronic typewriter, Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Pattii. VI 3-8379.
Wednesday. Nov. 14, 1962
Fast accurate typing. Secretary for 51%
at 703 Lawrence Ave. II 5-322
at 703 Lawrence Ave.
Typing — reasonable rates, meet and accep-
tions. Mrs. Bodin, 825 Greever Terre VI 3-13818
Mrs. Bodin, 825 Grever Terre VI
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric writerwriter. Call Ms. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tf
Manuscripts, theses, and term papers.
Also dissertations typed on wide carriage.
Special keys of 35 special keys.
Experience in education and reference.
Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI- 21462 . tf
Efficient typist. Would like typing in her home. Special attention to term reports, thesis, letters. Call anytime at VI 3-2651.
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast accurate, neat work. Reasonable rates Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff VI 2-1749 tt
Experienced secretary with electric type-
ers, computers, and telephone equipment,
e.g., Phone Nancy Cain at V.3-08241.
MILLIKEN'S S.O.S. — always first quality typing on IBM machines, equipped with carbon ribbons. Open 24 hours a day. 1021½% Massachusetts. VI 3-5920.
Experienced typist. 7 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rate. Mrs. Barlow, 240 Yale Rd., VT. V1648
RASCAL COLUMN
Lost: Market Research text by Brown Call Ext. 624, KU. 11-1K
Lost: Role of Advertising by Sandage and Fryberger. Call Dan Meek at Ext. 376.
376-850-2491. www.sandage.com
Lost: Zippe tighter with engraved
1-winged eagle. Phone VI 3-6971. 11-16
For rent, a lovely two bedroom apartment partially furnished. Private parking. $80 a month. Phone VI 3-7819 after 5 p.m. 11-16
BUSINESS SERVICES
RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, SI per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1287.
GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I study notes.
Completely revised and extremely comprehensive. $4. For free delivery call VI 3-8246. tf
DRESS MAKING and alterations. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith, 939¹ Mass. Call VI 3-5263. tf
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center. 1218 Conn. Conn. service service—sectionalized birds, hamsters, chameleons, turtles, etc., also complete supplies **tt**
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
- STUDENT TYPING & THESIS
MILLIKEN'S "S.O.S." — Open 24 hours
a day. Regular Office Hours: 7 a.m.-12
p.m.
TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rental.
New and used portables, standards and
electrics. Royal, Olympia, Smith Corona,
Olivettii and Remington portables. Bond
typing papers. Lawrence Typewriter, 735
Mass. Phone VI 3-3644. tf
CATING & THERMO-FAX COPYING
• COMPLETE SECRETARIAL & AN-
SWERING SERVICE, Office Space
Available.
102112 Massachusetts PH. VI 3-5920 M-ff F-Eff
German national will tutor students in
German language Call VI 9 11-21
after
HELP WANTED
General Assistant wanted to work 12 hours per week in Periodicals section of Watson Library. Start immediately. 70c per hour. No experience necessary. Apply in person at Periodicals desk in Undergraduate Library. 11-19
PATRONIZE YOUR
- ADVERTISERS •
Springtime softness in every puff
Salem refreshes your taste
"Take a puff... it's springtime"
Menthol Fresh
Salem
FILTEN CIGARETTES
$ \textcircled{c} $1962 R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. C.
You'll smoke with a fresh enthusiasm when you discover the cool "air-softened" taste of Salem
- menthol fresh - rich tobacco taste - modern filter, too
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Nov. 14, 1962
Record Deficit In U.S. Budget
WASHINGTON — (UPI) - The nation's budget is showing the second highest peacetime deficit on record, according to the Budget Bureau.
Total sales of goods and services will amount to $554 billion in 1962, instead of the $567 billion predicted, the report said. It estimated revenues at a record $85.9 billion, $7.1 billion less than the January forecast. Spending was projected at $93.7 billion, a peacetime high, up $1.2 billion from January.
The Bureau said yesterday the budget is running $7.8 billion in the red. It said the Cuban crisis will cost about $100 million, providing it doesn't get worse.
The 1963 deficit thus appeared to be the result primarily of the relatively slow pace of economic expansion and its effect on tax collections.
The biggest change was a drop in tax collections, which stemmed largely from the failure of the economy to expand at the pace the administration had forecast.
THE BUREAU'S report was a comparison of how the budget looks now and what President Kennedy proposed in January when he sent Congress the budget. At that time the President projected a narrow surplus of $463 million.
IN FISCAL 1962, revenues came to $81.4 billion and spending totaled $87.7 billion.
The Bureau indicated the President feels the deficit is not bad considering the economy's "existing level of unemployment and plant capacity." The Bureau said the economic slack means the deficit "is neither inflationary nor dangerous to our balance of payments position" and in keeping with "generally accepted fiscal requirements."
IF THE economy was close to its potential, there would be a revenue surplus of $2 billion this year, the Bureau said. Administration economists estimate the economy could produce $30 billion to $35 billion more goods and services than it is now turning out.
Budget planning is well under way for fiscal 1964, which will begin next July 1. There is a good chance that it will also be a deficit year, especially if Congress passes the general tax cut Kennedy has promised to propose retroactive to Jan. 1, 1963.
Jack Fiscus* says...
All Premium Payments Are Refunded as an Extra Benefit if death occurs within 20 years after you take out The Benefactor, College Life's famous policy, designed expressly for college men and sold exclusively to college men because college men are preferred risks. Let me tell you about all 9 big Benefactor benefits. No obligation. Just give me a ring.
*JACK FISCUS Area Director
Area Director
P. O. Box 272
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Viking 2-3206
representing THE COLLEGE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA
... the only Company selling exclusively to College Men
J School Gets Endowment
Burton W. Marvin, dean of the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information, today announced the establishment of the $20,000 Theodore C. Alford Endowment Fund.
The new fund is the largest ever awarded to aid KU journalism students.
Yearly scholarship income from the fund, which is part of a bequest of the late KU alumnus and chief of the Washington, D.C., bureau of the Kansas City Star, will be approximately $800 and will be awarded for the first time for the 1963-64 academic year.
A native of Lawrence, Alford was chief of the Washington bureau from 1928 until his death in 1947. He was a 1907 KU graduate, who attended the first journalism classes at KU, and was a 1944 KU Alumni Distinguished Service Citee.
Alford's will provided the $20,000
fund be established at KU after Mrs. Alford's death, which occurred in April 1962. Specific requirements for the recipient or recipients will be determined by the faculty of the School of Journalism.
Alford succeeded Roy A. Roberts, president of the Kansas City Star, as chief of the Star's Washington bureau. Alford previously covered the Missouri legislature and did political reporting in Kansas City. He covered all the presidential nominating conventions over a 25 year period.
Alford's mother was Susan Savage Alford, one of the first 55 students to enroll when the University opened classes in 1866. Also a journalist, she was the author of many newspaper and magazine articles about Quantrill's raid.
Alford received a law degree from the Kansas City School of Law in 1914.
NDFL Fellowships Available for '63-'64
The University will accept applications for National Defense Foreign Language Fellowships for 1963-64 for study in Russian and Spanish until January 10, Cyrus DeCoster, professor of Romance languages, said.
The fellowships pay $2,250 for a full academic year and $450 for summer study, plus allowances for dependents.
All applications should be sent to Prof. DeCoster. Applicants must prepare a detailed program of graduate study for the 1963-64 year.
ORDER Personalized Greeting Cards
BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass.
Quality Watch Repairal
Lowest Prices
DANIELS
"THE MIGHTY MIDGET"
THE WANT AD
Will Do the Job for You
Pall Mall Presents GIRL WATCHER'S GUIDE
HIGH-FLYING
GYM-DANDY
CAMPUS TYPE V
Few sights in all the world of girl watching are as breathtaking as the unexpected observation of a Gym-Dandy in midair maneuver. Plato might well have had the Gym-Dandy in mind when he wrote, "When a beautiful soul harmonizes with a beautiful form, and the two are cast in one mould, that will be the fairest of sights to him who has the eye to contemplate the vision."
Although the Gym-Dandy is a joy to behold even while tightening the laces of her sneakers, she must be seen in action to be fully appreciated. The same thing is true of a Pall Mall. It's a long, firm cigarette in a handsome package, but it must be tasted to be fully appreciated. Try Pall Mall and see.
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"
Three Who Won
Daily hansan
Thursday, Nov. 15, 1962
HISTORY
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
VOX WINNERS—Three of the 11 Vox winners are (left to right): Jim Thompson, Hugoton junior; Robert Tieszen, McPherson junior; and Sue McKinley, Ottawa freshman.
NEW DELHI-(UPI)-Indian troops have launched their strongest attack against the Communist Chinese since the Reds started their invasion in force on Oct.20, it was announced officially today.
India Army Stages Strongest Attack
An official spokesman said the attack was launched by a "strong patrol" against a Chinese position northwest of Walong in the eastern portion of the North East Frontier Agency (NEFA) near the Burma border.
"In the Lohit division (of the NEFA) our troops yesterday launched an attack on one of the Chinese-held positions a few miles northwest of Walong," the spokesman said. "When reports last came in, fighting was still going on."
HE SAID THE FIGHTING still was going on when latest reports were received last night.
In the western portion of the NEFA near Chinese-held Towang, the spokesman added that "a small Indian patrol raided a village held by the Chinese aggressors a few miles from Jang village and, in a clash, killed some Chinese soldiers and returned to base without loss to themselves."
AT THE SAME TIME, ANOTHER spokesman disclosed that Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru had sent another letter to Communist Chinese Premier Chou En-Lai. It was delivered to the Chinese embassy in New Delhi last night for relay to Peiping.
This was the only other action reported today except for some Communist Chinese firing with automatic weapons in the Walong sector.
The spokesman said it was a reply to Chou's letter of Nov. 4 in which he offered a cease fire and negotiations if troops of both sides were pulled back to their 1959 positions. This would give India control of all the NEFA but leave the Communist Chinese in possession of 10,000 to 20,000 square miles of northeastern Ladakh on the western end of the disputed border between the two countries.
The spokesman declined to comment on the contents of Nehru's letter other than to say it ran three pages.
60th Year, No. 45
ASC Jumps to 33; Balance Unchanged
Vox Loser Will Request Recount
Johnson said he will ask for an investigation to void the election by either the election board or the student court. He said he suspects that the extra votes came from Theta Tau, ruled out of the district because they are a social fraternity.
The defeated Vox candidate for ASC representative of co-ops and professional fraternities said today he will demand an investigation of voting his district.
- * *
The candidate, Danny Johnson,
New York City junior, said 62 votes
were counted Wednesday night and
there are only 67 voters in the district.
JOHNSON SAID he checked with the three co-op houses and found seven members who didn't vote. He said he knew of one other person who couldn't vote because his dean's card was not at the polls.
Newly elected All Student Council members, who trickled into the Daily Kansan newsroom last night from victory parties promised to give new life to student government this semester.
"At least two votes were from some other district." Johnson said, "and there may be more."
He said he spotted the irregularity about 10:30 Wednesday night when the tally went beyond the number of voters.
Johnson was defeated by Art Ogilvie, Kansas City, Mo., senior and UP candidate. Twenty-one votes were counted for Johnson and 41 for Ogilvie for the 62 total.
New Officers Promise 'Life'
Typical in his eagerness and desire to bring meaning to student government was Larry Bast, Topeka freshman and newly-elected president of that class.
BAST SAID the days of "functionless class officers" were zone.
He explained that there have been no defined duties for frosh officers.
"We plan to change this," Bast said.
"In previous years, fresh class officers have accomplished nothing." Bast said.
"We will start by setting up an organized system of class govern-
Faculty's Civic Leadership Criticized
A former Lawrence mayor told KU faculty members yesterday that they have not met their leadership responsibilities toward the city.
Ted Kennedy, who resigned in September after serving five and one-half years as mayor, made the statement at the Faculty Forum.
(Continued on page 12)
"Only twice in the last five and one-half years did University representatives exercise their influence to the good," he said. "Both times they got what they wanted, and both times they would not have got if if they had not come down."
"The most recent example was when members of the faculty and
Kennedy also cited the establishment of the Lawrence Human Relations Commission, which he called a "stabilizing influence on tensions in the community."
interested wives were influential in eliminating the spraying of elm trees with DDT," he said.
Kennedy criticized the lack of interest in city government by KU faculty members.
KU faculty members were instrumental in getting the council started and at present they make up a large proportion of the council's membership, he said.
"There aren't enough candidates for the commission from the University community," he said. "Faculty members feel that they
"The official should be called "chairman of the commission" under Lawrence's present form of government, Kennedy said.
He said the term "mayor" implies the head of a city having "some measure of authority," and said that Lawrence's commission-manager form of government does not allow this authority.
haven't been here long enough."
He suggested that faculty members would be more inclined to run for city government positions if voting were done by wards rather than at large.
Kennedy also criticized the role of the Lawrence mayor for the last 112 years, saying it was a "figurehead" position.
By Jackie Stern
University Party and Vox Populi last night each picked up 11 representatives in All Student Council (ASC) elections.
An independent candidate was elected for what is believed to be the first time in three years, bringing ASC membership to 33. Prior to the election, ASC membership stood at 27. Vox still retains a 19-13 majority on the council.
The total vote cast was 4,066, an increase of 356 votes over the fall election last year. John Stuckey, elections chairman and Pittsburg junior, said he was highly pleased with the voting turnout.
IF THE VOTING HAD FOLLOWED past tradition, which." he said, "had been a heavier vote the second day, we would have reached the 4.500 mark."
Voting results were slow due to redistribution of voting in several districts. Stuckey said the freshman class officers and freshman dormitory district presented the worst problem because ballots were improperly marked.
See page 12 for election result breakdown.
By 8:30 last night the freshman class officers and ASC representatives had been announced. Tension rose throughout the evening as candidates and campus politicians thronged Bailey Hall where election results were posted intermittedly.
VOX POPULI TRAILED UP UNTIL the fraternity district was tabulated at 11:45. Four Vox seats and one UP seat evened up the party representation.
The closest race was in the sorority district which tallied out 2-1 in favor of Vox. Cornelia Kosfeld, St. Louis, Mo., sophomore, was defeated by three votes.
Four districts carried a Vox-UP split. One UP and one Vox representative were elected from the freshman dorms, small men's dorms, large women's dorms and unmarried-unorganized districts.
The University Party defeated Vox in the large men's dormitory district, 3-1, and in the married, professional fraternity and co-op and small women's dormitory districts where one UP representative was elected.
PARTY LEADERS, WHO HAD earlier predicted majorities for their parties, expressed surprise at the 11-11 split vote.
Nancy Lane, Hoisington junior and UP co-chairman, said. "We thought we would take one or two more seats. But we are happy with the large voting turnout due to more campaign and increased activities of both parties and to the decentralization of polls."
CRC to Investigate Statute Violations
The Civil Rights Council (CRC) last night set up two committees to investigate alleged violations of the state's fair accommodations statute — abandoning, for the moment, the CRC investigation of taverns.
By Bernie Henrie
Don Warner, Topeau senior and CRC chairman, said following the closed meeting that he hoped the two committees would have a complete report available after Thanksgiving.
ASKED ABOUT THE CRC investigation of some Lawrence taverns which reportedly have refused table service to at least one Negro, Warner said the CRC was content — for the present time — to allow the special committee formed to contact tavern owners on the issue.
The special committee consists of one CRC member, a member of the All Student Council Human Relations Commission, and a special appointee of the Lawrence city mayor.
Warner declined to give detailed information concerning the two committees created last night. He said the two would be investigating reported violations of the Kansas fair accommodations statute and that the committees would not be duplicating their work.
Since 1874 it has been a misdemeanor in Kansas for owners or managers of public accommodations, entertainment, or transportation to make a distinction on account of race or color.
Warner said the findings of the two committees would be turned over to the Lawrence Commission in much the same way as was the CRC gathered information on local taverns.
Warner also said an attempt was underway to bring civil rights leader Martin Luther King to campus. Warner said the CRC is in contact with King's office, but that no positive arrangement has been made.
Warner said he would attempt to contact King during his December trip to a week-long civil rights conference in Montgomery, Ala.
Weather
Considerable cloudiness today and tomorrow. Occasional light rain likely tonight and tomorrow. Highs today near 60 and lows tonight 40 to 45 with highs tomorrow in the 50s.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Nov. 15, 1962
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
Criticism From Wichita
The Eurich Report was certain to cause controversy if for no other reason than it calls for a drastic change in the present set-up of state supported higher education.
It would set up obvious levels in the system, with the state colleges at Emporia, Hays, and Pittsburg relegated to a level somewhat lower than KU and Kansas State.
ITWOULD STOP the present inclination of each state institution to work only for itself rather than for the entire state system.
It would take control of the public junior colleges from the local school boards and give it to local boards under the general supervision of the state Board of Regents.
In short, it would coordinate the institutions of higher education in Kansas, helping to insure that each would provide a specific academic service for a specific geographic area or population group.
THE BIGGEST PROBLEM faced by those who made the study was the role of the University of Wichita in the general scheme. And the most criticism of the report has come because of its recommendations that WU become a branch of KU and K-State.
Much criticism of the report from Wichita has been superficial, involving such things as the name of the institution, and the loss of its present complete autonomy.
But the administration and students of WU and the people of Wichita have a number of valid objections to the report's recommendations.
TO UNDERSTAND these objections, one must look at the historical background of WU. Kansas' development moved from the northeast to the west before it moved southwest. When the state colleges were founded, the south central and southwest area of Kansas was relatively unpopulated, compared to the northeast and southeast, and no state colleges were established in the area.
The people of Wichita built an excellent university—with no state aid until last year—which definitely offers university-level instruction. It is the largest institution of higher education in the south central portion of the state.
As the south central portion of Kansas became more populated, and as Wichita grew to be the largest city in the state, WU became an important part of that growth. It also began to serve as a part-time institution and to a relatively large
extent a commuter institution similar to these found in most urban centers.
WICHITA, OF COURSE, cannot have its cake and eat it too. If it wants the state to assume responsibility for financing WU because of WU's benefit to the area as well as to the city. Wichita must be prepared to give up control of the university's operations.
Many of Wichita's questions stem from the vagueness of the recommendations in the report. This is no criticism of the report, for it is meant to be a guide, leaving specific details to be worked out by the Board of Regents and the state legislature.
At the same time, however, residents of the city will want assurances that the institution which they developed into an excellent university will not be treated as a stepchild by the two state universities.
ON PAPER, however, the board which the Eurich Report recommends administer the State Universities Center (WU) is a cause for concern. The institution's president would be an "administrative head," who would have only one vote on a board of eleven—half from KU and half from K-State.
Smooth operation of the Center could be seriously impaired through splits on the board. While the Center theoretically would be working for both KU and K-State, the members of the Center's board would be essentially responsible to their home institution.
The Eurich Report recommends the use of the present WU faculty and it calls for the level of work at WU to be on the same level as that of KU and K-State. However, it is difficult to imagine KU and K-State assigning the top instructors acquired in the future to the Wichita center rather than to the home campus.
THE EURICH REPORT is designed to improve higher education in Kansas. It seeks to do this by coordinating the state colleges. But it will not improve higher education if this coordination downgrades an excellent university serving the south-central portion of the state and the state's largest city.
The Board of Regents, in implementing the Eurich Report, should set up machinery to insure that WU will not be treated as a stepchild by the two state universities. Until this is done, the people of Wichita are not likely to vote to turn over their university to the state.
—Clayton Keller
Editor:
Answer to Murphy
Editor:
I am sorry that you experienced embarrassment when asked about "Homecoming" by your fellow student from another country. I also am a student and I believe I would have answered his questions, and yours, as follows;
"Homecoming Weekend" is a two-day period traditionally specified as a time when alumni and
... Letters .
friends are especially invited to visit, or re-visit, the University campus, and when the University makes a special effort to provide entertainment, and the probability of seeing old friends and perhaps their families. By entertainment, I mean several carillon recitals, a dramatic presentation (Hugh Miller in Swarthout), a University Theatre production ("Paint Your Wagon"), and a German film, ("Rosemary"), at Hoch.
Daily Hansan
University of Kaasas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Telephone Wiking 3-2700.
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 711, news room
Extension 376, business office
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Scott Payne Managing Editor Richard Bonnett, Dennis Farney, Zeke Wigglesworth, and Bill Mullins, Assistant Managing Editors; Mike Miller, City Editor; Bcn Marshall, Sports Editor; Margaret Cathcart, Society Editor.
Clayton Keller and Bill Sheldon ... Co-Editorial Editors
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Charles Martinache ... Business Manager
Jack Cannon, Advertising Manager; Doug Farmer, Circulation Manager;
Gene Spalding, National Advertising Manager; Bill Woodburn, Classi-
fied Advertising Manager; Dan Meck, Promotion Manager.
As for the girls, and their "crownings," let it suffice to say that anyone who either has observed or participated in this type of "ceremony" (and this will include a large segment of the female population, since there are "queens" for myriad occasions) is quite aware of the fact that any one of a thousand girls might have been named, and that the selection is made after a rather cursory interview, obviously because no great importance is attached to the "office." I do not know what you mean by this "inner circle of politics." It is my understanding that any group of students who wish to make a nomination is invited to do so.
These people you mention at length, who get "swacked out of their gourd" I am not acquainted with in numbers. In my admittedly limited circle of friends, this form of behavior is not condoned, nor considered to be attractive, or even acceptable.
Also available are the open houses of the various schools and departments, and the opportunity to visit the museums on campus.
Thank you for reading my reply, if indeed you do, and please remember that the whole point of the great international exchange of students is not to cause the hosts to become apologists for the customs of their cultures, but rather to hope that the hosts will treat these customs in the light of their relative value and importance to the basic aims and objectives of a given population.
Ann Reed Lawrence senior
SIGNA PHI
NOTHING
HOUSE
C-30
1962 ©
DAY ISN'T THAT THE SAME GROUP OF BOYS THE DEAN OF
MEN HAD SO MUCH TROUBLE WITH LAST FALL?
It Looks This Way
Campus Politics Labeled "Farce"
Election for seats on the All Student Council (ASC) were held this week.
Campus politics gives the student body president a sufficient excuse to wear a coat and tie to class without getting laughed off the Hill.
CAMPUS POLITICS is the saddest sack of apples that KU has seen in many a year (with the possible exception of last Saturday's football game).
So what?
Campus politics gives the party leaders the opportunity to sit in the basement of Strong Hall in the mornings, sip coffee, and talk about the campus political situations (if there happen to be any at the time)or they can at least ogle the freshman girls on their way to 10:30 classes.
CAMPUS ELECTIONS also give the executives of the Daily Kansan the opportunity to express political sentiment in recommending those candidates they feel best qualified to fill ASC seats.
And this year, as usual, there are few issues. There now are decentralized voting polls, but less people voted in last week's primary than in either of the primaries last year.
Several party leaders got excited about the poor publicity hounds in Statewide Activities, but this has all subsided.
WE HEAR CAMPAIGN promises that deviate little from standard operational procedure. We hear the same trite pledges every year about supporting civil rights and about how messed up the All Student Council committees are.
So, in effect, what we have here at KU is people going through the motions of politics, putting themselves over on students who don't care about qualifications of the candidates or the issues.
STUDENTS LIVING in organized houses—fraternities, sororities, and small dormitories—no longer vote as individuals. They usually vote as the majority of their living group decides (for either one party or the other).
And to top off all this, campus elections are a farce. The party leaders can count their votes before the elections begin-thanks to bloc voting.
We wind up with the biggest railroading job Kansas has seen since Union Pacific built the first line through the state in the 1860s.
Therefore, the real spirit behind the elections—the campaign is lost. The only actual campaign carried on is in the large dorms.
AS A RESULT of all this, the effectiveness of campus politics is on the decline. Parties and their leaders aren't pressed for issues which build a strong student government.
The only way to revitalize campus politics is for students to find these issues and question the qualifications and capabilities of the leaders of KU student government.
Then KU students should go out and elect those candidates who sincerely are interested in making campus politics more meaningful.
—Ben Marshall
Russia Calls the Shots
Thursday, Nov. 15, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 3
"Our strategy and tactics must aim to avoid great decisive battles in the early stages of the war, and gradually to break the morale, the fighting spirit, and the military efficiency of the living forces of the enemy."
Red China Bucks Status Quo
Red China seems to be dependent on the Soviet Union for nuclear weapons. Prior to the Sputnik success of their comrades, Red China had attempted to discount nuclear weapons as being decisive in the scales of military superiority.
This is the publicized strategy of Red China as formulated by Mao Tse-tung, and it has been the principal guideline that has directed the Asian country's quest to expand its domain of influence.
PRIOR TO 1957, this was the sum total of Red China's strategy. This strategy was demonstrated in the Korean War where human-wave tactics and other psychological weapons of war did more than gain territory; the goal was to make the next battle more easy to win. Without the "ultimate" weapon—nuclear armaments—Red China would not employ total-victory tactics with purely conventional weapons.
By Terry Murphy
And even if total victory were in sight for Red China, there was the threat that the tide could be changed with nuclear weapons being introduced.
The reason Red China wanted to discount the effectiveness of nuclear weapons prior to 1957 seems obvious—the United States was recognized as superior in the nuclear armaments. But along with the Sputnik came the feasibility of intercontinental ballistic missiles.
THIS WAS NOT to be misinterpreted to mean that the Chinese war lords considered nuclear war to be inevitable. But they professed to have no fear of nuclear war. They reasoned that nuclear war would take a terrible toll in China and Russia, but it would completely devastate the United States and its allies.
For the first time, Red China leaders began telling the world that nuclear weapons could be decisive. They believed, or at least professed to believe, that the USSR and Communist China would win any nuclear war.
The consequences of this dependence have been and will continue to be important.
At this point it would be illuminating to consider a factor which has influenced the strategy and activities of Red China more than any other single consideration; Red China's wide-spread dependence on Russia.
The effective control of Red China through rationing was extended beyond the Russian refusal to supply nuclear weapons.
DURING THE Korean War Russia furnished sufficient conventional weapons—rifles, automatic weapons, artillery, tanks, etc.—but even this supply of nonnuclear weapons was controlled.
Russia has always entered the alliance with Red China with one hard-and-fast rule: Russia shall call the big play. Border wars that contribute to continual unrest are one thing, but the threat of nuclear war is quite another.
Russia has always been willing to indulge and, in most cases, even encourage its Asian ally's aggressions, but always within well-defined limits.
Not until it appeared that United Nations forces might push across the Yalu River did Russia lift the lid on fuel for jet fighters.
If the big bomb is going to be used. Russia wants to call the shot.
THIS ATTITUDE was clearly demonstrated in the Formosan crisis. As long as the Communists confined themselves to shelling Quemoy and Matsu, Russia did nothing to collar the aggression. But when the United States moved the 7th Fleet to the Formosa Straits with the understanding that nuclear weapons would be used if necessary, Red China backed off.
In the study of Red China's strategy, two elements remain nearly constant: Red China's dependence on Russia, and Red China's need to prevent a condition of status oue in the Far East.
As essential and restricting as these elements may be, they should not be overplayed in considering which avenues are open to Red China and her pursuits of political and military objectives.
Why? It has been suggested that Red China knew Russia would not back her under threat of nuclear attack. Some view the Quemoy-Matsu shellings as a cautious test of U.S. intentions in the Far East. Red China wanted to find out what can be gained through bluster and, if the United States proved irresolute, use this fact to demonstrate to the Soviet Union that the United States is a "paper tiger" not to be overrated.
The opportunities for Red China to deny the status quo are plentiful. Laos, Vietnam, and recently India are evidence that the country cannot be completely throttled by her reliance on Russian supplies and technology.
IN ALL THESE places, the conditions are favorable to the Chinese—they fit into Mao's formula for domination and successful campaigns. The theme is clear and the pattern consistent; creation or exploitation of conditions where political economic, psychological means and the waiting game can be employed with effect.
Russia's refusal to write a blank check for backing aggression,
coupled with indications that the United States sensed Russia's re-license, presented Red China with a problem.
Being vulnerable to nuclear attack and the deterring influence this factor entailed, the Chinese needed to try to create circumstances which would guarantee that war would be fought with conventional weapons—where numerical superiority and logistics would favor the Asian power.
Regardless whether it were planned as an objective or not, the atomic moratorium in 1958 may have been agreed to by Russia as a means of placating the Chinese demands for possession of nuclear weapons.
All this may lead the reader to conclude that the only thing which binds Red China to the Soviet Union and the incumbent restrictions is the lack of nuclear capabilities.
SINCE 1958, THE Chinese Communists have concentrated on the old formula: creating situations where conditions favor the use of political, psychological, economic measures built around the patience of a doctrine which teaches the concept that communism inevitably will prevail.
At the same time, this moratorium would not stop the Chinese from developing their own capabilities in nuclear armaments.
Perhaps the Communists have been stopped short of their goals in Southeast Asia. But certainly the prevailing conditions in Laos and Vietnam cannot be considered as defeats for Red China.
FIRST, OF WHAT use is a nuclear weapon without the capability of delivering it to a target? While Red China may explode a bomb in the next five years, its technicians are a long way from developing an ICBM, or for that matter, even a long-range bomber.
Not necessarily. Other problems are inherent to a quasi-industrialized country such as Red China.
Will Red China run its own show after it has developed its own bomb?
Above and beyond the military ties to Russia, Red China's economy and industry are tied to the strings of Russia. The Great Leap seems to have been more an inching forward.
Red China still must depend on Russia, and Russia will use this lever to call the big shots.
The true civilization is where every man gives to every other every right that he claims for himself. — Robert G. Ingersoll
Short Ones
An expert is one who knows more and more about less and less. — Nicholas Murray Butler
w
LOOK AT US!
We have started delivery service
We ABSOLUTELY Deliver
Absolutely
Absolutely
Absolutely
EARL'S PIZZA PALACE
729 Mass.
VI 3-0753
S. U. A.
DATE-NIGHT AT THE JAY BOWL
DISCOUNTS ON BOWLING FROM 7 P.M. 'TIL CLOSING
FREE REFRESHMENTS
FRIDAY, NOV. 16
Bring your girl and see if you can win the "FREE NIGHT" of bowling at the J-Bowl for having the highest combined score for one game.
IT'S A PARTY !!!
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
ARENSBERG'S
819 MASS. VI 3-3470
Black
Bucko
$8.95
Class Moc
AAAA to B
4 to 10
Trampeze
CLASSICALLY
INCLINED?
For lovers of the classics, this moccasin's a "must". There's no shoe so well suited to all your casual clothes!
CHARGE ACCOUNTS INVITED
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Thursday. Nov. 15, 1962
Stealth Involved In Rock Chalk
Amateur playwrights have been sneaking off to nighttime rendez-vous — to labor on secret scripts.
These secret scripts will not become public until the night of March 1 — the opening night of Rock Chalk Revue.
The Rock Chalk Revue committee has set Dec. 7 as a deadline for the first drafts of skits, and Dec. 17 for final drafts. Skits chosen by judges for the Revue will be announced in January.
PRELIMINARY SKIT outlines were turned in Monday. Now, most of the houses are writing what they hope will be humorous dialogue.
Alpha Tau Omega and Kappa Alpha Theta have been busy three nights a week discussing ideas and writing, writing, writing.
Standard meetings usually last two hours, and have been attended by four or five members of both houses.
The Hashinger - Carruth-O'Leary Hall team, however, is employing a larger staff of writers. Five of a group of 12 are doing most of the writing, while others are "Thinkers" and substitute writers.
AT MEETINGS in some houses, ideas are submitted and writers volunteer their services. Each writer then takes a part of the script to work on and then brings it completed to the next meeting where it is revised and worked into the rest of the script.
Lighting, costumes, props, and scenery are things to be considered in the future.
Right now, script writing is keeping the midnight oil burning in many of KU's dorms and houses.
AOPi Happy Hour Is Set for Tomorrow
Alpha Microni Pi social sorority, 1144 W 11th St., will sponsor a Thanksgiving Happy Hour for foreign and American students from 4-6 p.m. tomorrow.
Military Ball Queen Finalists Announced
A cadet queen to reign over KU's Dec. 7 military ball will be chosen from 12 finalists announced yesterday.
All organized women's living groups with the exception of Corbin and Gertrude Sellards Pearson were invited to submit candidates. Air Force cadets, the hosts of this year's ball, interviewed the 44 candidates Sunday and Monday and selected the finalists.
Arthur L. Wagner, assistant professor of air science, said the candidacy has traditionally been limited to upperclassmen.
Finalists will submit photographs and attend a tea in the John Steuart Curry room of the Kansas Union Dec. 3.
Members of Scabbard and Blade, honorary tri-service society, will choose the queen and her two attendents. Her majesty will be announced and crowned before approximately 1,000 cadets, their dates and guests at the ball.
The finalists are Dana K. Sullivan, Ulysses senior, Alpha Omicron Pi; Carolyn Toews, Inman senior, Alpha Chi Omega; Sandra Lessenend, Topeka sophomore, Delta Delta Delta; Patricia Lee, Independence, Mo., junior, Alpha Delta Pi; Pat Wyles, Carlisle, Pa., sophomore, Pia Beta Pi; Sandra Coffman, Pittsburg sophomore, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Marcelie Wilson, Littleton, Colo, junior, Kappa Alpha Theta; Virginia Dick, Park Ridge, Ill., junior, Gamma Phi Beta; Cynthia Childers, Merriam junior, Sigma Kappa; Yvonne Jackson, Kansas City, Kans., junior, Alpha Kappa Alpha; Dorothy Stevens, Hutchinson senior, Chi Omega; and Cappy Mayo, Wichita junior, Lewis.
Illinois May Outlaw Poll Tax
SPRINGFIELD, Ill.—(UPI) —The Illinois Senate, meeting in special session, yesterday passed the proposed amendment to the U.S. Constitution outlawing the poll tax.
If the house approves the amendment, Illinois would be the first state to ratify it.
1.
2. ?
2. ?
Well, back to the rolling pin again
Try Our Quality Pizza and Tasty Submarine Sandwiches
Pizza Hut
Free Delivery in Campus Area
14th & Tenn.
VI 3-0563
About 95 seniors in the School of Education yesterday began classes for the first time this semester.
Ed. Students Shift On Block System
These were student teachers who returned Friday from eight weeks of teaching in the different schools in the area.
Their return preceded the departure of 55 others who finished their half-semester Friday and began their eight weeks of teaching yesterday in 14 area schools.
Karl Edwards, professor of education, said the block system has been in use for 16 years on a half-semester or eight-week basis.
Prof. Edwards added that each
of the students out on the block teach in one of several divisions, such as art, music, physical education, business education, foreign languages, home economics, math, and the sciences.
P-T-P 'Ambassador' Plan Discussion Set
STUDENTS
Plans for the summer "Student Ambassador Flight" abroad will be announced at an all-student People-to-People meeting at 7 tonight in the Kansas Union. Tentative plans for the summer direct job exchange will also be discussed.
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
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
When a cigarette means a lot...
get Lots More from L&M
P
Cigar Cone
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.
And L&M's filter is the modern filter-all white,
inside and outside—so only pure white touches your lips.
Enter the LM GRAND PRIX 50 For college students only! 50 Pontiac Tempests FREE!
Women Get 'Mrs.' Degree in Danforth
Page 5
By Blaine King
Designed by KU's first architecture graduate, built from an old stone fence with German POW labor and dedicated in 1946 when the late Andrew Schoeppel was governor of Kansas, Danforth Chapel has a lot of tradition behind it.
University Daily Kansan
BUT ANOTHER OF DANFORT'S traditions is more important for KU women. Many of them get married there.
And in the 16 years since Hope sophomore Leone Sandow walked down Danforth's aisle to join Robert Fisher at the walnut altar rail. 962 women have made the change from schoolgirl to wife.
The little reservations book in the registrar's office indicates that June is the most popular month for weddings, though the weeks just after fall semester run a close second.
THE YEAR FROM JUNE 1, 1958 to June 1, 1959, however, produced a bumper crop of weddings, as 95 men assumed the role of husband and a like number of women promised to love and cherish them. The "obey" may be omitted from the ceremony, and in recent years usually has been.
In its first year, Danforth saw 75 couples joined, but the pace has slowed slightly since then. Now, about 40 couples a year are married in Danforth.
The omission of "obey" may be one reason for another tale told in the reservation book, and might cause some women to consider just how secure their position really is before they get their man to the altar. For every dozen or so weddings listed in the reservation sheets, there is at least one cancellation.
Only once in Danforth's hectic first year did things go drastically wrong. In the excitement of the wedding, no one remembered to extinguish the candles, and melted wax overflowed, ruining the rug.
IN THE LATEST WEDDING at Danforth, that of Ira Paulin and Marcia Dicks, friends broke one of the many traditions surrounding weddings. They threw wheat instead of rice. The Paulin family farms in southwest Kansas and wanted to be true to their background.
In the future, when the new Fraser Hall is completed, the old setting may be altered somewhat. Danforth is not scheduled for removal, but the area will have to be relandscaped, and the tiny chapel (capacity 90) will repose in the shadow of its new neighbor.
Speakers will verbally dissect the paper boy in a discussion of the carrier boy and the newspaper of the future at the ninth annual Newspaper Circulation Managers School here Nov. 17, and 18.
Circulation Meet Set for Weekend
Dr. Edward D. Greenwood, coordinator of training in child psychiatry at the Menninger Foundation in Topeka, will speak.
George Alden, circulation manager of the Hutchinson News, will preside over a panel discussion on "The Carrier Boy . . . Getting, Motivating and Keeping him." The panelists will include D. L. Martz, circulation manager of the St. Joseph (Mo.) News-Press and Gazette, and Dwight McCreight, publisher of the Chanute Tribune.
Sunday morning, a panel will discuss "The Product You Are Selling; What It Is and Will Be" with Dale Kelly, city circulation manager for the Topeka Daily Capital and Journal, presiding. Other participants will be John McCormally, executive editor of the Hutchinson News; Herbert A. Meyer Jr., publisher of The Independence (Kan.) Reporter, and Stanley H. Stauffer, general manager of the Topeka Daily Capital and Journal.
Thursday, Nov. 15, 1962
GLASS
AUTO GLASS TABLE TOPS Sudden Service
KSU Test Incident Results in Ousting
A test-stealing incident at Kansas State University resulted in three students being expelled and five others disciplined.
Any other students found to be involved in stealing the tests or profiting by them will also be dealt with, Dr. Chester E. Peters, dean of students, said.
The students acquired keys to campus buildings and offices and used them to get in and take the test sheets, school officials said. The keys have been recovered.
AUTO GLASS
East End of 9th Street
VI 3-4416
State Farm Insurance
Paul E. Hodgson
Local Agent
Off. Ph. VI 3-5666 530 W Z3rd.
Res. Ph. VI 3-5994 Lawrence, Kan.
Quality Watch Repair Lowest Prices DANIELS
Winter Shipment Of Men's Wash And Wear
CONTINENTAL
PANTS
3 $ ^{9 8} $ and 5 $ ^{9 0} $
LITWIN'S
at
831 MASS.
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results
Drip - Dry
Car Wash 98c
Wiley's Texaco Service
23rd & Louisiana V1 2-0381
I will not let you down.
If you have a classified ad, clip this coupon and mail to KANSAN BUSINESS OFFICE 111 Flint
CLASSIFIED AD
Your Name___
Address___
Phone___
Days to Run___
OH
OH NO!
NO!
If you've lost something, found something, or want to buy, rent, or sell something, let the KANSAN CLASSIFIED ADS help you. You'll get quick results because everybody reads the classified ads.
She's lost her fountain pen again! If she's a smart gal, she'll put a want ad in The KANSAN!
PHONE KU 376
to place your ad.
I
KANSAN CLASSIFIED RATES
One day
1.00
Three days 1.50
Five days 1.75
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Nov. 15, 1962
2.
Professor Reviews Controversial Novel
By Joanne Prim
An associate professor of philosophy yesterday reviewed a book "damned by liberals and conservatives" but read by both
Charles Landesman discussed the philosophical implications of Ayn Rand's novel "Atlas Shrugged" to an audience packed into the Music Room of the Kansas Union for the first SUA Modern Book Forum.
"HER ATHEISM alienates the conservatives," he said, "and her capitalism alienates the liberals.
"The essence of her theories, Prof. Landesman told the students, "is her defense of reason, justice, atheism, liberty, and capitalism."
The seeming incongruency among some of the items listed makes it difficult to classify her, Prof. Landesman said. But she holds that if reason is assumed, the other characteristics must follow.
He said that Miss Rand "therefore opposes faith, love, God, tyranny, and collectivism or socialism."
"ATLAS SHRUGGED" is the story of what happens when the "intellectuals" refuse to function and thus stop the motor of the world. It is the story of the mind on strike, Prof. Landesman said.
The Campus Crusade for Christ, the interdenominational religious group promoting church membership among unaffiliated students, will hold its second meeting at 7 tonight in the Kansas Union.
Crusade for Christ Meeting Tonight
John Flack, national representative of the Crusade, will further pursue the question, "Who is Jesus?" Mr. Flack has been on campus since last week helping to organize the Crusade at KU.
"Those who have investigated the matter fully assert that he is the Son of God," Flack says. "If Jesus is the Son of God, we need to worship him and we need to follow him."
History tells that Jesus was a philosopher, a teacher, a man and the founder of Christianity. He may be the Son of God or he may have been a liar, an imposter or deluded.
"If Jesus was deluded, then Christians are idolaters; but if Jesus is the Son of God, the non-Christians are blasphemers," Flack said.
100
THE Coach House congratulates Mary — She's the Social Chairman for Corbin.
MARY HARTNETT
She's wearing a kilt, long-sleeved blouse and a bar pin—all from The Coach House.
"In her presentation of ideas, she is eloquent," he said. "The most interesting part of the book is her philosophy—not her plot."
"Concerning her ethics of reason and justice, she proposes to deduce ethics from human nature. This idea is based on Aristotle's teachings. Because reason is that aspect of man most highly valued, she believes that the best life is based on reason," Prof. Landesman said.
COACH HOUSE
Grooms For Tweens and Guys
"The independent mind is freed from all authority. Freedom is based on reason and experience. She recommends autonomous authority." he continued.
"THE END OF LIFE is happiness. Philosophically, this is her most valid conception," Prof Landesman stated. "She sees happiness as the knowledge of achievement of one's values. It is something active — not merely pleasure.
"Virtue is a means to happiness, she says, rejecting the puritanical view that virtue is its own reward. She is an optimist, again like Aristotle," Prof. Landesman said.
"Her justice insists on giving each man what he deserves, no more and no less. She follows that the dignity of man is based on the fact that he is responsible and hence subject to reward and punishment," he said.
Miss Rand does not totally reject benevolence, Prof. Landesman said, but limits it to justice.
SHE REJECTS the idea of love — "giving to those who don't deserve." Prof Landesman said.
- "There is no reason to believe in God.
"To give what someone needs
"If a woman chooses to spend her money to buy food for her hungry child instead of purchasing a new hat, we would call that a sacrifice," he continued. "But it would be a sacrifice only if she valued the hat more than the child."
for no other reason than need is an absence of value," he said. "Miss Rand says that need creates no obligation.
"The ethics of love say that the highest virtue is sacrifice, but Miss Rand believes that to perform a sacrifice is to surrender one's values.
Prof. Landesman said Ayn Rand's atheism is based on two premises;
Use Christmas Seals...
- "Faith is contrary to reason, the most valuable aspect of human nature."
1963 Christmas
1963 Christmas Greetings 1962
Greetings 1972
Fight TB and Other Respiratory Diseases
For the Finest in Hair Fashion
- Frosting - Tinting
- Bleaching
Driscoll Beauty Salon 908 Mass. VI3-4070
BIRD TV-RADIO
VI 3-8855
908 Mass.
TV-
RADIO
- Quality Parts
- Guaranteed
- Expert Service
U.S. Keds The Shoe of Champions
The Latest in Snow Boots
Newest in Rayon
Completely waterproof—
Turn collar up or down.
Black N & M to 10
$12.95
Brushed Nylon
Fur cuff in black on
black N & M to 10
$11.95
SHOE
10
Brushed Nylon in black with up or down top in red N & M to 10 $11.95
All U. S. Keds Snow Boots Completely Waterproof
Royal College Shop 837 Mass.
NEW!
MIDNIGHT
STAR*
From $100
Artcarved captures the romance of midnight ..the beauty of a precious star
MIDNIGHT STAR-for every fortunate Cinderella who finds herself engaged in the magic of a starlit night. The beautifully glistening facets of this Artcarved creation are displayed in a setting of new and lasting magnificence. No wonder Midnight Star was selected as the ring design of the year by the National College Queens.
You'll love the new design. And you'll treasure the fact that it is made by Artcarved—the name which has meant the finest in diamonds for more than a century. Come in and see the new Midnight Star and all the other award-winning Artcarved designs. *TRADEMARK*
Artcarved
DIAMOND and WEDDING RINGS
X
MARKS JEWELERS
817 Mass.
Lawrence, Kansas
MEMBER
AGS
AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY
International Club Needs Cars for Trip
Page 7
University Daily Kansan
Students who "have car and will travel" have an opportunity to take 30-40 foreign students to a People-to-People International Festival in Wichita this weekend.
Engin Artemel, Turkish graduat publicity chairman, said the club will pay six cents a mile to any student taking more than four passengers.
"WERE VERY UPSET about the lack of transportation," Artemel said. "We would pay P-t-P members six cents a mile to take cars, but Bill Schaefer (Shawnee Mission junior and KU P-t-p chairman) said they couldn't help us."
Schaefer said he received word this morning from the Kansas City P-t-P organization that a bus with 10 vacant seats would detour through KU on its way to Wichita
He blamed a lack of personnel for the transportation problem. "We have enough problems on campus," Schaefer said. "We're not able to organize excursions to every international club festival that comes up."
Four groups of KU foreign students will participate in the Festival.
ARTEMEL SAID that approximately 14,000 persons and 34 nations will be represented at the three-day exhibit at Sacred Heart College in Wichita.
The Arabs on campus are sending a belly-dancer. The Latin-Americans have put together a combo and the Indians have worked out an Indian stick dance. A KU African group will demonstrate native dances.
THE FESTIVAL opens at 7 p.m.
tomorrow. Booths will feature foreign art and food. An international fashion show will display the native dress of foreign countries.
An international ball and a Miss International contest is scheduled for Saturday night. Sunday is reserved for "sightseeing," Artemel said.
Arrangements have been made for KU foreign students to stay in the homes of Wichita families. If adequate transportation can be found, the groups plan to leave KU tomorrow afternoon.
Pledges Are Installed
Eighteen ROTC cadets were initiated last night into Pershing Rifles, a tri-service organization for men in the Armed Service program.
The new members are:
Arthur Lucas, Leavenworth sophomore; Timothy Jones, Houston, Tex.; sophomore; Robert L. Poley, Wichita freshman; Kenny Whitty, Parsons freshman; N. Y. freshman; and Larry D. Jenkebreen, Olympia, Wash., junior.
Luis A. Monserate Jr. Leavenworth freshman; Charles A. Killian, Junction City sophomore; John F. Hassig, Ft. Ben Georgia; freshman; Tom Wright, Mission Valley, Ft. Leavenworth freshman, and Gary Beauchamp, Ponona freshman.
Edwin E. Reed, Garden City freshman; Robert Yeager, Augusta junior; Alan Thompson Ft. Leavenworth freshman; Pilar Ching Cheng, Miami freshman; Victor A. Metzler, Colby sophomore and William Repogle, Miami, Florida, sophomore.
I NEED A NAME!
TRY YOUR LUCK!
NAME ME!
PARDON
MADE ME SELLE
A BLOUSE Will Be
Awarded to the
Person Who Suggests
The 'Cleverest'
name submitted during OPEN HOUSE
Thrilling Play Kills 15-Year-Old Boy
I NEED A NAME!
TRY YOUR LUCK!
NAME ME!
PARDON
MADE BY SELLE
A BLOUSE Will Be
Awarded to the
Person Who Suggests
The 'Cleverest'
name submitted during OPEN HOUSE.
The CAMPUS
Jay
SHOPPE
12th & Oread
CORDIALLY INVITES
YOU TO COME TO
OPEN HOUSE
The College Fashion Board
When: Saturday, November 17
10 A.M. to 1 P.M.
Where: Campus Jay Shop
12th & Oread
DALLAS—(UPI)The soft spiral sailed into Jerry Allman's arms and the 15-year-old W. H. Gaston Junior High School student dashed down the sideline for a touchdown.
"My heart feels like it is in my mouth," Jerry told a teammate. Then he collapsed. A few minutes later he died at a hospital.
A post mortem was underway today to determine what caused jerry's death.
The boy's sudden death stunned his schoolmates in the physical education class.
Earlier in the year Allman had taken a physical fitness test. He made one of the highest scores in the school.
He had no history of a heart condition. He had been playing touch football. There had been no body contact.
The CAMPUS
Jay
SHOPPES
12th & Oread
The CAMPUS Jay SHOPPE 12th & Oread CORDIALLY INVITES YOU TO COME TO OPEN HOUSE
Thursday, Nov. 15, 1962
Serving: Coffee and Donuts
"Chemical Aspects of Atomic Energy" will be discussed at the monthly meeting of the KU Section of the American Chemical Society at 4 today in 233 Malott.
Chem. Society Talk Is on Atomic Energy
The speaker will be Dr. M. D. Peterson, deputy associate laboratory director for education at Argonne National Laboratory since 1960. The meeting is open to the public.
JOE'S BAKERY
Open 24 Hours
Night Deliveries
412 W.9th VI3-4720
LEARN SPANISH, FRENCH
GERMAN, ITALIAN, RUSSIAN
Modern GREEK, ENGLISH for the Spanish speaking
"IN RECORD TIME"
Created to sell for $32.00
AMERICA
Yours for Only $9.98
Yours for Only $9.98
Learn SPANISH
in Record Time
A Complete Introduction to
SPANISH
IN RECORD TIME
RECORD TIME
RECORD TIME
RECORD TIME
RECORD TIME
RECORD TIME
Never before has it been so easy and economical to learn a second language. Other fine courses usually cost from $50.00 to $100.00 - but through the magic of LP recording and mass-production economies, it has at last become possible to offer these complete, concentrated Courses at the amazingly low price of only $9.98. These new Courses were devised and planned by the Institute for Language Study, in collaboration with a well-known language institute, pioneers in developing the phonograph method of teaching languages.
JOHN W. KENNEDY
THE AMERICAN
EXPLORATION
EVERYTHING YOU NEED TO SPEAK A SECOND LANGUAGE!
Two 12" HIGH-FIDELITY, UNBREAKABLE LPs — containing forty (40) complete lessons
AUTHORITATIVE TEXTBOOK—Illustrated in color, containing:
* Key to Pronunciation
* Basic Sentence Patterns
* Everyday Conversations
* Concise Grammar
* plus a 5,000-word Dictionary
Your "Passport" to More Travel Fun and Business Rewards A whole new world of romance and adventure opens for you when you speak another language. Unlimited career opportunities await you in the business world. And here's a Course you can take in the comfort of your own home - all you need is just 15 minutes a day and in less than a month and a half, you can learn to speak the language of your choice "In Record Time." Includes a phrase a traveler or businessman must learn through customs, ordering a meal, to seeking medical aid abroad. You hear the voices of cultured native instructors - follow the words and conversations in your illustrated textbook. Just "Listen and Learn!"
FREE BONUS!
**BONUS:** With each language Course you get a Certificate that entitles you to receive at no charge a valuable, de-luxe of Great Literature, free with this special offer. This beautiful "collector's item" introduces you to some of the best writings and writers of your "new" language.
KANSAS UNION BOOK STORE
M
A
Open Every Evening
S
1234567890
P
I
N
G
Safeway
CENTER
Key Rexall Drugs
T. G. & Y.
Speed-Wash
ACME Laundry & Cleaners
Western Auto
R
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
University Daily Kansan Thursday. Nov. 15. 1962
STUDENTS-Coming Monday
PRE-THANKSGIVING TURKEY DINNER SPECIAL
50c
THE TURKEY IS ON THE TABLE. IT IS A LARGE BREASTED TURkey, ROOTED AND ROASTED IN A BLACK RICE PUDDING. IT IS SERVED WITH MILK AND FISH. IT IS A VALUEFUL DISH FOR CALORIE AND VEGETABLES. IT IS ALSO SUPPLIED WITH KNIFES, SAWS, AND OTHER HOWEVER YOU CAN MAKE YOUR TURKEY FASTER.
Pre-Thanksgiving Dinner MENU
Roast Turkey and Dressing
Giblet Gravy
Mashed Potatoes
Buttered Green Peas
Cranberry Jello Salad
Hot Rolls and Butter
Coffee
©
Hawk's Nest & Cafeteria
10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. MONDAY NOV.19
UNION FOOD SERVICE
C.
Thursday, Nov. 15, 1962 University Daily Kansan
1
Page 9
Along the JAYHAWKER trail
By Ben Marshall You guessed it.
I waved goodbye to the fortune teller as I pushed him off the Kaw River Bridge. He took his foggy little crystal ball with him.
Last Saturday was just right for this "second-guesser." Two of the teams I picked to win turned out second best in the scoring column.
CONSEQUENTLY, THOSE two misses out of five picks now leaves the overall record at 31 right and eight wrong for a .795 percentage. This week might be just as bad.
IOWA STATE OVER KANSAS
STATE: Coach Clay Stapleton's crew also needs a win Saturday to finish with an even 5-5 record. In spite of the fired up Wildcats, Iowa State should come out on top.
In addition to a homecoming crowd, Kansas State should also be spurred on by a growing desire to snap a 16-game losing streak. Last week, K-State went for a two-point conversion against Arizona and failed, losing 14-13 in the final three minutes. Meanwhile, Iowa State was getting pounded by Oklahoma. 41-0.
Still, I-State's Dave Hoppmann should make the difference as he cools off the fired-up Wildcats. I-State by two touchdowns.
COLORADO OVER TEXAS TECH: If the two teams are considered solely on paper, this game is really up for grabs. CU has lost seven of eight games during the season. The Red Raiders from Lubbock are winless in eight outings.
Colorado, however, has a strong aerial game that should turn the tide. Frank Cesarek is the second-best passer in the league with 64 of 143 for 674 yards. And Buff ends John McGuire and Ken Blair rank first and third in the Big Eight, respectively, in pass receiving.
Colorado should win by a touchdown.
NEBRASKA OVER OKLAHOMA
STATE: The Cowboys (3-4) upset
the applecart with their surprise 12- win over Army. But they won't do much upsetting this week.
What the Cornhuskers line won't do to O-State, Dennis Claridge, Willie Ross, and Bill Thornton can handle. In fact, this crew should more than handle the Cowboys.
Nebraska should win by five touchdowns.
KANSAS OVER CALIFORNIA:
KU will face the best passer it has tackled since TCU's Sonny Gibbs in Cal's sophomore whit. Craig Morton.
But the California defense is not too strong, and should have trouble keeping Gale Sayers from cracking the 1,000-yard rushing barrier. Kansas by two touchdowns.
Kansas by two touchdowns.
OKLAHOMA OVER MISSOURI:
This is the battle between the two best defenses in the league, as each has yielded only 4.5 points per game.
Iowa State's last-second score against the Tiger third-teamers was the only touchdown scored on the ground against Mizzou this year. Notre Dame was the only OU opponent to breach the Sooner goal line on the ground and Kansas was the only team to score on the Big Red by passing.
Most attention, however, will fall on the rival left halfbacks.
OU's Joe Don Looney is the league's third best rusher. He has carried 95 times, and has gained 707 yards. Mizzou's Johnny Roland is runner-up to KU's Gale Sayers in the conference rushing race, having carried the ball 131 times for 787 net yards.
This is an even match, but the Sooner spirit will prevail. Oklahoma by three points.
Mennonite Group To Meet Sunday
The KU Menonite Fellowship will meet this Sunday at 3 p.m. in the Pan American Room of the Kansas Union.
Sooner coach Bud Wilkinson has put a cautious foot forward on Saturday's clash between undefeated Big Eight crown hopefuls Missouri and Oklahoma.
OU Coach Spares Optimism; No Prediction on MU Game
Kansas Sate coach Doug Weaver was having his own injury problems. Three Wildcat regulars, quarterback Doug Dusenbury, halfback Ralph McFilen and tackle Bill Hull, were listed as questionable against Iowa State.
"We've gotten a little better every game," said Wilkinson, "but everyone else does too."
Relax in a Pedwin
CASUAL
Time to relax means time to slip into smart, comfortable Pedwin casuals.
High fashion, narrow-toe styling and handsome colors make this shoe a must for your wardrobe.
$10.99
Black, Olive & Midnight Brown
pedwin
YOUNG IDEAS IN SHOES®
McCoy's
813 MASS
VL 3-209
Wilkinson even hedged on predictions that Saturday's winner at Norman was headed for the Orange Bowl, pointing out that Missouri still had to face Kansas and Oklahoma must play Nebraska, a team that stomped on the Jayhawkers 40-16 last Saturday.
"We're still playing each game as it comes," said the none-too-optimistic Sooner coach.
CA
Wilkinson said halfback Paul Lea, shaken up in the Sooners' 41-0 win over Iowa State Saturday, may be at half speed this week. Joe Done Looney, who scored three times against the Cyclones, has a charlie horse and his condition was uncertain, as was end Glen Condren.
Two injured Cyclones, tailback Dave Hoover and end John McGonegle, are out for the season, and end Scott Tieke has mononucleosis.
Missouri coach Dan Devine, relieved of his usual string of Tiger injuries, predicted a "good game" with Oklahoma. The only ailing Tiger is third string halfback Vince Tobin. Devine said Bill Tobin and Mack Gilchrist, recovering from injuries, should be in good shape for the Sooner bout.
A revitalized Oklahoma State squad was cheered with the possibility that they would be at full strength for Saturday's crucial meeting with Nebraska.
"We need to find more hitters to help us get through these last two games," the Cyclone coach said.
But for wounded Colorado, things were looking up.
"We're glad to be past the Big Eight meat grinder," said Buffalo coach Bud Davis. Davis said he was looking forward to Saturday's contest with Texas Tech where "we have a pretty good chance."
CHICKEN DINNER
Iowa State coach Clay Stapleton has sifted through 25 reserves this week excusing his top 26 men Monday in a search for backup power for use against Kansas State at Manhattan Saturday.
CHICKEN DINNER
Slaw, french fries,
rolls, gravy & pickles
$1.25
BIG BUY
VI 3-2091
813 MASS.
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results!
CHAMPAGNE
GLASS
$1.00
at
Peggy's Gifts & Cards Mall's Shopping Center Open 9:30 a.m. to 7:30 p.m.
Allen Drury's brilliant new successor to Advise and Consent
A SHADE OF ERENCE
DIFFERENCE
A crisis explodes at the U.N. and threatens to shatter U.S. prestige beyond compare, in A SHADE OF DIFFERENCE - Pulitzer Prize-winner Allen Drury's controversial new sequel to Advise and Consent. Here is all the brilliant, authentic detail of the first novel, now in a story of international politics and power that blends the drama of fiction with the stark reality of fact. No novel you read this year will be more entertaining, more engrossing, or more vital, than Allen Drury's A SHADE OF DIFFERENCE. 603 pages, $6.95
KANSAS UNION BOOK STORE
getting the big play!
No argument. In slacks the leader is Post-Grads. Taking it from the top, they've got traditional belt loops and on-seam pockets (no tricky jazz). Slim as a licorice stick, they taper off at the bottoms with solid cuffs. Get Post-Grads, the genuine article—in a flock of colorful, washable fabrics; at swingin' stores $4.95 to $12.95.
h.i.s Post-Grad Slacks
---
1. 2. 3.
Page 10
0 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Nov. 15, 1962
Russia Continues Indian Assistance
NEW DELHI—(UPI)—The Soviet Union appeared today to be taking unusual measures to establish itself as a friend of India despite this nation's border war with Communist China—a Soviet ally, said former Moscow yesterday that a con-
Tass News Agency reported in tract had been signed yesterday for the delivery to India of Soviet-made equipment for gas and oil exploration and research.
THE AGENCY also announced that Russia had permitted India to open a consulate in Odessa because of growing trade, business and cultural relations between the two countries.
Turkey is the only other non-Communist nation to maintain a consulate in the Soviet Union. It is located at Batumi on the Black Sea.
Earlier this week Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru disclosed that the Russians had given assurances they would carry out agreements to supply India with MIG jit fighters and a plant to make them.
NEHRU TOLD Parliament yesterday that the Soviet attitude has been "consistently friendly."
"They have been put in a difficult position because they are an ally o. (Red) China," Nehru said. "We don't expect them to break that alliance. But we have their good wishes, even recently, and that is a consolation to us."
Although the Soviet aid commitments to India were made before the border war broke out, it was considered significant that the Russians are going through with them.
Of even greater interest to Western diplomats are the recent "good wishes" that Nehru spoke of, almost an indication of encouragement to India in its battle against the Chinese Reds.
NEHRU, HIS campaign to drive out the Chinese Communists from Indian soil supported by a thunderous vote of confidence from Parliament, formed a new defense team yesterday.
He named as defense minister Y. B. Chavan, 48-year-old chief minister of West India's Maharashtra state, to take the place of the ousted V. K. Krishna Menon.
Bill Haynes $ ^{*} $ says...
"Stands to reason that a life insurance policy designed expressly for college men—and sold only to college men—gives you the most benefits for your money when you consider that college men are preferred insurance risks. Call me and I'll fill you In on THE BENEFACTOR, College Life's famous policy, exclusively for college men."
*BILL HAYNES
VI 3-9394
Chavan was the first Indian official to start throwing Communists in prison after the Chinese Communist border attack. He ordered the arrest of 41 militant pro-Peiping Reds on Nov.7 and ordered 2,000 Chinese in Bombay restricted to their residences.
Named to direct the new ministry of economic and defense coordination was T. T. Krishnamachari, 62, a hard-headed businessman who previously served as finance minister.
representing
THE COLLEGE LIFE
INSURANCE COMPANY
OF AMERICA
Group to Carry On Mrs. FDR's Work
WASHINGTON (UPI) President Kennedy yesterday named a committee headed by Ambassador Adlai Stevenson to find ways to carry on the work of the late Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt.
Appointed at the request of Mrs. Roosevelt's family, the committee will recommend ways in which the major interests of Mrs. Roosevelt—mainly the protection of human rights and improvement of living conditions for the underprivileged—can be continued.
... the only Company selling exclusively to College Men
Kennedy expressed the hope that the work of the committee will eliminate duplication of efforts by Mrs. Roosevelt's friends who want to perpetuate her goals in life. The President asked the committee to meet in Washington Nov. 27 to set up their operations. He said others will be appointed to the committee at a later date.
MOSCOW — (UPI) — Radio Moscow said today Russia has lived up to its end of the Cuban bargain and it is time the United States did the same.
Moscow Deplores U.S. Cuban Policy
In a commentary beamed to North America, the radio said some American politicians and influential administration circles still 'reckon on negotiating with a pistol in the pocket."
(In London, the British Broadcasting Corporation reported that Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev in correspondence with President John F. Kennedy had agreed to withdraw Soviet IL28 jet bombs from Cuba but under conditions unacceptable to Kennedy.)
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
t from Washington, reports said Kennedy has told Khrushchev within the past 48 hours that the issue of early removal of some 30 nuclear-capable bombers cannot drag on indefinitely.
demonstration. The Russian radio said the U.S. buildup of military strength in southern Florida and at the Guantanamo naval base continues and "it was such aggressive actions that brought on the crisis of late October."
Current Soviet-American talks in New York, it said, go beyond the Cuban crisis.
"Their success could have a most favorable effect on many other international problems — disarmament, a nuclear test ban, relations between NATO and the Warsaw Treaty countries, the closing of military bases on alien soil."
GRANADA
HOW SHOWING!
HURRY, ENDS FRIDAY
ROSS HUNTER PRODUCTION
IFA MAN
ANSWERS
...DON'T HANG UP!
SANDRA / BOBBY
DEE / DARIN
MICHELINE PRESLEY
JOHN LUND
COSOR ROMERO
STEERNE POWERS
Hang around for the FUN!
COLOR:
International Public
A ROSS HUNTER PRODUCTION
SANDRA | BOBBY DARIN
IF A MAN ANSWERS
DON'T HANG UP!
MICHELLE PRISSLE
JOHN LUND
COLOR BOARD
STEFANNE POWRIS
Hang around for the fun!
At 7:00 & 9:00
NOW!
ONE DAY ONLY!
VARSITY
THEATRE ··· Telephone VIKING 3-1065
COMPLETE SHOWS AT 4:00-7:00-8:30
DO THE DEAD RETURN? DO YOU BELIEVE IN GHOSTS?
YOU MUST SEE TO BELIEVE!
ON STAGE
IN PERSON
DRACULA
SEE DRACULA CHANGE
INTO A BAT AND FLY
INTO THE AUDIENCE
AMONG YOU!
DIRECT FROM HOLLYWOOD
IN HOUSE OF THE
LIVING DEAD
–PLUS–
• TWO SCREEN SHOCK HITS!
• MACK VICKERY'S TWIST BAND!
• ON STAGE TWIST CONTEST!
• FREE CHARM BRACELET FOR ALL GIRLS!
• TWO-FOR-ONE PASSES FOR ANOTHER SHOW!
- COMING SATURDAY
MOST INCREDIBLE TRUE STORY IN U.S. NAVY HISTORY!
"NO MAN IS
AN ISLAND"
in Eaatman
COLOR
BOWLING is FUN!
Try It This Weekend at Hillcrest Bowl
9th & Iowa
32 AUTOMATIC LANES
Patronize Kansan Advertisers—They Are Loyal Supporters.
THE GREATEST ADVENTURE AND ROMANCE IN A THOUSAND YEARS!
“BIG AS 'BEN-HUR'
–IF NOT BIGGER!’
—Los Angeles Times
SAMUEL BRONSTON
Presents
CHARLTON
HESTON
SOPHIA
LOREN
SUPER TECHNIRAMA • TECHNICOLOR® directed by ANTHONY MANN
CO-STARRING
RAF VALLONE • GENEMEVE PAGE • JOHN FRAASER • GARY RAYMOND
HURD HATFIELD • MASSIMO SERATO and HERBERT LOM
• STARTS SATURDAY •
GRANADA
THE LOVE BOY
SAMUEL BRONSTON
Presents
CHARLTON
HESTON
SOPHIA
LOREN
EL
CID
CID
GRANADA
HEATRE ... Telephone VKLNG 3-5782
Kittens weeks VI 2-34
One da
Slightly
Must s
S110. L
at VI
UPRIG $700 no takes.
A DX-
Comple
Dave S
'55 For with ra new eni on, n 7-tires, on the
HAPPY Drive-I in the Moderr week d
Used g
Wide
18 E. 9
strume
Seal P can C breedir evenin
Stereo makes. Don't Davis,
1955 antifre VI 3-50
New st
new A
count p
month.
chusett
TV sh
TV ha
But co
from j
Magna
All ki
Inclui
room
Phone
TYPIN typing math per po Massac
Westerpletely mimecopy.
Printed
comple
hensive
for all
Theta
livery.
Luxur
nese
mond
and
saving
A 2 bp
pus. F
burnin
full ba
interes
Thursday, Nov. 15, 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.
FOR SALE
Kittens Seal Point Siamese kittens 6
VI 2-3420 mornings or evenings 11-19
VI 2-3420 mornings or evenings 11-19
Slightly used Spanish guitar. New strings.
Must sell this week for best offer over
$110. Leave name and telephone number at
VT 3-4711. 11-19
UPRIGHT FREEZER Z2 cu ft. 2 yrs. old, $70m
$70m savings by Carrier. Best offer
vi. VI 3-78-6
A DX-20 transmitter Hallcrafters SX-99-
A AX-10 antenna hitter Kobe Phone
Dovie Strider a.k.a. Mike. Phone
Used guitars, drums, and all instruments.
Wide selection. Richardson Music Co.
18 E. 9th. VI 2-0021. Lessons for all instruments.
11-16
Seal Point Slames kittens with American Cat Financer papers. Perfect for breeding purposes. 6 week old. $25. Call enquiries or weekends at VI 3-8871. 11-15
'55 Ford like new, 2-door Custom Line with radio, heater, overdrive and almost new engine. New clutch, new transmission, new paint, new exterior, interior, t-ires, uses no oil. More than 20 mpg on the highway. $595. Phone VI 3-7642.
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in town. Best-west-Pet phone VI3-123-Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 pm. week days.
1955 Ford Customize, radio, hester.
1960 Ford Customize, radio, included.
V.I. N-50255 after 6 p.m. 11-20
Stereo er hi-fi diamond needles for most makes. Half price during November. Don't wait, buy them now at Pettengill-Davis, 723 Mass. tf
new sterec FM—new portable stereos—new AM-FM radios—new FM radio dis-
counts as low as us$263*; per month, at Ray McKenzie's, 929 Macau-
csets St. 11-20
All kinds of house plants. Potted . . .
Including philodendron to be used for
room dividers and in picture windows.
Phone VI 3-4207. tt
TV shopping? Magnavox 24" automatic TV has a 3 year picture tube warranty. from just $149.90. See the magnificent Magnavox at Pettengill-Davis, 723 Mass.
Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.00 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. 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
TYPING PAPER BARGAINS: Pink
typing paper, 85c per ream. Yellow
math pads, 25c. Scratch pads, 35c
The only Linen Products in
Massachusetts, open all day Saturday, $17
Luxurious, warm beaver fur coat, Japanese cultured pearls, alexandrite-dia-
namic earrings, classical record and hi-fi components, tremendous savings. Call VI 2-1610. 11-21
A 2 bedroom house $1/2 block from campus. Fully carpeted, screened porch, wood flooring. Interior finishes at $10,500, full basement with a laundry room at $10,500. Interested call VI 2-2202 after 5 p.m.
FOR RENT
Furnished apartment room efficiency, 1
three room, 1 four room, private baths,
off street parking, one block off campus.
Phone VI 2-3919. 11-28
2-room kitchenette apartment—furnished.
bathroom—per month, 18 months.
or phone VI S-7645. 11-19
Single rooms for men 1/2 block from Union, Kitchen privileges, maid service and linens. 1234 Oread—VI 2-1518, call or see evenings. 11-15
3 room apartment, private bath. I block
entrance to the room. Ullman bill paid.
Come and see. 1142 Indiana.
ROOMS FOR MEN: Double room only, share with Law student; one-half block from Student Union; private entrance. quiet, telephone and utilities paid. Call IV 3-4092 or see at 1301 Louisiana after 5 p.m. weekdays. tf
Small second floor furnished bachelor type apartment suitable for 1 person. Private bath and kitchen. Steam heat. Gas fireplace. Heating facilities paid except electricity. Rooms Real Estate Co. 7 West 14th. Phone VI 3-065 or VI 3-2929. 11-15
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, tsf
3-room apartment with stove, refrigerator and garage. Bills paid. $50. Also a house furnished or unfurnished $65. Call VI 3-7038. 11-15
Furnished or unfurnished units, singles or doubles. Park Plaza South Apartment Inc. 1912 West 25th. Phone VI 2-3416. 11-93
Why walk up the hill when you can be down? La. '1s block from Union. Excellent accommodations for 4 boys. Nice location.
A lovely two bedroom apartment now being redecorated. Partially furnished. Private parking. $77 a month. Phone 87518517 at 5 p.m. or see at 6th 25th. 11-21
Large furnished apartment with private bath and entrance. Newly furnished and decorated. 1 block from campus. Phone VI 2-3350 or VI 3-2263. 11-21
2 bedroom house $1/8 block from campus,
building burning fireplace, fully air conditioned,
full basement with a large lot. $100 a
day. If interested call VI 2-2423. 11-21
5 p.m.
Having a Party?
Crushed Ice Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds PARTY SUPPLIES
LAWRENCE ICE CO.
6th & Vt., VI 3-0350
"DEVINE" COMEDY AND HAVE A LAUGH AT
BUT-BEFORE YOU DRIVE LET US SAFETY-CHECK YOUR CAR
OLD MIZZOU!
LET'S MAKE IT A
FRITZ CO.
8th & N. H.
VI 3-4321
Downtown—Near
Everything
BUSINESS SERVICES
Open Thursday Evening 'til 8:30
TYPEWRIHTERS — Sales, service, rental
electrics. Royal, Olympia, Smith Corona.
Olivetti and Remington portables. Bond
Typewriter, Typewriter, Typewriter,
Mass. Phone VI 3-3644.
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center. 121a
Conn. Personal service—sectionalized
chamsters, chameleons, turtles,
guinea pigs etc., plus complete pets.
pet supplies. **tt**
EXPIRIMENT with Sleep-Learning!
fascinating, educational. Details free.
Research Association, Box 24-CP,
Olympia, Washington. 11-28
CITIES SERVICE
HELP WANTED
RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267.
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.
German national will tutor students in
language language Call VI 91-211
after 6 p.m. 11-21
CITIES SERVICE
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
tions for Cordelia, Ola Smith
1959's 939 Mass. Call VI 3-2663.
GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I study notes
Completely revised and extremely com-
prehensive. $4. For free delivery call
VI 3-8246. tf
OVERSEAS OPPORTUNITIES under 2 year contract for single persons over age 20 to serve on rural agricultural, and reasonable cash salary. Wages International Voluntary Services, 3636 Sixteenth St., N.W., Washington, D.C. 11-28
General Assistant wanted to work 12 hours per week in Periodicals section of Watson Library. Start immediately. 70c per hour. No experience necessary. Apply in person at Periodicals desk in Undergraduate library. 11-19
Kansan Classifieds Get Results
RASCAL COLUMN
Lost—Japanese binoculars. 7 x 35. Left in section 32 at NU-KU game Saturday, Nov. 10. Reward. Phone VI 2-1340. 11-28
Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority pin (in the shape of a key). Lost Monday probably at Strong or Murphy. Phone VI 3-5660. 11-19
Lost: Market Research text by Brown.
Call Ext. 624, KU. 11-16
Lost: Zipper tighter with engraved
1-winged eagle. Phone VI 3-6971. 11-16
Lost: Role of Advertising by Sandage and Fryberger. Call Dan Meek at Ext. 13-16
For rent, a lovely two bedroom apartment partially furnished. Private parking. $80 a month. Phone VI 3-7819 after 5 p.m. 11-16
TRANSPORTATION
EUROPE -Discover this bargain! Write
Europe, 255-C Sequino, Pasadena, Calif.
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, reports, acct. accurate work. Responsible edlowney. 215 Alabama. Ph. VI 3-8568.
Need ride to Topeka afternoons 2:30-4:00
p.m. Call AM 6-7239 in Topeka. 11-19
Typist experienced in theses and term papers. Prompt service, reasonable rates, electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Howard Mhlinger at VI 3-4409. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, these papers and other non-essential typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8379.
Travel-only a limited number of airline flights still available for Thanksgiving and Christmas Holiday.
Uebernehm - gerne Schreibmaschine-
beiben in deutscher, französischer,
spanischer und englischer Sprache. Amy
summers. VI 2-0276. 11-16
First National Travel Agency
745 Mass. VI 3-0152
English major and former secretary wn type themes and theses on electric type-writer. For neat and accurate work call Mrs. Melisand Jones, VI 3-5287. if
Suggest making reservations Now!
WANTED
$10 REWARD for information leading to the arrest and conviction of person stealing $10 from a law firm in front of Lawrence City Library, at approximately 8:25 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 13, 1962. $2 REWARD for return of horn from Carl Zimmerman, Miss., VI 3-8066. 11-15
Fast accurate typing Secretary for 51%
at 703 Lawrence Abbetton, VI 3-62ff
at 703 Lawrence Abbetton, VI 3-62ff
Will do neat and accurate typing in my home. Experienced in themes, tresses, and term papers. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Adcock, VI 2-1795. tf
TYPING
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. if
Manuscripts, theses, and term papers.
Also dissertations typed on wide carriage.
Experience in education and sciences.
Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. VI 2-1546. tf
Typing reasonable rates, meet and ac- cede reasonable rates. VI 3-18f8 Mrs. Bodin, Bodin, 825 Greener Terra.
Efficient typist. Would like typing in her home. Special attention to term reports, thesis, letters. Call anytime at VI 3-2651. tt
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast,
accurate, neat work, Reasonable rates.
Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff.
VI 2-1749. ff
Experienced secretary with electric type-
phone systems, including phone and
Phone Nancy Cain at VI 3-0524.
Experienced typist. 7 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rate. Mrs. Barlow 240 Yale Rd., VI 21-1648.
FRIDAY and SATURDAY ONLY
BLACK
TIGHTS
TECHNICOLOR by BOLL
CYD CHARISSE,
MOIRA SHEARER &
ZIZI JEANMAIRE,
ROLAND PETIT
introduced by
MAURICE CHEVALIER
THE GREATEST PICTURE OF ITS KIND TO PLAY LAWRENCE SINCE "RED SHOES"
The loveliest ballerinas this side of heaven, in a quartet of droll and dramatic stories modern choreography, pantome and music, in sumptuous color and costumes... It's sheer magic.
Two Evening
Performances -
at 7:00, 9:05 p.m.
NO SEATS RESERVED
Matinee Saturday—2 p.m.
ALL SEATS $1
VARSITY THEATRE
LIMITED ENGAGEMENT
VARSITY ART Attractions (EXCLUSIVE LAWRENCE SHOWING)
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Thursday. Nov. 15, 1962
Campus Election Results
- Indicates election winners
Fraternity
*Reuben McCornack (VOX) 218
*Jim Thompson (VOX) 208
*Bob Tiezen (VOX) 199
*Don Ma广danz (VOX) 193
*John Baumgarner (UP) 176
Mike Bush (UP) 153
Sorority
*Suzi Runnels (VOX) 175
*Joy Bullis (UP) 163
*Jerrie Trantum (VOX) 116
Connie Kosfeld (VOX) 113
Men's Large Dormitories
*John Young (UP) 249
*Don Eversmeyer (UP) 204
*John Underwood (VOX) 113
*Douglas Hall (UP) 86
Larry Geiger (VOX) 35
Women's Large Dormitories
Women in Law
*Patricia Wilson (UP) 129
*Sandra Garvey (VOX) 123
*Peggy Conner (unaffiliated) 89
Linda Ritter (VOX) 76
Cindy Snyder (UP) 76
Men's Small Dormitories
*Dan Wanamaker (VOX) 109
*Jack Croughan (UP) 105
Dennis Pugh (VOX) 56
**Women's Small Dormitories**
* $ \textcircled{*} $ Jane Breckenridge (UP)...97
Marilyn Griffin (VOX) ... 28
Marilyn Grimm (VOX) 24
Freshman Women's Dormitories
*Ann Donald (UP) 136
*Sue McKinley (VOX) 135
Janet Doege (VOX) 114
Martha Yankee (UP) 80
Professional Fraternities and Co-ops
*Art Ogilvie (UP) ... 41
Danny Johnson (VOX) ... 21
Unmarried-Unorganized
*Charles Marvin (UP) 102
*Mike Miner (VOX) 58
Vinita Fishel (VOX) 45
(Speaking privileges only) 25
Sandra Donley (UP) 14
Freshman Class President
Freshman Class President
*Larry Bast ... 624
Bill Swan ... 487
Bruce Bikales ... 188
Freshman Class Vice-President
*Wayne E. Resnik ... 660
Jim Lewis ... 585
Freshman Class Secretary
*Carolyn Hoke
Mary Lasley
Freshman Class Treasurer
*Mary Meek ...
James Hyland ...
Officers Promise
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1) ment which will include a frosh senate," Bast indicated.
HE SAID THE frosh senate will consist of frosh representatives from all living groups appointed by the class officers.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Dianforth, Chapel.
Sigma XI 7.30 p.m. 411 Summerfield,
metal-bordele engineering, Crystal Graz
KU Section of the American Chemical
University, Memphis, Tennessee.
Peterson, deputy assoc. laboratory director
for education. Argonne National Lab.
Chemical Aspects of
Atomic Energy."
Mathematics Staff Seminar, 3:30 p.m.
(coffee at 3:00 p.m.), 119 Strong Hall
"Interpolation between Banach Spaces"
by Emilio Gagliardo.
Der deutsche Verein trifft sich Domerstag, den 15 November, im 5 Uhr in der Hauptsitz des Gebietes "Gesang am Feueroefen" ein Buhn-stuck von Zuckmayer. Studenten, die sich der deutsche Literatur interessieren, besuchen eigeladen. Es gibt Erfrischungen.
TOMORROW
Fireside discussion of "The Trial" with
Foundation, 1314 Oread, all are welcome.
Catholic Masses. 7:00 a.m. 11:40 a.m.
St. Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Strat-
ford
Pharmacology students, 2:30 p.m., 233 Malott, Dr. Marion de V. Cotten: "Cardiovascular Responses to Cardiac Glycosides in Calcium Cholamines During Hypothermia."
International Club, 8:00 p.m., Big 8 Room, Tau Sigma, Dance Fraternity is going to perform and will be followed by the social hour.
Tomorrow night is the deadline for registration for the International Club Mexican trip Dec. 20.
Mexico Trip Sign-Up Deadline Tomorrow
Fritz Gysin, Swiss graduate student, said foreign students planning to make the trip must submit $15, passports and two photographs to the Club tomorrow night. American students must have their birth certificates.
Gysin said foreign students who have not received authorization from the Mexican government should submit passports and photographs. The material will be taken to the Mexican consulate in Kansas City, Mo., to secure visas.
FAST FINISHED Laundry Service
"We want to work with the officers of other classes and the All Student Council (ASC)," Bast said.
737
528
Interviews with University Party candidates indicated that UP—as a minority—will bring several new issues to the attention of the ASC.
Charles Marvin, Lawrence junior, elected from the unmarried-unorganized district, said his principal aim as an ASC member would be to represent American and international students better on the Council.
RISK'S
Jaek Croughan, Novato, Calif., junior and men's small dormitory representative, said;
"I WOULD LIKE to investigate the possibility of removing the extra charges from University theatre tickets."
"I am most interested in getting the ASC better known in the frost dorms. Some of the girls I have spoken to don't even know what the initials ASC stand for."
James A. Riley, Lawrence senior, married students representative, who did not receive enough votes to give him voting power on the ASC, said he intended to create unity and enthusiasm in his district so a voting representative could be elected next year.
Anne Donald, Prairie Village freshman and freshman women's dormitory representative, said:
613 Vermont
NSA To Examine Applicants Dec. 8
The National Security Agency (NSA), a division of the Defense Department, will conduct a professional qualification test here Dec. 8 for KU seniors. Application deadline is Nov. 23.
Students wanting additional information on the examination should see C. P. Ketzel, associate professor of political science, in 19 Strong Annex B.
Kemper Explains Halt as Sponsor Of TV Program
CHICAGO — (UPI) — The Kemper Insurance Co. said today it withdrew sponsorship of an American Broadcasting Co. (ABC) news show last night because of the appearance of Alger Hiss on a previous ABC program.
Company President James S. Kemper said the decision on whether the company would resume sponsorship of the news program would depend on what ABC chief James S. Hagerty "has to say on Sunday evening and what further information or assurances we can get that would justify resuming the program."
THE CHICAGO-BASED Kemper company has shared in the sponsorship of ABC's regular evening news report. The Kemper company sponsors the program one night a week and other firms sponsor the program on other evenings.
Kemper said sponsorship was withdrawn as a result of the appearance of Hiss on a controversial program entitled "The Political Obituary of Richard Nixon" Sunday night.
Kemper said in a statement:
"WE WERE NOT on the show Wednesday evening for two reasons:
- "Number one, a number of our policy holders and others objected to our association with a TV chain which gave a platform to Alger Hiss.
- Number two, our own people in the office thought it was not cricket on the part of the chain to advertise the Hiss performance."
Kemper said he had talked with Hagerty and ABC President Thomas H. Moore "and told them that we recognize the freedom of every medium to report what it wishes in news and commentary."
"But I do believe," Kemper added, "I have the right to choose my own bedfellows."
Kemper said "I have known Jim Hagerty for many years and I wish to extend to him as a longtime friend the consideration I would expect from him if our positions were reversed."
Psych Club Organized
The newly-organized Psychology Club elected Russell Crane, Independence senoir, as president at its first meeting yesterday in Green Hall.
Other officers are Sally Brackett, Bethel junior, vice president; John Platt, Topeka junior, secretary and publicity chairman, and Christie Frick, Fort Scott junior, treasurer.
The purpose of the Psychology Club, Platt said, is to promote and stimulate interest in psychology throughout the University of Kansas campus through movies, lectures, etc.
Any student interested in psychology is eligible for membership, he said.
Jerry's Special
Dr. Howard Baumgartel, associate professor of psychology, is the organization's faculty adviser.
You can't always tell the contents of a can by its label,
But-
You will quickly recognize a man who is ready, willing and able.
JERRY'S CONOCO
9th & INDIANA
KU SPORTS
on
DIAL KLWN 1320
7:30 a.m. Daily Sports Shorts
5:00 Today Football Forecast
5:20 Tom Hedrick Sports
5:20 Tom Hedrick Sports
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds
TIRED OF BORROWING YOUR NEIGHBORS BATHROOM SCALES? GET YOURSELF ONE FOR CHRISTMAS!
BORG
★ guaranteed for life
★ budget priced
accurate
★ all colors
Round
C
Corner Drugs 801 MASS.
Three Records For The Price of Two
Angel Opera Sale
BELL'S
925 Mass. St.
VI 3-2644
FRIDAY FLICKS
Shows at 7 and 9:30
FRASER THEATER
The Master of Suspense tells his greatest tale!
CARY GRANT
EVAMARIE SAINT
JAMES MASON
ALFRED HITCHCOCKS
VISTA VISION
TECHNICOLOR.
NORTH BY NORTH WEST
35c admission — tickets for both shows on sale at Union on FRIDAY until 6 p.m. and then at the door
Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
60th Year, No. 46
Friday, Nov. 16, 1962
Castro Threatens To Down Planes
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.—(UPI)Havana Radio today disclosed the text of a defiant letter from Fidel Castro to acting Secretary General Thant in which the Cuban premier threatened to shoot down U.S. planes photographing Cuba.
Castro charged that the planes were being used to "orient
BULLETIN
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.—(UPI)—Cuba told the U.S. today that "from today on" American surveillance flights over Cuba will be met with anti-aircraft fire. U.S. officials said the United States was prepared to send heavily armed airplanes, determined to shoot, to protect its reconnaissance aircraft over Cuba.
saboteurs and their maneuvers" operating in Cuba, allegedly under the direction of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency.
He again rejected international inspection of Cuba although Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev had promised President Kennedy that Soviet missiles would be dismantled and shipped back
Chinese Hit Back After Indian Push
NEW DELHI — (UPI) — Indian troops have driven Chinese Communist forces from hill positions in the Northeast Frontier Agency (NEFA), triggering a massive Chinese counter-attack, an official spokesman said today.
"A fierce battle is raging," the spokesman said.
He said the Reds counterattacked in "more than two places north and west of Walong." Walong is in the easternmost NEFA near the border with Burma.
A "STRONG PATROL" of Indian troops attacked Chinese Communist positions northwest of Walong Wednesday.
The spokesman said the Chinese Communist offensive appeared to be the biggest in the NEFA since their human-wave attacks which forced the Indians to withdraw from the
See related story on page 8.
monastery town of Towang on Oct. 24. Towang is in eastern NEFA near the Bhutan border.
THE SPIKESMAN said Indian troops attacking in the mountains northwest of Walong "were able to occupy the slopes of the Chinese position despite heavy enemy fire."
"Fierce fighting is raging at this very moment," the spokesman told newsmen, "and has been since the early hours of this morning."
He said the Chinese counterattack was aimed not only at the newly-won Indian positions but "in more than two places."
HE SAID that by "massive," he meant the Chinese were in "considerably superior numbers."
The battle raged in an area which India must hold to protect the eastern gateway to the Assam valley and the Digboi oil fields.
Walong is the administrative center of the NEFAo's LaHit division, and is about 15 miles south of the McMahon line which Peiping has refused to recognize as the boundary between Tibet and India.
INDIAN TROOPS launched an offensive early Wednesday in an effort to drive out Red Chinese troops from high-ground positions above the mile-high Walong valley. Their initial success cost them 10 killed and 2 wounded and apparently triggered the Red counteroffensive.
The Reds threw an undisclosed numbers of troops with automatic weapons, mortars, and artillery into the pre-dawn blow.
Castro reiterated his "five points" for peaceful solution of the Cuban crisis, which includes U.S. withdrawal from the Guantanamo naval base.
CASTRO'S WARNING was delivered to acting Secretary General Thant by Cuban Ambassador Carlos Lechuga late yesterday.
Disclosure of Castro's five-page letter to Thant—their first communication since the bearded leader rebuffed the U.N. Chief's mission to Havana to arrange international inspection of removal of Soviet missiles and bases—was the first major break in an information blackout that has blanketed a week of intensive diplomatic talks here.
U.S. Ambassador to the U.N.
Adlai Stevenson, and his deputy,
Ambassador Charles W. Yost, discussed
the Castro letter with Soviet Deputy Foreign Minister Vasily Kuznetsov at the Soviet Embassy in New York last night in their fourth extended meeting in two weeks.
"WE WENT OVER all the questions with the Soviet Union once more," Stevenson said after the meeting. "I don't have anything to say about them."
Castro's letter drenched the optimism voiced by Thant's spokesman Wednesday after joint Cuban-Soviet proposals—still not communicated to the United States—were put before him.
"The general feeling is that some progress is being made toward a peaceful and speedy settlement of the problem," the spokesman said then.
If the bombers were taken out—and the United States has acknowledged that enough ships have been permitted to pass through the naval blockade of the island to carry out the 750-mile range planes — the United States then could turn its attention to working out a settlement with Castro.
U. S. SOURCES were skeptical that Russian agreement to remove medium - range Beagle bombers from Cuba might come quickly. They acknowledged that the bombier question, on which the White House said President Kennedy was in "continuing communication" with Khrushchev, was the major remaining stumbling block to easing U.S.-Russian tension.
KU students may see the first snow since last winter today, but nothing more than a few scattered flakes are expected.
Weather
P-T-P Plans Foreign Tours For Summer
It will continue cloudy with occasional rain. Highs today will be from 40 to 45. Lows tonight will be in the middle to upper 29s. Highs tomorrow will be in the 40s.
National People-to-People has big plans for approximately 1000 college and university students.
The organization plans to send representatives abroad on a summer "Student Ambassador Flight" program, initiated last year "to increase understanding among peoples of the world."
Mary Ann Olson of Kansas City, Mo., national P-t-P director of the Ambassador Flight, explained the program at an open P-t-P meeting and in a Kansan interview last night.
"THE AMBASSADORS will learn how it feels to be foreigners." Miss Olson said. "They will be living and traveling among foreign peoples, sharing their customs and cultures."
"Their experiences abroad," she noted, "will be invaluable in carrying out the P-t-P programs on American campuses."
- The Romance countries: Spain, Portugal and France;
- Central Europe: West Germany, Italy, Switzerland and Austria.
- The British Isles: Ireland, Scotland, Wales and England.
- Scandinavia: Finland, Sweden, Norway, and Denmark;
Miss Olson said tentative plans include pilot groups in the Near East (Greece, Cyprus, Israel and Egypt) and Mexico.
"The prospective ambassador," she said, "should indicate the major area in which he would like to work. National P-t-P will try to place the student in this area.
"However," she said "we reserve the right to assign a student to his second area choice, if his first choice is already overflowing with ambassadors."
Before applying for the Ambassador program, a student must:
- Be able to communicate in the language required for the area of choice;
- Be a sophomore or junior at the University or a senior or graduate student returning to the University next fall:
- Be a member of KU People-to-People and a member of National People-to-People by Dec 15.
Miss Olson said the cost of the program varies. The student ambassador may spend as much or as little as he wants. Last year several ambassades financed their entire summer on less than $500. Others spent up to a $1000, she said.
Students may begin making applications for the program Monday
Introduction of voluntary sterilization is one way to reduce the number of families dependent on relief.
Wood To Speak On Birth Control
This is the belief of Dr. H. Curtis Wood Jr., medical fields consultant for the Human Betterment Association of America, who will speak at the Minority Opinions Forum at 4:30 p.m. Monday in the Big Eight room of the Kansas Union.
"Social-Economic Merits of Voluntary Sterilization" will be the title of Dr. Wood's lecture.
Dr. Wood believes that many children are being brought into being and reared in an atmosphere of moral and economic irresponsibility.
Dr. Wood, former president of the Betterment Association has been an obstetrician for 30 years.
Complaints Mount After ASC Election
By Linda Machin
Complaints of confusion at the polls during the All Student Council general elections began to mount Friday in the wake of newly discovered errors.
Among others, the ASC elections commissioner drew fire from at least two sectors for "uninformed poll workers."
Dan Johnson, New York, N.Y., senior and Vox candidate from the Professional Fraternities and Co-operative district said he knows of two voters from his district who were given wrong ballots.
JOHNSON, who was defeated by UP candidate Art Ogilvie by a 41-21 vote count, is contesting the election in his district.
Lee Ayres, Wichita junior and UP member of the ASC elections committee, said 12 men from Carruth-O'Leary dormitory were given improper ballots.
"In Strong Hall," said Johnson. "one voter from the Professional Fraternity and Co-operative district was given a sorority ballot." At the Kansas Union poll, another voter from my district was given an unmarried-unorganized ballot."
A voter from the sorority district told a Daily Kansan reporter she voted for a candidate in the fraternity district.
Ayres and Bob Stewart, Bartlesville sophomore and UP Greek co-chairman, said poll workers were not informed and "did not know what they were doing."
THEY SAID workers should have been informed ahead of time about election procedures. Printed instruction sheets should have been placed at the polls for the use of the poll workers. Avres added.
Ayres said "The real burden of the elections is placed on the elections chairman by the ASC elections bill. It is up to him to get the election organized. I guess Stuckey (Elections committee chairman) expected retiring poll workers to instruct oncoming workers, but it wasn't done effectively."
In reply, John Stuckey, Pittsburg senior and elections chairman, said a meeting to instruct poll workers was held the Sunday before the primary. However, very few poll workers came to the meeting, he said.
He said he left instruction sheets listing the districts into which individual houses belonged to avoid ballot mix-ups.
"MEMBERS OF the elections committee who were poll supervisors were expected to give instructions to workers," Stuckey said.
"I spoke to as many of them as I could, but because of the high turnover, I was unable to talk to all of them," he said.
Dean Salter, Garden City senior and ASC chairman, said much of the difficulty was due to the new multi-poll system.
He said it was necessary to use 30 poll workers at a time to keep all four polls open. Because workers were not officially excused from class, the staffs changed every one or two hours.
Stuckey said there will be a public meeting of the ASC elections committee Monday for anyone who wants to discuss the past elections.
SALTER ADDED, "There are always complaints about an election, and I think Stuckey did a fairly good job considering the situation."
Mexican Trip Sign-up Ends
If you want to send your Christmas cards from sunny Mexico to overcast Kansas, tonight is your last chance to sign up for the International Club Mexican trip.
Fritz Gysin, Swiss graduate student, and Helmut Bechler, German graduate student, will complete registration at the International Club meeting at 8 p.m. in the Jayhawker Room of the Kansas Union.
TAU SIGMA, campus dance fraternity, will entertain club members with a modern dance routine. Not attending the meeting will be nearly 40 P-t-P International Club members who are attending P-t-P international Festival in Wichita this weekend.
Engin Artemel, Turkish graduate student, said he called the P-t-P office in Kansas City and they are arranging for three cars to stop in Lawrence enroute to Wichita.
A bus from Independence, Mo., to Wichita will have room for 10 foreign students. Two other cars are leaving from KU Friday afternoon.
THE FESTIVAL is expected to draw 11,000 foreign students from 34 nations.
The Festival will include exhibits on art, food and nance dress.
An international ball and a Miss International Festival contest will highlight the weekend's activities.
Four groups of foreign students will represent their countries. They are the Arabs, Latin-Americans, Indians and Africans.
Concept of Love Is Topic of Poets
Love was a dominant theme at the Poetry Hour yesterday.
Sidney M. Johnson, professor of German, read an English translation of a collection of poems by Walther Von Der Vogelweide, a medieval German poet.
One poem advised "Shun love that would leave thee alone, but pray the constant kind find."
Another concerning a girl's love affair concluded with the line: "He I'm sure will never tell," underscoring the fact that there were no men's living groups in medieval days.
One of Prof. Johnson's selections sought to define love in the lines, "Love is love when giving joy, when giving pain it cannot be called loving."
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Friday. Nov. 16, 1962
China's Attack Perplexing
Among the explored but unanswered questions involving international affairs are the causes for Red China's territory grabbing attacks on India.
The land involved is apparently nothing more than a wasteland of desert and mountains with spots of jungle, and to get it China had to destroy the Nehru-cherished dream of perpetual Indian-Chinese brotherhood and to debunk the proclaimed yearning of the Chinese for peace and understanding.
IT IS TRUE that both Chinese factions, Nationalist and Communist, consider the disputed territory to be rightfully Chinese. It is true also that Red China, now in control of the mainland and territories adjoining the disputed area, did not have regular access to the United Nations as an avenue through which a peaceful solution could have been attempted.
But since the land is sparsely peopled and remote, and since it appears that the most pressing needs of the Chinese are economic rather than military victories, the question of why Communist China decided to attack India at this time is perplexing. No convincing explanation has come from the attacking Chinese, but experts offer the following bits of conjecture:
- Red China seeks the elimination of Indian presence and influence on territories the Chinese consider rightfully theirs.
- Red China seeks the political domination of the whole belt stretching from Ladakh through Nepal to Sikkim and Tibet to the Indian North East Frontier Agency. This would give the Reds a springboard from which to infiltrate and subvert India.
- Red China seeks the diversion of India's growing economic strength from the task of building a nation to that of defending a nation. This would be an effort to slow down India's
economic progress, which evidently has been faster than that of Red China.
If the reason for the attack is economic jealousy, it follows that India, with its parliamentary democracy containing capitalistic and socialist phases, is embarrassing Red China with its totalitarianism and regimentation. Perhaps China suffers by comparison to the extent that it considers India's advances too significant to remain undisturbed.
PERHAPS, HOWEVER, the Chinese miscalculated by thinking that India's ostensibly peace-loving Nehru would offer only token resistance and conveniently look the other way while China grabbed off this desolate and apparently worthless strip of land.
Perhaps, also, the Chinese were expressing a rededication to the philosophy that their brand of communism is dynamic rather than static and that, contrary to Russia's present and apparent disposition, communism must remain conspicuously expansive and growing at all times.
In any event, one effect of the aggression has been the turning of world opinion against the aggressors. Red China now has gained the reputation of being a nation which without provocation will cut the throat of a placid and friendly neighbor.
ANOTHER EFFECT has been that India was forced to turn to the West for aid and can hardly remain neutral in the East-West conflict. Russia has proclaimed its backing of Red China in the conflict and the United States and Great Britain are supplying India with moral backing and military equipment.
If Red China continues on this course and is estranged from Russia, Red China will be practically alone in a world of enemies. In this condition it would be a prime candidate for extermination resulting from decay from within and strangulation from without. —Jim Alsbrook
Critical Scrutiny Needed
Editor:
The spirited discussion attending the Eurich report across the state suggests that the future of higher education is of real concern to the people of Kansas. The referral of our future educational problems to objective study and recommendation by a panel of educators distinguished by their national prominence is a tribute to the Kansas Board of Regents.
However, does this mean that the Eurich plan should not be subjected to critical scrutiny? Are the objections being raised concerning the plan and its proposals only emotional reactions which will change to support when the plan's "opponents" turn to a "serious evaluation?" This apparently is the judgment of Daily Kansan writer Jerry Musil (Nov. 14) and it is implied by Chancellor Wescoe as reported in the Daily Kansan of Nov. 13. The Board of Regents, by adopting the plan unanimously the day after it was released, also seems publicly committed to a completely non-critical position.
IT COULD BE, however, that the report has been given some serious
... Letters ...
consideration by its "opponents." There was, for example, no official reaction to the Eurich report at the University of Wichita for several days after its release; perhaps that time was used in closely analyzing the plan as submitted.
Apparently the strongest objection is that the Eurich plan would convert the University of Wichita into an extension program for KU and KSU. Chancellor Wescoe on Tuesday protested that this conclusion could not be supported by the report itself. However, on page 27 of the report the panel characterizes the current operation of WU in this way: "In other words the University serves the same function that extension centers of universities generally serve." The panel flatly states that it views the present operation of WU as an extension-type function and nowhere indicates that it views the future potential of the school in any other manner. Perhaps the panel did not intend this "extension" conclusion as Chancellor Wescoe states, but at least part of the report leaves this impression nonetheless. What, then, is the difference between a "State Universities Center" and an "extension center?"
Daily Hansam
University of Kausas student newspaper
Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1004, triweekly 1008, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Managing Editor
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Clayton Keller and Bill Sheldon ... Co-Editorial Editors
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
BUT WHAT IS wrong with being an extension? For one thing many university "branches" or "extensions" service part-time students primarily. The Eurich report deals with this matter by submitting data to support the contention that WU is currently functioning much like a university extension. Their data indicates that only about 5 per cent of the students are taking full course-load at WU; most of them, on the contrary, are taking only a few hours of course work.
Charles Martinache ... Business Manager
This finding is both surprising and consistent with the panel's proposal that the Wichita campus be a branch of KSU and KU. However, the data that supports this finding is based only on the 714 graduate student population there. But why describe a university that is oriented to undergraduate training by characteristics of its graduate student population? It is not probable that the ratio of part-time to full-time students in the graduate student population is considerably higher than that of the undergraduate population in any university in the state of Kansas? Would it not be advisable to look at the panel's proposal in terms of data on the entire student population of Wichita University rather than on that based on an unrepresentative strata?
IN MY ESTIMATION these are questions worthy of consideration. They are critical, yes, but which of the distinguished panel members would be offended by these or other questions that critics might muster? Any man who prides himself on his credentials as a scientist takes honor in having his work subjected to empirical criticism.
The Eurich plan is both imaginative and far-reaching and its implications for the future of higher education in Kansas are impressive. But again the question: Why should such an important public document only be "understood" and "sold" to the public? Does not higher education in the state both now and in the future have something to gain from critical scrutiny of the Eurich report as well?
Robert Simpson
It Looks This Way
Frankfort graduate student
Why Not Practice All of Our Rights?
In a recent editorial, this writer defended the Constitutional right of every law-abiding citizen (fraternity members included) to practice bigotry and discrimination if he so desires.
That same editorial blasted the Civil Rights Council for playing hob with the fraternity members' privilege of practicing their inalienable right of being bigots.
BUT THE EXERCISE of the right of bigtry is nothing for the fraternity or sorority members to be especially proud of. In fact, the practice of racial discrimination is pitiful.
Fraternities (sororities, too) supposedly seek to improve through the pledging and initiation of persons who will work to make brotherhood something much more than a word to use in songs and rituals.
The fraternal members have another right which they have not exercised quite as vigorously—the right to associate with anyone.
The state of Kansas is not stultified with a caste system. There is no legal code which forbids the pledging and initiation of a Negro.
IF THE ACTIVE members of fraternities (sororities, too) were to apply a little eye-opening logic to the question of considering pledging a qualified Negro, there might be some hope. Logic alone should sink the sorry theory of superior brotherhood (sisterhood, too) through racial "purity."
Individually, not many fraternal brothers or sisters would deny the possibility that somewhere on the Hill there walks a Negro who is "as nice a guy or girl as you'd ever hope to meet."
But, collectively, the members think in stereotype. The test is how many have the courage to stand up in chapter meeting and suggest that the house even so much as consider the pledging of a Negro?
And at this point, a note of caution might be in order. The fraternity (sorority, too) which pledges a Negro without requiring that he meet the organization's standards of excellence (grades, social decorum, etc.) is also missing the boat.
A HUMAN BEING'S RACIAL characteristics should be neither a pass key to undeserved opportunity nor a closed door to deserved opportunity.
A fraternity or sorority has made the crucial step when it awakens to the fact that a Negro just might happen to have something to contribute.
If the Negro meets all the other qualifications for membership except skin color, and the members still refuse to tender an invitation, the fraternity or sorority will be the biggest loser.
—Terry Murphy
BOOK REVIEWS
THE OLD MAN AND THE BOY, by Robert Ruark (Crest, 50 cents) best-selling book, in much more benign mood than one usually encounters in Ruark, about growing up in the South, especially growing up with a gun in your hand.
THE CHESS PLAYERS, by Frances Parkinson Keyes (Crest, 95 cents)—popular fiction by one of the most popular novelists about a handsome young chess player who served at the same time as a spy and conspirator for the Confederacy.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
U.S.
ARMY
B-65
" — IN CONCLUSION, WE LOOK WITH HOPE AND COURAGE TO TOMORROW WHEN WE BEGIN TO PLANT OUR ROOTS AND TO TAKE OUR PLACE IN OUR COMMUNI — COMM — COMM — "
'Crusader' Contrasts Christianity, Secularism
John Flack, national representative of the Campus Crusade for Christ, contrasted four secular ideas with Christian theology at the Crusade meeting last night.
By Tom Winston
He especially spoke to those who find they "just can't get out of the clutches of the 'old pad' on Sunday morning."
DARWIN STUDIED science and developed his theory of evolution and he believed that the world is a man-centered universe which revolves around the rationale of man, Flack said.
Christian teaching says God is the center of the universe, Flack said, and God loves man. "Man is God-conscious, conscious of something greater than himself, that man is not the end or be all," he said.
"Man's purpose is to have fellowship with God. Everyone has eternal life. It is merely a question of whether you spend it with or without God." Flack said.
Charles Darwin arrived at the first idea, Flack said. He saw that the Christian religion was decadent, with little effect on the society of his time, and decided that reason would be his guide.
Karl Marx presented the second idea — that there is no such thing as God, that man will be happy if he has all the material things he needs and that religion is a crutch which helps the rich exploit the poor, Flack said.
"MARX AGREED with Lenin that 'Religion is the opiate of the people,'" Flack said. "The important thing, Marx said, is not what you do, but what results. Each must give as he is able and each must receive as he needs."
Christian teaching says one cannot change society until he changes the individual within society, Flack said. "Man is sinful and falls short of the glory of God. The problem is the corruption of the heart."
Sigmund Freud issued the third idea — that religion is a God delusion, the result of mass neurosis, Flack said. Freud, he continued, said the subconscious mind is the main thing, and the most important thing is to give vent to the desires of the subconscious.
Friedrich Nietzsche disseminated the fourth idea — that God is an illusion, that man has only one basic desire, a will to power, and that society is not important if it gets in your way to power, Flack said. "The English poet Swinburne echoed Nietzsche when he wrote, 'Glory to man in the highest, for man is the center of things.'"
CHRISTIAN TEACHING says that man has a will to power, but
We Rent Most Anything
ANDERSON RENTAL
812 N. H.
GAS-TOONS
FRIENDLIEST SERVICE IN TOWN
Page 3
"Fill my radiator, check the tires, and see if the battery needs water . . . etc. We're naturally friendly!
LEONARD'S
STANDARD SERVICE
Telephone VI 3-9830
706 W. 9th
man is powerless without God
Flack said.
University Daily Kansan
"There is truth in what all four men had to say, but it's a half truth or a third of a truth," Flack said. "But that is not enough — only the whole truth, so help us God."
"Each idea began with only one man, each ran its gamut and changed the course of history, but only Jesus, as Son of God, has the whole truth.
Three KU chemistry professors are among 24 chemists who will read papers today at the 14th annual Kansas City Chemistry Conference.
"The Bible claims to be a revelation of God to man; it does not pretend to be a book on science or a textbook on anything." Flack said. "The plan is simple: God loves man; man is sinful; God provided Jesus for man and man accepts Jesus."
Three Profs Read Papers at Meeting
The conference, sponsored by the Kansas City section of the American Chemical Society, was held on the Kansas City University campus. The program included a symposium on "The Chemical Modification of Agricultural Products for Industrial Uses."
Friday, Nov. 16, 1962
Presenting papers were Profs. J. A. Landgrebe, Albert Burgsthaler and Earl F. Huyser. Assisting Dr. Burgsthaler and Dr. Huyser with the papers were Charles E. Aimam, Kansas City, Kan., and Ernest Bedard. Fall River, Mass., both graduate students.
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
RICHARD AND MARGARET
Roland Petit and Moira Shearer in a ballet scene from the technicolor production of "Black Tights," the first of the Varsity Art Attractions, which will play at the Varsity Theatre Tonight Saturday.
Tastes Great because the tobaccos are!
21 Great Tobaccos make 20 Wonderful Smokes!
CHESTERFIELD KING tastes great, smokes mild. You get 21 vintage tobaccos grown mild, aged mild and blended mild and made to taste even milder through its longer length.
CHESTERFIELD KING
Tobaccos too mild to filter, pleasure too good to miss!
$1.60
Chesterfield
KING
CIGARETTES
LUCKETT & WINDS TABACCO CO.
ORDINARY CIGARETTES
CHESTERFIELD KING
Longer length means milder taste The smoke of a Chesterfield King mellows and softens as it flows through longer length...becomes smooth and gentle to your taste.
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Friday. Nov. 16, 1962
KANSAS
12
PLAYER OF THE WEEK Brian Palmer
For the fine job he did in passing against the Cornhuskers last Saturday.
For the finest job in laundry and dry cleaning come to us at . . .
1-HOUR
PERSONALIZED JET LIGHTNINE'SERVICE
Acme
Hillcrest Shopping Center VI 3-0928
LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
Downtown
1111 Mass.
VI 3-5155
Malls
Shopping Center
VI 3-0895
HERE'S SOME GOOD ADVICE FOR SATURDAY NIGHT
If you are going to attend the KU-California football game this Saturday, why not make it a "real day to remember!" Just treat yourself and your date to a superb meal in the Prairie Room at The Kansas Union. Enjoy your favorite choice of charcoal broiled steak or tasty sea food served with potato, tossed green salad, hard roll and butter.
The Prairie Room is open from 5 p.m. to 9 p.m.
UNION
FOOD
SERVICE
WU Backers Put Signs on Campus
"If WU wanted its diplomas from KU we would have enrolled at KU. WU doesn't want to be an extension!"
University Daily Kansan
Page 5
This was one of six signs recently posted on the KU campus by unknown persons, according to campus police.
"We hold these truths to be selfevident, all universities were created equal!"
The signs were found on a traffic sign at 13th and Mississippi, on a tree nearby, on the 14th Street traffic station, in front of Haworth Hall, on the west side of the Kansas Union and on a sign at 12th and Oread.
OTHER SIGNS READ:
"We want degrees from Wichita!"
"WU chooses Harvard!"
"WU doesn't want to be an intellectual parasite!"
KU officials think the signs were probably left in retaliation for a sign deposited earlier on the WU campus by apparent KU supporters.
All six signs here protested a recent proposal submitted to the Kansas Board of Regents by a group of national education experts.
THE PROPOSAL was that Wichita University become a "State Universities Center" under the general direction of KU and Kansas State College.
Campus police said they have no clue to the identity of the sign hangers.
Blue Cross ID's Due On 30th
KU students who bought health insurance during fee payment week have another two weeks to wait for their Blue Cross-Blue Shield ID cards.
Gary Zook, Topeka manager of the Blue Cross member service department, said the ID's will not arrive at KU until Nov. 30, though they are usually in the students' hands by mid-November.
He said the cards were delayed because his office received the necessary information from KU late.
But all the students who bought the insurance are covered and claims can be processed, he said.
Keith Nitcher, KU comptroller, said yesterday that the business office sent the money and names to the Topeka office a day earlier than they did last year.
"Considering that fee payments ended Oct. 3 and we sent the money in Oct. 11, I think this was a good job." Nitcher said.
Since none of the 2,280 students enrolled in the program have their Blue Cross ID's, Watkins Hospital has been using receipts attached to students' KU ID's to determine if students have the insurance.
She said the $14 health fee, paid by students as part of the campus privilege fee, covers doctors' fees at Watkins, most laboratory fees, first day hospitalization and physical therapy.
Mary Baxter, insurance clerk at Watkins, said the Blue Cross program is set up around the KU student health fee.
The Blue Cross program covers the cost of drugs and X-rays, surgery and hospitalization after the first day.
The insurance plan is good at any hospital, Mrs. Baxter said.
Having a Party?
Crushed Ice
Ice Cold 6-pacs
of all kinds
PARTY SUPPLIES
LAWRENCE ICE CO.
6th & Vt., VI 3-0350
Four flags fly from the twin towers of Fraser Hall. One is the American flag, the other, a KU banner.
Minute Flags Mark Valley's High Point
The other two, much smaller, are the private property of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.
The flags mark one of the highest points in the Kaw Valley and are visible from as far away as Ferry.
The engineers use the two flags— one white, one red—to determine elevations for use in their surveying work.
Friday, Nov. 16, 1962
Buildings and Grounds officials say the flags have flown from Fraser for a number of years, but no one knows just how long.
Similar marker flags are also located at the Lawrence airport and at a point south of Lawrence.
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
NOTHING EQUALS THE CONVENIENCE OF A BANK
Where every financial service human ingenuity can devise is available at one stop, under one roof.
1ST MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF Lawrence
746 Massachusetts St.
Now's the Time
and
Redman's the Place
to
Find Your White
Satin Heels, for
Formal and Party
Wear
(High or Med. Heels)
TINTED
FREE
only
$8.99
REDMAN'S
815 Mass.
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds
Comfort, silence and luxury to challenge any car from anywhere
There's a lot underneath the beauty of the '63 Chevrolet. Its roomy, comfortable Body by Fisher screens out noise and shock. There's instant response in a choice of 6- or 8-cylinder engines, a host of refinements to make it run and look like new longer, and plenty more that make it hard to believe it's a low-priced car. But your Chevrolet dealer can prove it!
CHEVROLET
The make more people depend on
CHEVROLET
GO Jet-smooth '63 CHEVROLET-IT'S EXCITING!
1963 Cheerloet Impala Sport Sedan shares its carefree Jet-smoothness with the new Bel Airs and Biscaynes:
Ask about "Go with the Greats," a special record album of top artists and hits and see four entirely different kinds of cars at your Chevrolet dealer's-'63 Chevrolet, Chevy II, Corvair and Corvette
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Nov. 16, 1962
Banana Executive Reviews Costa Rica
Peace Corps trainees viewed Costa Rica through the eyes of a banana executive last night.
During the speech and a question and answer period which followed, Jasper Baker of the United Fruit Co., said United Fruit does not oppose Costa Rican labor unions.
"IN COSTA RICA the unions are more politically oriented than they are here. If they feel it is advantageous to join hands, they will join hands," he said.
Baker attributed the cooperation between business and labor partly to education. He said education was responsible for more reliable people becoming union leaders in Costa Rica.
He described the Communists as "a lesser threat in Costa Rica than in other Latin American countries" and said the people became disenchanted when the Communists stole money from the unions.
"They are beginning to understand why the company can or cannot give a raise," he said.
BAKER SAID the United Fruit Company has absorbed the "wrath" for unfavorable political activities in the past, but that it has not financed revolutions in Costa Rica for many years.
Comparing the rate of living of Costa Ricans to workers in the U.S., Baker said the company furnishes homes with electricity for workers. In the land where the average wage is $3.17 a day United Fruit has built individual two and three bedroom homes for workers.
Older units are constructed in row-house fashion above a cement slab used for a playground, he said, and a cookhouse with wood or charcoal stove is located behind the houses.
He said United Fruit has paid 50 per cent of the cost of 32 Costa Rican schools which were offered to the
Married Students Rank High at KU
The old standby that students come to college to pick up their Mr. and Mrs. degrees may well be born out in a statistical analysis of KU married students.
One of every five students at KU last fall was married, a ratio that has remained practically constant since the return of the World War II veterans.
THE PERCENTAGE of married students ranges from a low of 3.1 per cent of the freshmen and rises steadily through 6 per cent of the sophomores, 13.7 per cent of the juniors, 27.1 per cent of the seniors, 40.9 per cent of fifth-year students, 43.7 per cent of law students, and 50.8 per cent of the graduate students.
The women start out well behind in the marriage race, with 1.9 per cent of the freshman women married compared to 4.0 per cent of the men, and they stay behind for most undergraduate levels. By the time the women are seniors, however, they have caught up with the men and passed them; 27.4 per cent of them are married compared to 27.0 per cent of the men.
The statistics tell no romantic stories about how many married students met their mates at KU. They can be interpreted just as easily to read that college has become a place one attends even though one is married. Somewhere between the two lies the real explanation.
Portraits of
Distinction
HIXON
STUDIO
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
A
HIXON STUDIO
government. Costa Rican officials were reluctant to take them, he said.
HE SAID it is impossible to equate the Costa Rican plantation workers daily salary of $3.17 with that of a worker in the U.S. because of vast differences in the cost of consumer products.
One of the volunteers inquired about the anti-trust suit which the U.S. government filed against the company. Baker said United Fruit has until 1966 to divest its 39 per cent interest in a Guatamalan railroad and to set up a competitive producing nine million "stems" a year. He said that United Fruit also must halt its retailing activities in the U.S.
the three KU music fraternities will present the G. Faure requiem Mass and music by Mozart and Brahms at their annual combined concert at 3 p.m. Sunday in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Solists in the requiem will be David Holloway, Gas City junior, baritone, and Marilyn Belton, Lost Springs junior, soprano, Dingwall C. Fleary, St. Louis, Mo., senior will conduct the combined chorus
Soloists Present Classics Concert
Quality Watch Repair
Lowest Prices
DANIELS
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
and orchestra of Phi Mu Alpha Sinfonia, Mu Phi Epsilon and Sigma Alpha Iota.
Martha Shirley, Mankato junior,
soprano, will sing Mozart arias.
Three members of the Phi Mu Alpha
will play part of Brahms' clarinet trio.
Wife, Not Doctor, Is Needed
Admission is free.
MANCHESTER, England — (UPI) Business executives who sleep poorly, have bad tempers, drink too much and can't get along with anybody have little need for medical care, Dr. G. O. Hughes said yesterday at a conference on occupational health.
"The answer is to marry the right wife," he said.
I
EVERYONE'S ON THEIR WAY TO
Sandy's
Thrift & Swift Drive-in
ACROSS FROM HILLCREST
Hamburgers
15c
French Fries
10c
THE PERFECT PICK-UP delicious, refreshing
TURKEY
MILK
serving KU and the Lawrence area with the BEST TASTING MILK SINCE 1920
Lawrence Sanitary ALL STAR LAIRY Milk & Ice Cream Co.
ALL STAR
DAIRY
202 W. 6th
LAWRENCE Sanitary
ALL STAR
VITAMIN D
HOMOGENIZED
ONE HALF GALLON LIDER
FOR A QUICK
DELIGHTFUL DESSERT
Variety Value!
ICE CREAM
LAWRENCE Sanitary
ALL STAR
Grade A
VITAMIN D PASTEURIZED
HOMOGENIZED
Milk
FLAVOR CONTROLLED BY C.V. PROCESS
400 U.S. P. UNITS OF VITAMIN D
ACTIVATED ERGOSTEROL ADDED PER QUART
VI 3-5511
HAPPY THANKSGIVING
Friday, Nov. 16, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
STUDENTS---- Coming Monday
PRE-THANKSGIVING TURKEY DINNER SPECIAL
50c
**TURKEY**
Pre-Thanksgiving Dinner MENU
Roast Turkey and Dressing
Giblet Gravy
Mashed Potatoes
Buttered Green Peas
Cranberry Jello Salad
Hot Rolls and Butter
Coffee
© K
Hawk's Nest & Cafeteria
10:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. MONDAY NOV.19
UNION FOOD SERVICE
© K
. . .
---
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Nov. 16, 1962
THE MORALE of the soldiers on the front lines seemed high despite the bitter rollback before a massive Chinese onslaught that began Oct. 20, and despite a constant fight against freezing temperatures.
Indian Defenders Ready For Attack
The Kansas Association of Radio Broadcasters (KARB) voted yesterday to give KU's Radio Production Center (RPC) $260 to help it meet its budget for the 1962-63 school year.
TEZPUR, India — (UPI) — "They feel they were tricked instead of detached," said a bearded Sikh officer. "They want revenge."
The tough, turbaned soldier was speaking to correspondents at Se La Pass where Indian troops are dug into rock-walled bunkers in rai-ified atmosphere more than two and a half miles above sea level.
They are preparing for at least one more major Communist Chinese offensive before the heaviest part of winter sets in. They are confident that this time the Red hordes will be turned back.
"We've got the terrain on our side and this time we're prepared," the Silkh unit commander said.
The RPC is an independent group of KU students who prepare informative programs for distribution over an eight-state area. The group is sanctioned by, but is not a part of, KU's department of radio and television.
United Press International
RPC Given Grant By Radio Group
Arden Booth, owner of Lawrence radio station KLWN and a member of the KARB's board of directors; said the grant is considered a scholarship rather than a subsidy.
---
THE RPC HAD REQUESTED $650 from the All Student Council, but was given only $390, a cut of $260.
"We feel that a group like this should be rewarded for their initiative," Booth said. "We think they have started a good program.
"Any students who are willing to do all that extra work to improve themselves professionally deserve help like this."
Booth said the group's decision to support RPC financially carries with it the support of KARB in publicizing RPC.
MIKE BUSH, Webster Groves, Mo., junior and chairman of RPC, said he hoped the RPC budget next year could be provided entirely by the ASC.
"We will certainly encourage our member stations to carry RPC programs," he said.
But the Chinese are preparing too, according to reports brought back by fighting patrols which slip forward from the Indian lines nightly to probe and test the enemy's positions.
JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass.
OPEN
24 hrs. a day
More Red soldiers are concentrating eight miles north of Se La Pass around the monastery town of Towang which they captured Oct. 23.
BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY
Until the road is finished the biggest Chinese weapons are mortars and light howitzers carried in by mule trains.
THE CHINESE are reported rushing work on a road from the Tibetan border to Towang for what Indian officers expect will be an effort to reinforce their lines with artillery.
CHARLES MARVIN UP
Unmarried-Unorganized
Indian gunners remind the enemy of this every few hours by firing smoky high explosive shells into the no man's land area between the battle lines.
Thanks You For Your Support
How Does Chicken Come?
Baskets-Tubs-Barrels
BIG BUY
23rd & Iowa
See Us Before You Buy
TYPEWRITERS
NEW AND USED
PORTABLES STANDARDS
ELECTRICS
Sales — Rental Service
LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER
735 Mass. VI 3-3644
KU Debate Squad In Wichita Contest
Ten students from the KU debate squad will participate in the Wichita University Debate Tournament today and tomorrow.
Walt Bliss, Omaha, Neb., freshman and Elizabeth Berns, Peabody freshman, are entering the Junior Division.
Students participating in the Senior Division are: Bob Enberg, MePherson sophomore; Ann Leffler, Pittsburg junior; Mary Reeves, Oberlin junior, and Lauralee Milberg, Arlington, Va., junior.
Those in the Cross-Examination Division are: Dave Seal, Independence, Mo., junior; Dan Crary, Kansas City senior; Chuck Marvin, Lawrence junior; and Lary Schiefelbusch, Lawrence sophomore.
ST. PAUL, Minn.—(UPI)—Larry Probst, 19, was reported in critical condition today from a cobra bite.
St. Paul Boy Bitten by Cobra
The youth was bitten at a local pet shop. Serum was ordered rushed from the Lincoln Park Zoo at Chicago and flown here by military jet.
D&G AUTO SERVICE VI 2-0753 1/2 blk. E. 12th & Haskell
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results
SUMMER JOBS in EUROPE
842 Mass.
3000 OPENINGS - RESORT, FARM, OFFICE, FACTORY, HOSPITAL,
CONSTRUCTION, CHILD CARE, CAMP COUNSELING, AND MORE
THROUGHOUT EUROPE. WAGES FROM ROOM AND BOARD TO
$175 A MONTH. COMPLETE PACKAGES WITH TOURS FROM
6 TO 24 DAYS—COSTING FROM $150 (not including Trans-Atlantic
transportation) to $799 (including round trip jet flight).
TRAVEL GRANTS AWARDED FIRST 1000 APPLICANTS
See your Placement Officer or Student Union Director or send 20 cents for complete 20-page Prospectus and Job Application to:
DEPT. N, AMERICAN STUDENT INFORMATION SERVICE,
22 Avenue de la Liberte, Luxembourg City, Grand Duchy of Luxembourg
A. M. SMITH
Going To The Dance?
Everything you need to look your well-dressed best for this important occasion. . . . Newest styles . . complete selection of accessories. Our manager will fit the garment to your individual requirements. Your formal wear will be cleaned and pressed to perfection. Yes, here is the modern way to go formal. . . Rent your fashionable formal attire.
Sir Knight FORMAL WEAR
VI 3-9594
SENIOR PARTY!
Saturday, Dec.1
at ELDRIDGE HOTEL BOTH BALLROOMS
Popcorn, Peanuts, etc., FREE
Cokes, 7-Up, Dry Soda Will Be Available
Swing Band
FROM 9-12
Dress Will Be School Clothes
FREE WITH YOUR SENIOR I.D.
$1 WITHOUT I.D.
University Daily Kansan
Jayhawkers Will Face California Aerial Threat
Page 9
The victory-starved California Golden Bears, featuring the West Coast's sophomore passing sensation Craig Morton, invade Memorial Stadium tomorrow afternoon to meet the "up-and-down" Kansas Jayhawkers.
Kickoff time is 1:30 p.m.
The big question this week is — can Kansas regain early season form, or will the Jayhawkers continue to slide after losing to Nebraska last weekend, 40-16.
Cal lost by two points to Pittsburgh and Penn State. Missouri had to come from behind (trailing 7-10 at the half) to beat the Bears, 21-10. UCLA beat California, 21-16. Only Southern Cal and Washington have pinned decisive defeats on the Bears, 32-6 and 27-0.
But more important is the emergence of California's sophomore quarterback Craig Morton, possibly the best signal caller on the West Coast. Hobbled by an early-season knee injury, the 6-4, 210 pounder came off the bench in the Penn State game to give Rip Engle's crew a big scare.
In spite of the record, the Bears should be psychologically prepared for the Hawkers. Last year, KU crushed Cal at Berkeley, 53-7.
THE HUNGRY BEARS bring a 1-7 won-lost record into the game, not at all indicative of their caliber of play, considering the tough schedule Cal has played to date.
MORTON COMPLETED 20 of 28 passes for 274 yards and three touchdowns. In the same game, he rushed for 11 more to set a new school single-game total offense record of 285 yards.
He had a big day against UCLA two weeks ago when he completed 18 of 32 aerials for 236 yards and one touchdown. He ran for another in the 26-16 Cal loss.
In the three games he has played this season, the Bear quarterback has completed 45 of 78 passes for 579 yards and four touchdowns.
This passing mark is currently third best in the Big Six, and he owns a 57.7 completion average.
Defensive specialist Larry Balliett, who is captain of the Bears, is second best in Big Six passing with 54 completions in 102 tries for 642 yards. He stepped in as quarterback when Cal starter Randy Gold was forced out for the season with a knee injury. However, now that Morton has established himself, Balliett has returned to the defensive secondary.
But Marv Levy's crew has a problem with defense. Through eight games this season, the California forward wall has surrendered 1883 yards on the ground, an average of 235 per game.
OTHER OFFENSIVE standouts on the 1962 model Golden Bears are end Bill Turner, who has caught 30 passes for 366 yards, and halfback Alan Nelson, the team's leading rusher with 266 vards in 64 carries.
And in addition to the questionable line, the Bears are young. Of the traveling squad of 37 men, 27 are sophomores, and five are on Levy's starting unit.
Compounding the danger of California's passing threat is the fact that KU's defensive back Ron Oelschlager might not see action tomorrow. If he is unavailable, coach
Jack Mitchell will have to start another sophomore, Gary Duff, opposite veteran Phil Doughty in the Hawker secondary.
Also on the doubtful list for the California game are fullback Ken Coleman (knee injury), and guards Ron Marsh (knee) and Duke Collins (ankle injury).
Friday, Nov. 16, 1962
THE HAWKERS' sophomore sensation, T-back Gale Sayers, can break into a Big Eight elite column tomorrow, provided he picks up at least 28 yards rushing. Sayers needs only this much to break the 1,000-yard rushing barrier in a single season.
With Roger McFarland in command, and Armand Baughman and Sayers blasting the Bear line, the Kansas offense should be able to move.
But with Morton directing the Cal attack, the Hawks will have to play heads-up on defense to win.
Open 24 Hours Night Deliveries
Buzzi No. 1 Receiver
End Jay Roberts is runner-up in this department with eight receptions for 108 yards and one touchdown.
JOE'S BAKERY
T-back Lloyd Buzzi is the leading Jayhawk pass receiver. He has caught 6 aerials for 118 vards.
State Farm Insurance
412 W. 9th
VI 3-4720
AKRON, Ohio — (UPI) — If your 1963 model car rides better than its predecessor, credit a minor revolution that has taken place in the tires.
Paul E. Hodgson
Local Agent
Off. Ph. VI 3-5666 530 W 23rd.
Res. Ph. VI 3-5994 Lawrence, Kan.
STUDENTS
Grease Jobs . $1.00
Brake Adj. . . . 98c
Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing
7 a.m.-11 p.n
PAGE CREIGHTON
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd
PATRONIZE YOUR
- ADVERTISERS -
Kirsten's Hillcrest Shopping Center Sports Wear
● Majestic ● Jr. House of
● White Stag Milwaukee
● Helen Harper ● Patty Weid
KU SPORTS
on
DIAL KLWN
7:30 a.m. ___ Daily Sports Shorts
5:00 Today ___ In the Enemy Camp
5:20 ___ Tom Hedrick Sports
FORD
Quick
Service
FORD
Quick
Service
MINOR TUNE-UP BATTERIES LUBRICATION
TRANS. OVERHAUL BODY-PRINT-GLASS
UNIVERSITY FORD
24 HOUR WRECKER SERVICE
DAY V13-3500 NITE V13-8845
.
.
UNIVERSITY FORD
24 HOUR WRECKER SERVICE
DAY V13-3500
NITE V13-8845
WHY SHOULD YOU BUY STEREO COMPONENTS from
AUDIOIRONICS RADIO TV PARTS-PA SYSTEMS-HIGH FIDELITY
Here is part two in our series on why we feel that the best way (therefore
these sold as BUDIOTRONICS) through a stereo component system, such as
those sold by AUDIOTRONICS.
What's the matter with commercial stereo consoles? The distortion at normal listening levels is high, and the overall response is narrow. The ads may say that the amplifiers cover the full audio range, but if we consider the response of the speakers around 70 cycles, will find that there is little if any clean response below about 70 cycles or above 12,000 cycles. The response is deliberately rolled off for several good reasons. First, these packaged units invariably use cheap record changers and do not require access around 30 cycles; and the easiest way to minimize it or to make it simpler to use loudspeakers which have no response below 60 or 70 cycles.
There is another good reason for reducing response below 70 cycles. When the loudspeaker is in the same cabinet as the record changer the vibrations of the speaker travel to the pickup through the wood of the cabinet. The suit, appearance and sound of the speakers very readily and this result in the phenomenon called acoustic feedback" by "motorboating" or a howling sound. This feedback is not serious until the speaker begins to vibrate at very low frequencies—below 70 cycles.
If you have two speakers, as in a one-package stereo hi-fi, the possibility of feedback is doubled. But if the speaker or speakers have no response at frequencies below 70 cycles, the possibilities of acoustic feedback are minimized or eliminated.
The transient response and stability of packaged bi-fits by no means approaches that of component-type systems. Nor does a system in one of these packages have much stereo effect, except when the most exaggerated ping-pong-type recordings or tapes are played through it. Most stereo disks have little more stereophonic effect when played through them than a monophonic disk when played through a good stereo system.
Finally, practically all of these "name brand" lil-isi use ceramic or crystal phonograph pickups. These ceramic pickups have a much poorer re-operation capability than ceramic phonograph bridges have much poorer compliance and require relatively high wear on the wear of records is greater than it is when a magnetic cartridge is used.
Next week we'll cover why stereo components overcome the frailties of commercial consoles. Meanwhile, come on in, and we'll be glad to show and play component stereo for you. Ask for David, Curt, or Fred. We'll be happy to be of service.
AUDIOIRONICS RADIO TV PARTS-PA SYSTEMS-HIGH FIDELITY
928 Mass.
VI 3-8500
---
Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Friday. Nov. 16, 1962
Indications Mount Of U.S.S.R. Unrest
By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst
For many weeks, long before eruption of the Cuban crisis, unusually frank dispatches from Moscow have been reporting mounting troubles for Nikita Khrushchev at home.
These included widespread agricultural failures and a seemingly endless list of industrial snufas running all the way from a shortage of women's black lace lingerie to the production of cement.
This week brought new stories of Soviet labor unrest which, coupled with earlier reports of rioting against increased meat and butter prices, added to evidence of mounting discontent among the Soviet people.
TAKEN TOGETHER, these dispatches gave new reason for other Moscow reports that the Kremlin now seeks a period of quiet on the international front so it can turn its attention to problems at home.
Disappointing crop reports came from virgin lands of northern Kazakstan and from the Ukraine. Only in Great Russia, the area surrounding Moscow, was there a report of a "record" grain harvest.
Last summer, reports never confirmed by the Kremlin but generally credited by the West, told of wild rioting in a southern industrial city over a hike in food prices.
Later reports have told of thousands of Soviet construction workers walking off their jobs in the industrial Kuznetsk basin in Siberia. The workers were protesting unsatisfactory living and housing conditions.
THESE SAME REPORTS told of more than $600 million tied up in unfinished construction projects and more than $80 million worth of machinery idle because of unfinished factories.
All this points to a new shakeup in Soviet planning agencies and perhaps to more belt-tightening for the hapless Soviet citizen.
For those seeking straws in the wind pointing the direction of Soviet policy, Party slogans accompanying the recent celebration of the Bolshevik Revolution's 45th anniversary seemed to provide interesting food for thought.
The slogans virtually ignored heavy industry, indicating a continuing de-emphasis of that branch of the Soviet economy, along with curtailment of new capital investments.
COAL MINERS were urged to their "utmost" to make full use of their tools, but there was no mention of further mechanization or automation.
Similar omissions were noted in the oil and gas industries.
Rapid expansion of electric power, building, wood-working and chemical industries, according to the slogans, will be continued.
References to Khrushchev's pet agricultural projects, such as the planting of sugar-beets, beans, peas and corn were dropped.
And smacking suspiciously of capitalism have been recent suggestions that an incentive system should be installed for Soviet workers.
INCREDIBLE TRUE STORY OF THE LONE U.S. SAILOR WHO FOUGHT A JAPANESE TASK FORCE ON GUAM FOR 3 HELL-PACKED YEARS!
SHE RISKED HER LIFE TO GIVE HIM FOOD, SHELTER...
AND LOVE!
"NO MAN IS AN ISLAND"
In Eastman COLOR
STARRING
JEFFREY HUNTER • MARSHALL THOMPSON
CONTINOUS SHOWINGS SUNDAY FROM 2:30
SHE RISKED HER LIFE TO GIVE HIM FOOD, SHELTER...
AND LOVE!
"NO MAN IS AN ISLAND"
In Eastman COLOR
STARTS
SUNDAY
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
KU Senior Featured In Magazine Article
A KU senior in Engineering is featured in the November issue of Echo, a publication of the Kansas City Works of Western Electric Co.
George W. Taylor, Independence, Mo., holder of a $625 Western Electric Fund scholarship at KU, was selected to represent the 167 students at 114 colleges and universities receiving assistance from the fund. The feature, "Scholarship Student," includes several photos of Taylor.
Taylor, resides with his wife,
Laura, at Stouffer Place.
COMPLETE
TRAVEL SERVICE
We sell travel everywhere. U.S., Europe, W. Indies. Tours. Cruises.
MEMBER
AMERICAN SOCIETY
ASTA
OF TRAVAIL AGENT
Maupintour Travel Service
711 W. 23rd., Lawrence, Kans.
VI 3-1211
Fraternity Jewelry
Badges, Rings, Novelties, Sweatshirts. Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals
Balfour
411 W.14th VI 3-1571
AL LAUTER
OYD CHARISSE, MOIRA SHEARER &
ZIZI JEANMAIRE, ROLAND PETIT
Introduced by MAURICE CHEVALIER
BLACK TIGHTS
1
(Special Limited Lawrence Engagement)
It's sheer magic! You will be transported into a world of comedy, romance, satire and drama in modern dance, pantomime, music and luscious
color.
THE GREATEST PICTURE OF ITS KIND TO PLAY LAWRENCE SINCE "RED SHOES"
VARSITY ART Attractions
For The Discriminating
Limited Engagement
(2 Days Only)
FRIDAY & SATURDAY
Evening Performances
7:00 & 9:05
Sat. Matinee 2 p.m.
---
Read and Use Kansan Classifieds
IT HAS TAKEN THE NATION BY STORM!
"BIG AS 'BEN-HUR' IF NOT BIGGER!" "THE PICTURE IS COLOSSAL!"
-LOS ANGELES TIMES
-TIME MAGAZINE
SAMUEL BRONSTON
PRESENTS
CHARLTON
HESTON
LOREN
No man, ever, quite like El Cid...leader, lover, world hero. No picture, ever, quite like this. N.Y.Times says "The spectacle is terrific." Redbook calls it "One of the great romances!" Dallas News says "Biggest movie yet."
-And millions agree!
EL CID
Produced by 70MM SUPER TECHNIRAMA
TECHNICOLOR*
written by RAF VALLONE • GENEWEVE PAGE JOHN FRASER • GARY RWMOND • HURD HATFIELD • MASSIMO SERATO HERBERT LOM • FREDRIC M. FRANK PHILIP YORDAN
directed by ANTHONY MANN music by MIKLOS ROZSA a SAMUEL BRONSTON PRODUCTION in association with DEAR FILM PRODUCTIONS distributed by ALLIED ARTISTS
●COMING TOMORROW!
SATURDAY MATINEE AT 2:00 ● SATURDAY EVENING, ONE SHOW
(4)
SATURDAY MATINEE AT 2:00 ● SATURDAY EVENING, ONE SHOW AT 7:15
CONTINOUS SHOWINGS SUNDAY ● SHOWS AT 1:45 - 4:55 - 8:10
HURRY! ENDS TONIGHT
SANDRA DEE
in
"If A Man Answers"
GRANADA
THEATRE . . . . . Telephone VIKING 3-5788
Friday, Nov. 16, 1962
University Daily Kansan
Page 11
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
TRANSPORTATION
WANTED: Ride to Seattle or part way
Dec. 15. Will pay half gas. Write Susan
Sperry, 3831 Troost, Kansas City, Missouri.
11-16
Travel-only a limited number of airline flights still available for Thanksgiving and Christmas Holiday.
First National Travel Agency
746 Mass. VI 3-0152
Suggest making reservations Now!
EUROFEE-Discover ins bargain] Write:
Europe, 255-C Sequoia, Pasadena, da-
11-98
Need ride to Topeka afternoons 2:30-4:00
p.m. Call AM 6-7239 in Topeka. 11-19
FOR RENT
2 bedroom home, fireplace, dining room carpeting, electric house, basement. A choice location adjacent to South KU Phone VI 3-3293 11-25
A 3 bedroom house for a family or grad-
ual family, bath and a half,
utility room, attractive
station room with potbelly stove. Would
furnish if necessary. Phone VI 2-1982
Furnished apartment room efficiency. 1 three room, 1 four room, private baths, off street parking, one block off campus.
Phone VI 2-3919. 11-28
2-room kitchenette apartment—furnished
for the month
or phone VI 3-7645. . . . .
ROOMS FOR MEN: Double room only
share with Law student; one-half block
from Student Union; private entrance,
quiet, telephone and utilities paid. Call
VI 3-1082 or see at 1301 Louisiana after
5 p.m. weekdays.
3 room apartment, private bath. 1 block
paid. Come and see. 1142 Indiana. iff
Vacancies for young men in contemporary home with swimming pool, shower bath, private entrance, 5 evening meals weekly. $65 a month. Call M1. 3-9635. tf
Furnished or unfurnished units, singles or doubles. Park Plaza South Apartment Inc. 1912 West 25th. Phone VI 2-3416. 11-22
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.
Large furnished apartment with private bath and entrance. Newly furnished and decorated. 1 block from campus. Phone VI 2-3350 or VI 3-2263. 11-21
2 bedroom house 1/2 block from campus.
Fully carpeted, screened porch, wood burning fireplace, fully air conditioned,
full basement with a large lot. $100 a month. If interested call VI 2-2202 after
5 p.m. 11-21
A lovely two bedroom apartment now being redecorated. Partially furnished in the parking. $77 a month. Phone 31-7849 after 5 p.m. or see at 625th. 11-21 25th.
FURNISHED OFFICE SPACE is now available by the day, week or month. Contact Secretarial & Answering Service. Call VI 3-5920 or see them at 10211\^ Mass.
M-W-F-tf
FOR SALE
Brand New: Ancoset 35mm camera &
$32, Sidesk. Brownie movie camera &
lites. $20, Call VI 2-0699. Ask about other
cinamers in cameras, and photofilm
inge. 29
Kittens: Seal Point Siamese kittens 6
old; hid in wetlands, 11-18
F-2+3420 mornings or evenings. 11-18
Slightly used Spanish string. New strings.
Must sell this week for best offer over $110. Leave name and telephone number at VI 3-4711. 11-19
UPRIGHT FREEZER 22 cu. ft. 2 yrs. old.
UPRIGHT FREEZER by Carrier. Best off-
takes. VI 3-7825.
A DX-20 transmitter Hallcrafters XS-99.
Dave Shrader VI a 31-948. $110. 11-19
Dove Shrader VI a 31-948. $110. 11-19
Used guitars, drums, and all instruments.
Wide selection. Richardson Music Co.
18 E. 9th. VI 2-0021. Lessons for all instruments.
11-16
'55 Ford like new, 2-door Custom Line with radio, heater, overdrive and almost new engine. New clutch, new transmission, new paint, new exterior, interior, 7-tires, uses no oil. More than 20 mpg on the highway. $595. Phone VI 3-7642.
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center - most complete shop in the west -Pet Phone VI1-232. Modern self-service. Phone 8 to 6 3pm. wk weekdays.
1955 Ford Customline; radio, heater.
1956 Ford Customline included.
V I S-3053s 6 p.m. 11-20
Stereo or hi-fi diamond needles for most makes. Half price during November. Don't wait, buy them now at Pettengill-Davis, 723 Mass. tf
New stereo FM—new portable stereos—
new AM-FM radio—new FM radio dis-
session—as low as $299 a month,
month at, Ray Stoneback's, 929 Massachusetts St. 11-20
All kinds of house plants. Potted ...
Including philodendron to be used for
room dividers and in picture windows.
Phone VI 3-4207. tt
TV shopping? Magnavox 24" automatic
has a 3 year picture tube warranty.
It comes with a screen protector.
from just $149.90 See the magnificent
Magnavox at Pettengil-Davis, 723 Mass
Printed Biology Study Notes: 70 pages.
Presentations on nonsensical diagrams and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the "Abbey Guide" to VI 2-3701. Free software. $4.50. **tf**
TYPING PAPER BARGAINS! Pink
typing paper 85c per cup. Yellow
paper 85c per cup. Red and
pound. The Lawrence Outlook. 100s
Massachusetts, open all day Saturday. tff
Luxurious, warm beaver fur coat, Japanese cultured pearls, alexandrite-dia-
nales, flat surface, classical record and hi-fi components, tremendous savings. Vol C1 VI 2-610. 11-21
A 2 bedroom house $ \frac{1}{2} $ block from campus. Fully carpeted, screened porch, wood-framed enclosed place, fully air conditioned, full basement. No fireplace. If interested call VI 2-2022 after 5 p.m.
S. U. A.
DISCOUNTS ON BOWLING FROM 7 P.M. 'TIL CLOSING
DATE - NIGHT AT THE JAY BOWL
FREE REFRESHMENTS
FRIDAY, NOV.16
Bring your girl and see if you can win the "FREE NIGHT" of bowling at the J-Bowl for having the highest combined score for one game.
IT'S A PARTY !!!
Will do neat and accurate typing in my home. Experienced in themes, theses, and term papers. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Adecko, VI 2-1795. tt
TYPING
Typist experienced in theses and term papers. Prompt service, reasonable rates, electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Howard Mhlinger at VI 3-4409. ff
Uebernheime gerne Schreibmachinae-
beiten in deutscher, französischer,
spanscher und englischer Sprache. Amy
Summers, VI 2-0276. 11-16
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, books, articles and reports. Electric typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney. 2521 Alphani. Ph. III - 8568
English major and former secretary will type themes and theses on electric typewriter. For neat and accurate work call Mrs. Melisand Jones, VI 3-5267. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, these and electronic rates on an electric typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8379.
Fast accurate typing. Secretary for $15
fast accurate typing. Secretary for $15
at 703 Lawrence Abbett, VI 3-824
at 703 Lawrence Abbett, VI 3-824
Typping — reasonable rates, neat and accu-
tional.
Messin, Bodin, 852 Geyer Terr.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tt
Efficient typist. Would like typing in her
hardcover, letters, calls anytime at VI - 3651-21
Manuscripts, theses, and term papers.
Also dissertations typed on wide carriage.
All key letters.
Experience in education and fi-
nances.
Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. VI 2-1546.
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
accurate, neat work. Reasonable rates.
Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff
VI 2-1749. tf
MILLIKEN'S S.O.S. — always first quality typing on IBM machines, equipped with carbon ribbons. Open 24 hours a day. 1021$_{1/2}$ Massachusetts. VI 3-5820.
M-W-F-t!
Tonite and Saturday FOUR BIG HITS! SHOW STARTS AT 7:00
-1-
EITHER THE PARSON SPOKE . . .
OR HIS PISTOLS DID! ...
"STARS IN MY CROWN"
STARRING JOEL McCREA
M.G.M.
MGM
AD MAT NO. 110 1 COL x 1" (14 LINES)
2
Lad
ADog
AND
"The Adventures
of the
Road Runner"
A brand new cartoon featurette!
TECHNICOLOR WARNING ADVISORY
Lad Dog
Experienced secretary with electric type-
phones, including a telephone service,
Phone Nancy Cain at VI 3-0824.
THE FAST AND THE FURIOUS
LOST: 1962 L.H.S. class ring, Reward.
Call VI 3-7487 after 4 p.m. 11-27
THE FAST AND THE FURIOUS 4 RUNAWAY DAUGHTERS
Experienced typist. 7 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Request number. Mrs. Barlow. 240 Yale RG. VI 21-1648.
A G Stockton State Production-An Amherst-International Pisture
Lost Reddish brown collie pup 5 months
Wearing red harness. Reward. Older
VI 2-10
SUNDAY
"Stars in My Crown"
and
"Lad: A Dog"
— SUNDAY —
Lost: Market Research text by Brown.
Call Ext. 624. KU. 11-16
Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority pin (in
the shape of a key), Lost Monday
probably at Strong or Murphy. Phone VI 3-
5660. 11-19
RASCAL COLUMN
Lost: Zippo tighter with engraved
1-winged eagle. Phone VI 3-6971. 11-16
Lost—Japanese binoculars. 7 x 35. Left
Front. 8 x 40. Right. November 10. Reward. Phone VI 2-114. 11-28
Lost: Role of Advertising by Sandage and Fryberger. Call Dan Meek at Ext. 376 165-894-2300.
Sunset
DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on highway 40
For rent, a lovely two bedroom apartment partially furnished. Private parking. $80 a month. Phone VI 3-7819 after 5 p.m. 11-16
HELP WANTED
OVERSEAS OPPORTUNITIES under 2 year contract for single persons over age 20 to serve on rural agricultural, and distribution cash salary. Wages reasonable cash salary. Wages International Voluntary Services. 3668 Sixteenth St. N.W., Washington. D.C. 11-28
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
BUSINESS SERVICES
EXPERIMENT with Sleep-Learning! Fascinating, educational. Details free Research Association. Box 24-CP Olympia, Washington. 11-28
RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. V 3-1267. ff
GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I study notes.
Completely revised and extremely comprehensive. $4. For free delivery call
VI 3-8246. tf
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
mentation. Ola Snitt 939' 85% Mass. Call VI 3-5263.
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center. 1218
Som. Personal service—sealed sectionalized
chains, chameleons, turtles,
guinea pigs, etc., plus complete supplies. tf
LARRY CRUM suggests all kinds of Pancakes. T-Bone steak only 98c. We are open 24 hours a day. "K"-Pancake Grill and Sundries. 14th and Mass. tf
German national will tutor students in the German language. Call VI 2-547-11-21-11
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. ft
MILLIKEN'S "S.O.S." — Open 24 hours a day • Regular Office Hours: 7 a.m.-12 p.m. Specializing in Efficiency.
• CUSTOM GESTETNER DUPLI-CATING & THERMO-FAX COPYING
• COMPLETE SECRETARIAL & AN-SWERING SERVICE, Office Space Available.
1021½ Massachusetts Ph. VI 3-5920
M-F-E-fj
ORDER
Personalized
Greeting Cards
BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass.
We Think You
F
FREEMAN Town Squires
Town Squires
Carefree comfort . . . you'll praise the good looks and comfort fit of this soft chukka boot . . . plantation crepe sole and heel . . . Sand color.
"Bunny Blacks"
11. 95
Royal College Shop
837 MASS.
Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Nov. 16, 1962
U.S., West Berlin Discuss Berlin and Nato
BONN, Germany — (UPI) — Ranking U.S. and West German leaders gathered today for a four-day series of talks on the Soviet threat to Berlin and other problems facing the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
Gen. Lucius D. Clay, President Kennedy's special adviser on Berlin, scheduled a news conference to precede the opening session of the talks.
OTHER NATO leaders were meeting in Paris at the eighth annual NATO conference to consider resolutions passed yesterday urging NATO member governments to provide the troops and equipment needed for a "mobile forward strategy in Europe."
A Bonn conference agenda included Soviet designs on Berlin, development of a European Nuclear Deterrent, trade with the Communist bloc, NATO cooperation, and the U.S. partnership with the European Common Market.
In Paris, the NATO lawmakers noted Shape command Gen. Lauris Norstad's complaints that shortages of manpower, equipment, and transport were hampering his efforts to carry out a mobile forward strategy. The military committee supported this strategy, and said "from a military point of view and from considerations of morale, it is wrong to yield any territory of NATO allies to the agressor at the very beginning of a conflict."
THE COMMITTEE also denounced the Communist Chinese invasion of India as "a calculated and unprovoked act of aggression" and recommended that NATO nations extend all possible aid to India.
It made these other recommendations:
- Arms and equipment of troops who will have to be moved considerable distances should be stock-piled in peacetime.
- All member states should contribute to the mobile forces.
- Priority should be given to an adequate anti-submarine air force.
Diplomatic sources said, meanwhile, that Norstad may continue his Shape command after the end of the year. Originally scheduled to retire Oct. 31, he was kept on at the urgent request of NATO because of the Cuban crisis.
Senior Given $500 Award
Lawrence A. Sluss, Kansas City, Mo., senior, was presented the Haskins and Sell's Foundation $500 award at a recent meeting of the Accounting Society.
The award is presented annually by the firm to an outstanding senior majoring in accounting. It is based on grades, willingness to accept professional responsibility, moral conduct and student activities.
Sluss has maintained a 2.74 overall grade point average and a 2.86 average in professional credit courses.
He is a member of Beta Gamma Sigma, honorary business organization, and has held a Goodyear Foundation scholarship for the past two
Strong Open Nights For Student Study
Strong Hall basement is being kept open until 11 p.m. Monday through Friday to be used for studying.
George Hahlm, Scotch Plains, N. J., senior and All Student Council vice-president, said today that nine rooms were open and more would be available if needed.
Philosophy Professor Speaks At 8 Tonight
Errol E. Harris, Roy Roberts Distinguished Professor of philosophy, will speak on "Analysis and Insight" at 8 tonight in the University Theatre.
The lecture is part of the Humanities Lecture series.
James Gunn Novel Published by Bantam
"The Immortals," a novel by James E. Gunn, administrative assistant to the Chancellor, has been published in a paperback edition by Bantam Books.
The 154-page book is a collection of separate stories tied together by the problems of immorality in several fields of human endeavor.
This is Gunn's fifth novel of science fiction. The others are "This Fortress World," "Star Bridge," "Station in Space," and "The Joy Makers."
British Beauty Forms Union
LONDON — (UPI) — Blonde Ann Firth, 21. Britain's first trade union queen, said today she has formed a union for beauty contest winners.
"A beauty queen is entitled to fair play the same as anyone else," she said.
The KU Chess Club will have a match with the Kansas City Chess Club at 1 p.m. Sunday in the Oread Room of the Kansas Union.
Eight players from each club will compete,each playing one game.
Chess Clubs Sponsor Match Here Sunday
The match between the two clubs is an annual affair. Last year, the Kansas City club won.
A 'Fighting Lady' Headsto Junk Yard
KEARNY, N.J.—(UPI)The battleship South Dakota, a veteran of 15 major sea battles in the South Pacific, docks here today to be carved up for scrap.
The 35,000-ton warship left the Philadelphia naval base under tow Tuesday for her last 250-mile journey to the yards of the Lipsett division of Luria Brothers.
Lipsett bought the ship from the government for $466,665 and will return about $2 million worth of equipment on board before cutting torches begin their work.
The South Dakota was built at the New York Shipbuilding Corp. yards at Camden in 1941. She saw duty from Guadalcanal to the North Atlantic in World War II.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
foreside discussion on "The Trial" with the
pianist 50 p.m., Wesley Foundation,
1314 Oread.
Pharmacology students. 2:30 p.m., 233 Malott, Mar.Dion de V.Cotten,"Cardiovascular Responses to Cardiac Glycosides to Alcoholamines During Hypothermia."
International Club, 8:00 p.m., Big 8 Room, Tau Sigma Dance Fraternity is going to perform and will be followed by the social hour.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship,
Dr. Lindell.
"The Challenge of Missions."
TOMORROW
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship
9:00 a.m.-3:00 p.m., Oread Room, Union
Paul Little "The Christian Message."
SUNDAY
Catholic Masses, 8:00 a.m., St. Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road; 9:30-11:00 a.m., Fraser Auditorium.
Lutheran Student Association-Gamma Delta Joint Meeting, 5:30 p.m., Immanuel Lutheran Church, topic by Dr. Matsky.
Interviews for teaching positions in Milwaukee Public School, Milwaukee, second semester and Sent. 1963, 2:00 p.m.; fourth semester Teacher Appointment Bureau, 117 Bailey.
Comment Rhymes
DALLAS, Tex. — (UPI) — Don Vanderslice knew what a previous fifth grader meant when he checked out a textbook at the start of school.
Stamped inside was a form for comments under two headings, "condition when issued," and "condition when returned." Under the first the previous student had written "sadly;" under the second, "gladly."
We Think You Will Enjoy
our
"Just Fine Food"
Served Piping Hot in a Jiffy
We are open Every
Night until midnight!
CRESTURANT
at the
HILLCREST
BOWL
9th & Iowa
NEWEST CHARMER
In at Home Glamour
$1.87
Thick, Fluffy, Acetate With Gay Satin Bow Rose Pink, Light Blue, and White A Lovely Christmas Present For Yourself or a Friend Sizes 41/2 - 10
Open Daily, 9 to 9 Harvey's DISCOUNT SHOES
1302 W. 23rd St.
FRIDAY FLICKS
Shows at 7 and 9:30 FRASER THEATER
THE MASTER OF SUSPENSE
WEAVES HIS GREATEST
TALE!
MGM presents
CARY GRANT
EVA MARIE SAINT
JAMES MASON
ALFRED HITCHCOCK'S
NORTH BY NORWEST
JESSIE ROYCE LANDIS
VISTA VISION TECHNICOLOR
35c admission — tickets for both shows on sale at Union Friday until 6 p.m. and then at the door.
Daily hansan
60th Year, No. 47
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
Monday, Nov. 19, 1962
POLITICS
OLDEST TRAINEE—David Shaffer, 41, of New Orleans, La., is the oldest prospective volunteer now enrolled in the KU Peace Corps training program. Shaffer is shown here as a member of a trainee panel that recently explained the organization and purpose of the Peace Corps.
Trainee Discusses His Unusual Past
By Trudy Meserve
Doing uncommon things comes naturally to David Shaffer.
Doing uncommon things comes naturally to David Shafter. "My grandfather," he said, "remarried at 72. The bride was 70 The couple spent their honeymoon in a tent.
"And then there was my grandmother," he continued. "Until her death several weeks ago, she was out about five times a week drinking beer and playing poker."
Shaffer, a dapper man who is going bald, has had an unusual life. Now, at 41, he is trying to get into the Peace Corps. Shaffer is the oldest trainee in the KU group.
He is one of 30 prospective Corps volunteers training at KU for the Costa Rican project.
SHAFFER SAID his father, an estimating engineer, is one of ten world experts on marble. His father and mother are presently remodeling a home themselves.
Shaffer explained he is joining the Corps to experience life in a Central American country, to gain two years experience in teaching and to spend time where Spanish is spoken.
Shaffer, frowning at a lemon slice which floated aimlessly in the bottom of his tea cup, said "I guess
I have always had an interest in people. During college foreign students were frequent guests in my home during vacations.
"LAST YEAR. I started working with 'Project Learn' in New Orleans. Three times a week, I tried to teach 13 illiterate Negro adults how to read and write.
"At the end of the term, 10 of the students attained fourth-grade level," he said
Shaffer explained that 'Project Learn, formed in New Orleans by a group of Jewish women, is an effort to educate some of the 70,000 illiterates in Louisiana.
"TLL NEVER forget our class Christmas party." he said. "I was
(Continued on page 12)
Officials Press Soviet Decision On Cuban Jets
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Negotiations for removal of Soviet IL28 bombers from Cuba remained stalled today. Officials said the United States has made it clear that it wants an answer soon.
Officials shied away from the suggestion that a deadline has been set for a satisfactory answer on the bomber question. But President Kennedy has scheduled a news conference for 5 p.m. CST tomorrow.
The President met with his Cuban crisis advisers today to study a report from John J. McCloy, head of a special negotiating committee. McCloy spent more than five hours yesterday in consultations with Soviet Deputy Premier Vasyli V. Kuznetsov at the Russian Mission on Long Island, N.Y.
KENNEDY CONFERRED with the executive committee of the National Security Council for one hour after returning by helicopter from a weekend with his family at Middleburg, Va.
Press Secretary Pierre Salinger declined to comment on McCloy's Report. But other U.S. officials said talks still were stalled on this country's insistence that the Soviet IL28 bombers be removed from Cuba.
U. S. officials would say only that they hoped for a satisfactory response to demands for removal of the IL28's soon—meaning sometime today or tomorrow. It would be helpful, they said, if a response could come before Kennedy's scheduled news conference.
The President's news conference, open to radio and TV and scheduled for a convenient viewing hour in many American homes, would provide a forum for any announcement—such as a tightening of the U.S. quarantine to include fuel oil.
THAT STEP has figured in speculation throughout the controversy over removal of the Soviet warplanes, which Kennedy has included in the "offensive weapons" category.
Today's UDK Is Last Until After Vacation
Today's Kansan will be the last paper until after Thanksgiving vacation. The next Kansan will be published on Tuesday, Nov. 27.
Philosopher Claims His Profession Is Failing to Solve Modern Problems
By Tom Winston
The speaker, Errol Harris, professor of philosophy, is a British-educated philosopher who has taught in South Africa. He is spending this year in residence at KU. Prof. Harris left Africa, he explains, because racial discrimination was beginning to manifest itself there, and it was put up with it or get out.
Today's philosophers should help mankind find a moral purpose rather than more efficient ways to destroy himself, a speaker at the Humanities Lecture said last Friday.
See Related Story on Page 5.
Prof. Harris said today's philosophers are concerned mainly with the analysis of words and ideas and that instead of lending direction to contemporary thought, they have succeeded in driving men to social extremes.
Prof. Harris said that the philosophers of analysis have 'removed
"The real problem today is how to combat a set of political half-truths, dogmatically asserted as a doctrine. Who is better qualified to undertake this than philosophers?" Prof. Harris said. He added that philosophers, with one or two exceptions, have not been doing this.
THE RESULT of this overenthusiasm is "a tendency for persons to turn to such extremes as communism or fascism," he said.
everything" in their eagerness to clear away the rubbish in discussions of political extremes.
Instead of helping to find a path of common sense, "the analytic philosophers have been destructive of metaphysics and morals," Prof. Harris said. "These men are subtle arguers about the nature of words, but for all their cleverness, they are likely to become dupes of their own philosophy.
"UNLESS REASON and sanity can prevail, society's hope for the future is rapidly vanishing," he said.
More than 400 people, including Roy Roberts, editor of the Kansas City Star and founder of the Roy Roberts distinguished professorship Prof. Harris now holds, heard Prof. Harris speak in the University Theatre.
Prof. Harris said the love of wisdom has been the foundation of philosophy since antiquity. He traced its evolution from the Greeks through Descartes and the social contract philosophers to modern day idealists.
PROF. HARRIS WAS head of the department of philosophy at the University of Witwatersrand in South Africa before he came to the United States in 1956. In 1857 he gave a series of lectures at Yale (the Terry lectures) concerning the compatibility of science and religion
He served as acting head of the department of logic at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland during a sabbatical leave during 1959-60. He is spending this year as a professor in residence at KU.
Chinese Capture Key Indian Post
NEW DELHI—(UPI)—Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru tonight announced the fall of the key northeast frontier bastion of Bomdila to Chinese Red troops and appealed to the United States and Britain for massive new military aid.
"We have asked for massive military aid from the U.S.A., and the United Kingdom." Nehru said in a surprise broadcast to the nation. He did not go into details of the aid sought.
In the unprecedented emergency broadcast, Nehru pledged gravely that "we will see this through."
"We shall not accept any terms until the invaders are thrown out," he vowed.
THE CAPTURE of Bomdila, a gateway to the rich Assam Plains of Northeast India, was the biggest Chinese Red victory yet in the drive that began from the Northeast frontier Oct. 20.
It came in the wake of a series of Korea-type human wave offensives by Chinese Red troops that overwhelmed key positions on three widespread fronts inside India's Northern border with Red China.
The loss of Bomdila, an administrative center of some 2,000 population, and of the 9,000-foot Bomdila Pass it controls, meant the trapping of thousands of Indian troops further north.
Bomdila was the site of a U.S. bomber base in World War II and its airfield had been used in recent weeks as the terminus of a supply airlift flying in U.S. arms and equipment for Indian forces.
"OUR HEART goes out to the people of Assam," Nehru told the nation in today's surprise broadcast. "This war is not only a menace for Towang, for Walong, for Bomida.
"It is a menace not only for Asia but for the whole world."
Heavy Chinese Red forces seized Bomdila, chief administrative center of the region, after leapfrogging
BULLETIN
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The State Department said today the United States was giving "urgent and sympathetic" attention to requests by India for fresh military aid in its border war with Communist China, including transport planes and mountain warfare equipment.
some 35 miles through Indian defenses on the northeast frontier, and cutting a key highway just north of the town.
(Continued on page 12)
A defense ministry spokesman had said earlier that the entire civilian population of Bomdila, estimated at 2,000, had been evacuated in advance of the Red capture. He said an estimated half division of Indian troops retreating from Se La had been cut off by the Red drive, which also isolated an Indian forward divisional
BOMDILA FELL to Red troops who had sliced down from Se La, a strategic mountain pass captured yesterday by the Chinese.
Bonn Collapse May Be Near
BONN — (UPI) — The five Free Democratic Party (FDP) members of Chancellor Konrad Adenauer's coalition cabinet resigned today, threatening the government with collapse.
The party announced it was quitting Adenauer's government because the chancellor had refused to meet its demands to fire Defense Minister Franz Josef Strauss. A short time later the Party announced the resignation of the ministers.
A SPOKESMAN for Adenauer's Christian Democratic Party (CDU) said the chancellor will meet tomorrow afternoon with Party leaders to discuss the best course for action.
Adenauer is now lacking eight seats for a majority in Parliament. The CDU and FDP together had 309 seats, of which the FDP supplied 67. Without the FDP Adenauer can muster only 242 seats, eight less than the 250 seats he needs for a majority.
LEADING CDU POLITICIANS said Adenauer will probably try to run a minority government and stick to his refusal to fire Strauss. This could not be confirmed immediately.
Nikita Plans Tightened Controls on Production
MOSCOW — (UPI) — Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev today announced a sweeping reorganization of the Communist's Party's structure to tighten control over industry and agriculture. The move appeared aimed at stepping up production without curtailling Soviet military and space programs.
At the same time, he said the Russian people never had it so good.
In a keynote speech to the Communist Central Committee meeting, Khrushchev said the Soviet Union should follow the example of the capitalist countries by making extensive use of industrial specialization.
"We should remember Lenin's injunction to be able, if necessary, to learn from the capitalists, to imitate the good and the profitable they have," Khrushchev declared.
THE 1963 draft plan calls for an 8 per cent increase in gross national product, he said.
He said it was expedient to set
Khrushchev proposed to abolish small administrative districts in rural areas to help solve the nation's farm problems, replacing the units with 1.500 larger agricultural production directorates.
up a single agency to manage industry in all the republics of Central Asia. The agency would answer directly to the Presidium of the Party Central Committee.
Khrushchev urged more centralization of "designing and scientific research organizations (to) accelerate technical progress.
THE PARTY must not only ensure "more concrete guidance of industry, construction and agriculture" but concern itself equally with "problems of every day life, education and culture," he said.
Khrushchev said the Soviet Union would keep emphasis in the years ahead on development of heavy industry over consumer goods. But "We must take additional measures to ensure that the production of consumer goods proceeds at faster rates."
In four years he said, consumer goods increased 34 per cent compared to a planned 33 per cent.
Weather
The weather will be cloudy with occasional light snow today through Tuesday. The high today and Tuesday will be in the upper 30s, with the low tonight between 30 and 35.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Nov. 19, 1962
Hillbilly Revolt
Down with hillbillies!
Sentimentality must not enter into this issue! If we are to preserve our phonies, we must put down this threat to the culture-vultures and ingrown intellectuals of this nation!
THE HILLBILLIES ARE on the verge of writing the only new poetry and music we have had since the birth of the Blues, and they are challenging the very foundations of our culture. Most horrible of all, they do this without a sense of social responsibility and with never a worry about nuclear war, foreign policy and a balanced budget.
If this movement is allowed to grow it may pervert the creative talents lying dormant in our junior beatniks and our social-climbing subdivision dolls.
Arrogantly, they pluck and twang and stamp their feet and have a hell of a good time while the rest of the world wrings its hands.
NOT ONLY DO THESE ingrates maunder over the woes and glories of illicit love in no uncertain terms, they also decorate their works with understandable titles such as "You Ain't Givin' Me Nothin' But Left Over Kisses and Warmed-Over Love," and simply "Furthermore!" They show a blatant disregard for erudite titles and fourth-level symbolism.
And they are gathering in numbers. Ray Charles, a sometimes jazzman, has come out with an album of "country and western music." (The difference between "country and western music," and "hillbilly" music is closely paralleled by the
difference between a "Republican" and a "Conservative.") Connie Francis, a successful pop singer, has also gone the same road. Most shocking of all is the fact that old Burl Ives, the granddaddy of American folk singers, sometimes called "Big Daddy," is now wooing the masses with such things as "I Walk the Line," and "A Little Bitty Tear." However, foxy old Burl is hedging his bets. His album includes such things as "Royal Telephone" for the Fundamentalists, and "Mama Don't Want No Peas An' Rice and Cocoanut Oil" (she wants gin—she's an alcoholic woman) for the other end of the philosophical scale.
SOMETHING MUST BE DONE. This decadent trend must be halted before it is too late. The scholarly mutual-admiration society and the Saturday Afternoon Ladies Literary Club may not survive unless we act! A Congressional investigation is in order!
The hillbillies have been quite firmly entrenched in this country since the days of "Old Hickory," but never before have they displayed such strength. They now have a hit parade of their own and an annual hillbilly disc-jockey convention in Nashville, Tenn.
The hillbillies are utterly irresponsible, and completely unconcerned that they may not be contributing to "art." This minority is oppressing the right of the majority not to be disturbed in its dejectedness, and it may eventually cause the laity to question our hallowed and soundly established concept of music and art in this great society of carefully conditioned, cultural sheep-herders. —Bob Hoyt
Theatre Director Answers Comment
Sound and Fury
The Daily Kansan's "Sound and Fury" letter of Nov. 7 was sent to the Theatre staff some weeks ago. Far from "signifying nothing," these comments caught our interest as do the numerous letters we receive each year either criticizing or praising our work. We welcome these reactions. It means that our theatre is alive. Only rarely does one of these letters get into print, providing us with the welcome opportunity of discussing a subject which we live with morning, noon, and night—theatre.
University Theatre is a strange and exciting animal. I should know, having been intimately involved with it as both student and faculty member for a decade and a half. I have also viewed it from the perspective of distance during three European trips. The hard cold fact is that in the United States professional theatre is confined to ten square blocks in Manhattan with only sproutings of professional companies and road shows to service a theatre-hungry nation.
YOUR THEATRE at KU must always contribute in a vital way to the intellectual and cultural life of the campus. But it must also recognize an audience which stretches from the townspeople of Lawrence to ever broader reaches of the state. We are delighted when busloads of high school student attend our productions "as a lark." If theatre is not a heightening of the experiences of life, if it is not joy, it is nothing.
I somehow receive the vague impression that Mr. Ruhe feels we are not concerned about the KU student. Nothing could be further from the truth. When some of us arrived on "the Hill," lo these many years ago, faculty and townspeople had been doing much of the performing. Dr. Goff (Director of the University Theatre now on leave) was determined that this would be a student's theatre, and thus it has been ever since. The decision that three permanent faculty members of the Theatre Division would perform in productions this year was made only when we were convinced that worthy students were not being deprived of acting opportunities. We have long been encouraged by the active student interest in theatre at KU, both as participants and members of the audience. Many university theatres are not so lucky. This has made it possible for us to expand the number of productions and the length of runs.
OUR PERMANENT full time faculty numbers eight. A bulk of the responsibility for our 16 productions this year thus rests in the hands of a large number of talented and dedicated students from all areas of the campus. Of course, these students are "stage struck," if the term means that they are willing to undergo the attendant pressures and weeks of hard work in order to help breathe life into the printed page so it moves through time and space for its "brief hour upon the stage." This fall a record number of 165 students attended the open try-outs. Each year more volunteers find their way into the various technical areas, expressing a desire to learn more about the theatre by working in it.
Frankly, I am disappointed that anyone should express such disdain for a group of talented students who, during their college careers, choose to work within a particular creative framework. We live in a harried era where the days pass all too quickly and time is precious. If the scripts, the core and impulse for our efforts, are not worthwhile, how does one explain this increased interest and participation?
The selection of a season's bill for the major, experimental, and children's theatre series is indeed a problem. Each spring, requests roll in from students, townspeople, members of the English and language departments, and from the School of Fine Arts. We are always open to suggestions.
Certainly the audience wants to see colorful and spectacular productions—if that is what the script calls for. Through numerous production conferences we strive to find the right mold for each given
BUT THE FACT of life remains that we cannot produce everything in a given year. We strive for a balanced program. In recent years we have put on the boards works by Anouilh, Goldoni, Claudel, Bizet, Shakespeare, Sherwood, Euripedes, Ben Johnson, Chekhov, menotti, Kafka, Lerner and Loewe, O'Casey, Wilder, Brecht, MacLeish, and Moliere, to mention only a few. No two people will view each of these names with the same degree of enthusiasm, but one who dismisses the lot as "third-raters" must simply admit that theatre is not his cup of tea and seek his diversions elsewhere. After all, the university is the place for exposure to ideas, both new and time-proven.
play, working from the demands of the script outward to its technical and visual requirements. Personally, I am delighted to see "The Egg" presented with two charturees sofas and a hank of draped cord; I am enchanted with "Under Milk Wood" with no scenery at all. But neither approach seems quite right to achieve the total impact of "Carmen" or "The King and I." It is our duty to our audiences and to our students to explore all of the forms of visual expression. Lack of capitalization and punctuation might be an effective technique for E. E. Cummings, but should all writers be limited to it?
THE UNIVERSITY THEATRE has no reason for existing if it does not make its productions available on a fair basis to students and nonstudents alike. Operating and production costs are high—and rising. We are a self-supporting unit, yet our only financial concern is to break even at the end of the year. A student has never been refused admission unless the house is sold out. On any given night, the students are seated in the best seats available in the auditorium. Since this often works to the advantage of the late-comer, our box office will clarify our existing policy so that the earlier demands for tickets will receive this consideration.
We welcome you all, your families, and your friends, to the coming productions of "Alice in Wonderland," "The Fantasticks," and "The Cherry Orchard," as well as to the lecture-discussions and guest attractions which are an integral part of the KU Theatre's program.
Dr. Jack Brooking Acting Director, University Theatre
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas student newsletter
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904,
tristweek 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
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 the Newspapers Society. MAY 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 Sunday, University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
WORTIAL JM PRESENT
B.39
PRODUCER
1952 MANIFEST CARTI
FIRST, LET ME SAY THAT I APPRECIATE THE FACT THAT MOST OF YOU CAN MANAGE TO MAKE THIS BOOCLOCK CLASS.
Letters to the Editor
Editor:
Unfathomable Sin
Clayton Keller is dead.
He committed the unfathomable sin at the University of Kansas. He recognized ("Criticism from Wichita," Daily Kansan, Nov. 15) that the state has a minimum of three good universities. Heretical statements of this nature are not sounded in Lawrence — everyone within a two-mile radius of the University Relations in Strong Hall knows that there is only one truly good and great state university in this country. For the first time in the last four years, someone in Lawrence has had the courage to admit that the barbarians in the state's most important city have a university of good standing.
Yes, Clayton Keller is dead; he was attacked by an angry mob on the streets of Lawrence. The faces of the mob reflected the Journal-World's "indoctrination of non-reality" — the complete lack of ability to accept reality where concerned with the existence of other universities within our state's borders or where concerned with the relative merits of the University at Lawrence compared to schools across the nation.
Kansans of the future will admire Mr. Keller's attempt to bring to light the need for an honest appraisal of our universities. May he rest in peace.
James Hesser Wichita senior
the took world
ROUGHING IT, by Mark Twain (Harper Classics).
Here, available in hardback, is one of the best books ever written about the West. It is not top-rung Mark Twain, but even low-rung Mark Twain is ahead of most writing.
"Roughing It" is kind of in-between fiction and non-fiction. Much of the forepart is fiction, for Twain had no real recollections of the trip to Nevada with his brother. And the writer's considerable propensity for exaggeration and comic incident casts much doubt on the later parts as well.
Not that this all matters. Mark Twain had a way of achieving truth even in his most obviously fictional fiction. The accounts of silver mining, of newspaper reporting, of traveling in the Sandwich islands, of deciphering Horace Greeley letters, of living with the Mormons remain vivid, delightful reading. And as a story of an eastern tenderfoot offered up to the tough characters of Nevada and California of 100 years ago, this book has no peer.—CMP
- * *
THE NIGGER OF THE "NARCISSUS," by Joseph Conrad (Harner Classics).
Supreme as a psychological story of the sea is this famed work by Conrad. There is little plot, but there are splendid and believable characterizations, there is a storm at sea which for incident and description is almost unrivaled in literature, and there is that fatalism which marks so many of Conrad's novels.
The "Nigger" of the title is a handsome, noble West Indies man who comes aboard the Narcissus at Bombay and soon is revealed to be dying from tuberculosis. Though his petulance and his demands wear on many of the crew, he becomes the focus of attention, and he is pitted against the ignoble Cockney, Donkin. Also standing out in bold relief is the old man Singleton, reading Bulwer-Lytton as tobacco juice drips into his white beard.-CMP
☆ ☆ ☆
I PROMESSI SPOSI (THE BETROTHED, by Alessandro Manzoni (Premier, 95 cents)—the famous Italian classic of 100 years ago, in abridged form. The London Times calls this story of 17th century Milan the greatest Italian novel, and critics have classed it with "Don Quixote" and "War and Peace."
De Gaulle Wins Easily In General Election
PARIS — (UPI) — President Charles de Gaulle, easy winner in France's general election struggle, has decided to ask Premier Georges Pompidou to form a new government, government sources said today.
De Gaulle's victory in yesterday's election made his Union of the New Republic (NNR) the nation's largest political party — a position that had been held by the Communist party since World War II. The Communists slid into second place
DE GAULLE FLEW back to Paris this morning from his country home at Colomby-Les-Deux-Eglises in Eastern France where he cast his ballot yesterday. He planned to confer with Pompidou later today.
Pompidou resigned after he was overthrown by the rebellious National Assembly Oct. 5. But De Gaulle, virtually ignoring the resignation, asked Pompidou and his government to carry on until the elections.
De Gaule was expected, however,
to wait until after the run-off ballot-
ing next Sunday before officially
asking Pompidou to form the new
government.
THE FINAL make-up of the new National Assembly would decide whether Pompidou would make many changes or would carry on with more or less his present cabinet.
Earlier there had been some talk of De Gaulle replacing Pompidou with Christian Fouchet, minister of information, who was France's last high commissioner in Algeria before independence.
HOWEVER, officials said De Gaulle has become used to working with Pompidou, a former banker of the house of Rothschild, and sees no reason for making a switch now.
De Gaulle scored a major victory in the first round of parliamentary general elections yesterday. In so doing, he crushed an attempt by rebellious leaders of France's oldline political parties to curb his powers and emerged more clearly than ever as France's "strong man" president.
Slides on Japan to be Shown
Arm Chair Warrior
Akira Kieda, visiting professor of mechanics and aerospace engineering from Dorsishisa University in Japan, will show color slides of his country at a meeting of the Chinese Club at 8 p.m. today in the Don Henry Co-op lounge.
LONDON—(UPI)—A big game hunter, obviously arm chair variety, placed this ad in today's London Times:
"Head wanted. Preferably hippo potamus, or possibly rhinoceros."
Now–
give yourself
"Professional"
shaves
with...
Old Spice
SUPER
SWOOTH SHAVE
NEW
SUPER SMOOTH SHAVE
New "wetter-than-water" action melts beard's toughness in seconds. Remarkable new "wetter-than-water" action gives Old Spice Super Smooth Shave its scientific approximation to the feather-touch feel and the efficiency of barber shop shaves. Melts your beard's toughness like hot towels and massage in seconds.
Shaves that are so comfortable you barely feel the blade. A unique combination of anti-evaporation agents makes Super Smooth Shave stay moist and firm. No re-lathering, no dry spots. Richer and creamier...gives you the most satisfying shave...fastest, cleanest—and most comfortable. Regular or mentholated, 1.00.
Old Spice
SHULTON
HILLCREST LAUNDROMAT HILLCREST LAUNDROMAT HILLCREST LAUNDROMAT
Monday, Nov. 19, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 3
HILLCREST LAUNDROMAT HILLCREST LAUNDROMAT HILLCREST LAUNDROMAT
10c WASHEREE!
Last 10 Days of November Beginning Nov.21 thru Nov.30
WASH 10c - DRY 10c
at
HILLCREST LAUNDROMAT
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK —24 HOURS A DAY
HILLCREST LAUNDROMAT HILLCREST LAUNDROMAT HILLCREST LAUNDROMAT
SENIOR PARTY! Saturday, Dec. 1
at ELDRIDGE HOTEL BOTH BALLROOMS
Popcorn, Peanuts, etc., FREE Cokes, 7-Up, Dry Soda Will Be Available
Swing Band FROM 9-12
Dress Will Be School Clothes
FREE WITH YOUR SENIOR I.D.
$1 WITHOUT I.D.
HILLCREST LAUNDROMAT HILLCREST LAUNDROMAT HILLCREST LAUNDROMAT
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Monday. Nov. 19, 1962
THESE FRIENDLY LAWRENCE BUSINESS ESTABLISHMENTS WISH EVERY STUDENT AND FACULTY MEMBER A
HAPPY
THANKSGIVING
AND A PLEASANT DRIVE HOME . . .
Norris Brothers, Incorporated
1515 West 6th Street VI3-6911
University Mobil Service
23rd & Naismith VI 3-5074
Daniels Jewelry
914 Massachusetts VI 3-2572
Business Machines Company
912 Massachusetts VI 3-0151
Hillcrest Standard Service
Ray Christian Jewelers 809 Massachusetts
914 Iowa Street VI 3-9667
Raney Drug Stores
Hillcrest 909 Mass. Dillon's Plaza
Hillcrest, Downtown, Malls VI 3-5155
803 Massachusetts VI 3-2241
Terrill's Dry Goods
Acme Laundry & Dry Cleaners
Rankin Drug Company
110 Massachusetts VI 3-5440
University Ford Sales
714 Vermont VI 3-3500
Lawrence Laundry & Dry Cleaning
1001 New Hampshire VI 3-3711
Round Corner Drug Store 01 Massachusetts VI3-0200
Lawrence Sanitary Milk and ICE CREAM Company
Drake's Bakery
907 Massachusetts VI 3-0561
Calvert Standard Service
23rd & Louisiana VI 3-5688
---
DRIVE SAFELY!
Law Student Will Try Cases As Lawrence Justice of Peace
The justice of the peace can direct that illegal gambling devices be seized by the sheriff. He can try vagrants, fine them from $100 to $500 and sentence them to terms of 30 days to six months.
Ed Prelock, Abbotsford, Wisc., law student, was elected Lawrence justice of the peace recently. He will take office in January. Running unopposed on a democratic ticket, Prelock polled 2,813 votes.
The office gives Prelock the power to punish misdemeanors with fines of up to $500. He can disperse mobs (unlawful gatherings of three or more persons) and fine them up to $100.
AS JUSTICE of the peace, he has many other duties. He can witness deeds and has original jurisdiction over bastardy proceedings.
KU couples planning elopement will find a justice of the peace as near as Green Hall.
By Rose Ellen Osborne
Prelock has jurisdiction over fish and game laws and, according to Kansas statutes, can fine any persons who shall drive, ship or transport into the state cows with Texas fever.
PRELOCK feels the office offers him an opportunity to gain experience and to earn his way through law school.
Students who fail to pay their rent or overextend their charge accounts might find themselves appearing before Prelock.
There is no salary connected with the office. Prelock's income will come from court costs.
"I'll get to know the lawyers in town and the statutes." Prelock said. "You never really look the law up until you need to use it."
Star Head Hears Lecture
The Roy Roberts distinguished professorships were established by Mr. Roberts, president of the Kansas City Star, to encourage work by teachers in the humanities and science and mathematics.
Mr. Roberts gave $200,000 to the University in 1958 for the establishment of the grant. He and Mrs. Roberts attended Prof. Harris' lecture Friday night and received an ovation from the crowd.
Errol Harris, KU professor of philosophy who presented the Humanities Lecture last Friday, holds the first of these professorships.
Application Deadline For NSA Tests Set
The deadline for applying to take the professional qualification test of the Defense Department's National Security Agency is Friday.
The test will be given on Dec. 8. Interested students should contact Clifford Ketzel, associate professor of political science, or the College Office.
'Silent Lodger' Really Silent
LONDON — (UPI) — "He has been kind of a silent lodger," the judge commented in granting Mrs. Kathleen Sherlock a separation from her husband, Alfred.
Alfred admitted he had spoken only twice to his wife in the last 898 days.
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
Monday, Nov. 19, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 5
CONCERNING his "matrimonial"
responsibilities, Prelock said that
"Being a bachelor Ive had no
experience professionally or socially."
He said a couple needs only to get a license and a health certificate and to observe the three-day waiting period for him to perform the wedding ceremony.
"The justice of the peace is becoming less useful as police and county courts take over the office's duties," the 27-year-old law student said.
In Lawrence traffic violations tried by the justice of the peace in smaller communities now come under the jurisdiction of the police court.
PRELOCK said garnishment cases—summoning debtors for creditors—would make up most of his official duties. The paycheck of a working man with dependents can be garnished ten per cent and a savings account for the entire debt.
Prelock graduated from KU in 1958 with a B.A. in psychology. He was a former varsity football player and All Student Council representative, and he is now president of his second year law class.
He said that handling two or three actions a week will undoubtedly cut into study time, but that the experience gained from the office will more than justify the time spent.
一
BIRD TV-RADIO
VI 3-8855
908 Mass.
TV-
RADIO
- Guaranteed
- Quality Parts
- Expert Service
A. C. B.
I learned the hard way—
...that having a personal checking account prevents arguments over payments made. If you are thinking about a checking account, be sure to inquire about
ThriftiCheck
Available exclusively in this area at
DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK
9th & Kentucky
VI 3-7474
—Psych.
—Soc. exam.
—Call Fred jo.
MEMO:
—Don’t forget to call Acme Laun-
dry and Dry Cleaners before I go
home for Thanksgiving and tell
them to pick up my laundry and
cleaning. They’ll deliver it, too.
When I get back, my laundry
and cleaning will be nice and fresh
and ready for me to wear.
—Pay rent
—Psych. exam.
—Soc. exam.
—Call Fred for ride
3 CONVENIENT LOCATIONS
Downtown, 1111 Mass. ___ VI 3-5155
Hillcrest Shopping Center ___ VI 3-0928
Malls Shopping Center ___ VI 3-0895
Acme
Acme Laundry & Dry Cleaning
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Monday. Nov. 19, 1962
KU Latin American Project Promising, Says Local Expert
A local expert on Latin American affairs says KU sponsors one of the most ambitious and promising educational programs in Latin America.
John Augelli, professor of geography and chairman of the Latin America Area Studies program, recently attended the Midwest Council of the Association for Latin American Studies (ALAS), and spoke to the group about KU's accomplishments in Latin America.
"THE MEETING gave me an opportunity to compare our Latin American program with those of such Big Ten universities as Wisconsin, Michigan and Illinois and that of U.C.L.A." Prof. Augelli said.
"The comparison suggests that KU has made greater strides in its Latin American effort during the last few years than most of the institutions represented at the ALAS meetings," he continued. "Many directors were surprised at the nature and extent of our involvement in Costa Rica and elsewhere in Central America."
The U.S. State Department sponsors a junior year abroad for 10 to 15 Kansas students and the Carnegie Foundation subsidizes a faculty exchange with Costa Rica as part of the KU program.
KU IS ALSO the first school to sponsor, administer and train candidates for a Peace Corps project. KU is training Peace Corps specialists to teach English and basic sciences in Costa Rica.
"As the result of the Costa Rican exchange we have had requests for other programs in Panama and possibly other Latin American countries," Prof. Augelli said. The Panama program will also be sponsored by the Ford Foundation.
The interest shown by foundations in the success of the KU program has made these other projects possible, he said.
One of the problems of the program is acquiring additional staff
Theatre to Give Tests to Children
The University Theatre is planning a research project to determine the attitudes of a child audience toward certain characters and events in its coming production of "Alice in Wonderland."
Approximately 100 Lawrence children will participate in the research project. The children will be given a series of rating scale tests designed to show their attitudes toward selected characters and events and to evaluate the meaningfulness of these concepts to the child.
Jed Davis, technical assistant in Theater, and William Birner, Lawrence graduate student, will carry out the project.
The program of research in children's theatre was begun two years ago.
HOLIDAY IS A FESTIVAL
WITH GREETINGS AND Celebrations
SPECIALISTS IN STUDENT TRAVEL
"Teenager Trips" are our specialty. U. S., Canada, Europe, Mexico. Top itineraries; expert leaders; modest prices. May we tell you more about them?
MEMBER
AMERICAN SOCIETY
OSTA
NOT MOVED AWAY
MAUPINTOUR
TRAVEL SERVICE
711 W. 23rd VI 3-1211
"RECRUTINING new people is going to be difficult because the explosion of interest in Latin America by the federal government places a high premium on Latin Americanists." Prof. Augelli said.
The Malls Shopping Center
members with Latin American training to enable KU to take advantage of its Latin American opportunities without neglecting its Latin American Area Studies program at home. Already KU is using some of its staff for the Costa Rican program.
Another problem is that the University of Costa Rica has no formal financial arrangement for sending its people north, he said.
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
ORDER
Personalized
Greeting Cards
BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass.
"It's called an exchange, but we are sending more people than Costa Rica has been able to send," Prof. Augelli said.
Some Costa Rican professors have been brought to KU and paid for by regular university funds as visiting professors. Others come to pursue an advanced degree, Prof. Augelli said.
FAST FINISHED Laundry Service
KEEP ALERT!
SAFE
NoDoz
TABLETS
15 TABLETS
SAFE AS COFFEE
RISK'S
613 Vermont
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.
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds
General Dynamics/Fort Worth is continuing to pioneer research in the greater Southwestern area. Specific openings exist for engineers and scientists. If you were unable to discuss employment with us, and have an interest in General Dynamics/Fort Worth, please write Mr. J. B. Ellis, Industrial Relations Administrator—Engineering, P. O. Box 748, Fort Worth 1, Texas. An equal opportunity employer.
GENERAL DYNAMICS | FORT WORTH
Golid State:
TRIANGULAR PRIMA OF PYROPHYLITE
THERMOCOUPLÉ
PYROPHYLITE
TETRAHEDRON
METAL SAMPLE USED
METAL TAPD
TRIANGULAR
Solid State:
TRIANGULAR PRIMA OF
PYROPHELLITE
THERMOCOUPLE
PYROPHILLITE
TETRAMEDION
METAL
GAMMA
TOUGE
METAL TAPO
TRILINEAR
OF
$ \frac{\partial}{\partial x} \left[ \frac{x}{2 z} +\frac {\partial}{\partial y} \right] $
$ \frac{\partial}{\partial x} \left[ -\frac {\partial P}{2 x} \right] $
Super Orbital Re entry:
SHOCK WAVE
ERGE OF BOUNDARY LAYER
A safety lobe
orbital with
relative material
PRODUCTS OF ABILATION
HEAT PROTECTION PERFORMANCE
ENthalpy Potential (-Hw - Hv)
(MPa Std.lb.)
G D
Monday, Nov. 19, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 2
Around the Campus Sluss Granted Application Deadline B.A.P. Award For Scholarships Set
Lawrence A. Sluss, Kansas City,
Mo .senior, has been awarded the $500 Haskins and Sells Foundation
award for 1962-63.
The award is given annually for scholastic excellence in accounting to students in each of 75 colleges in the country. Sluss received the award, given at KU for the sixth year, from Mr. S. E. Ellis, partner in the Kansas City office of Haskins and Sells, certified public accountants.
Sluss has maintained a 2.73 grade point average throughout his college career, and has earned a 2.86 grade point average in business and economics courses.
He is a member of Beta Gamma Sigma, national honorary society in business, having been elected as a junior, and is a member of the Society for the Advancement of Management and the Finance and Insurance Club.
Japanese Painting May Be Real Find
The KU Museum of Art Friday reported the discovery of a valuable 14th or 15th century Japanese religious painting.
James Cahill, who is here as a Humanities lecturer, found the painting among items the Museum had stored for appraisal.
He is the curator of the Freer Gallery of Chinese Art at the Smithsonian Institute in Washington, D. C.
Cahill told Marilyn Stokstad, associate professor of art history and acting director of the museum, that the painting cannot be later than 15th century.
"The painting is in poor condition and must be cleaned before we can exhibit it, and that will take about a year." Prof. Stokstad said.
He said it was probably 14th century and maybe earlier. The value of the painting will not be known until its age is determined.
"There is only one man in the United States who cleans and restores old paintings, and he is at the Freer Gallery. If he is too busy to help us, we'll have to send the painting to Japan," she said.
"It will certainly be the finest thing in the oriental part of our collection," Prof. Stokstad said.
KU Anthropologists To Study Indian Tribe
Two KU anthropologists have received research grants to study the modern-day Indians of the Pottawatomi tribe in northeast Kansas.
James A. Clifton, assistant professor of anthropology, and Alan Dundes, instructor of English and anthropology, will begin their field work in the Holton and Horton, Kans., area under small faculty personnel research grants from the Kansas City Association of Trusts and Foundations.
Dundes and Clifton, who have made extensive studies of contemporary Indians in southwest Colorado, joined the KU faculty this fall.
Bashful Pipers Need Uniforms
FORT WILLIAM, Scotland — (UPI)—Residents took up a collection today to buy new uniforms for the bacup pipe.
The pipers complained that their 30-year-old kilts are so worn they are practically transparent
Having a Party?
Crushed Ice
Robert Billings, director of the aids and awards office, said applicants will be notified by Jan. 15 of actions taken by the KU scholarship committees.
The deadline for scholarship applications for the spring semester is Dec. 1.
Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds
PROVIDENCE, R. I. — (UPI) — Richard A. Campagnone, 18, was fine $20 in court yesterday because he stopped to talk to a girl.
PARTY SUPPLIES
Billings also said applications for the 1963 fall semester are due Feb. 15. The scholarship recipients will be notified by May 1.
LAWRENCE ICE CO.
6th & Vt., VI 3-0350
He was charged with obstructing traffic because of the jam that developed when he stopped his car to chat.
Friendly Chat Stops Traffic
Pioneer Nuclear Physicist Dies at 77 in Copenhagen
COPENHAGEN, Denmark—(UPI)
Dr. Niels Bord, who unlocked the secrets of the atomic age nearly 50 years ago, died last night at the age of 77.
The pioneer nuclear physicist, whose work ranked with that of the late Albert Einstein, succumbed to a heart attack at his home, "The House of Honor," at the Carlsberg breweries here.
His wife, Margarethe, and three of their four sons were at his bedside when he died. A fourth son, a professor of physics, was reported en route home from a lecture tour of China.
WITHIN HOURS of the announcement of Bohr's death, tributes from all over the world began pouring in for the heavyset, quiet Jewish professor who unlocked the secret of atomic structure.
Danish Premier Jens Otto Krag
EVERYONE'S ON THEIR WAY TO
I
Sandy's
Thrift & Swift Drive-in ACROSS FROM HILLCREST
Hamburgers
15c
French Fries
10c
A SPOKESMAN for the Swedish Academy of Sciences, which awarded Bohr a Nobel prize in 1922, said the Danish physicist was one of the most brilliant researchers ever to receive the award.
called Bohr "the best-known and fullest acknowledged Danish personality of our time." The Danish state radio canceled its programs and began broadcasting church music.
"He was a giant in this field and the leader of a generation of physicists," Swedish Prof. Manne Siegbahn said.
Poooped . . but must carry on ? Snap right back and keep going! Take Verv continuous action alertness capsules Effective, safe, not habit-forming.
Shill ap
sir
© OWEN FIELDS, INC.
Shill appreciate the label
as much as the gift in-
side if the package is from
Ober's
Junior Miss
B21 MASS. VI 3-2057
Our Condolences To The KU Football Team And Their Loyal Supporters
AFTER THE KU-MU CLASH DROP BY AND CELEBRATE THE VICTORY
or
DROWN YOUR SORROWS AT
LENNY'S LOUNGE and RESTAURANT
4108 TROOST
K. C. MISSOURI
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Monday. Nov. 19, 1962
U.S. Warns Against Agricultural Tariffs
PARIS—(UPI)—The United States today bluntly warned Europe's Common Market countries to maintain and expand their purchases of U.S. farm products or face economic reprisals.
The American government urged the Common Market to exercise a "great moral and practical responsibility" in the imposition of tariffs against agricultural imports from the United States.
"The continued unity and strength of the Western world is at stake" in the maintenance of international trade, the United States warned.
THE AMERICAN view was presented by Agriculture Secretary Orville L. Freeman in a major policy speech at a ministerial meeting of the agricultural committee of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD).
(Freeman's speech was released simultaneously in Paris, Washington, and Brussels, headquarters of the Common Market.)
Freeman's "frank and candid" speech was approved by the White House and the State Department.
(THE SPEECH was viewed in Washington as reflecting a tough new attitude on trade by the Kennedy administration, and a determination to use retaliation if necessary to protect American markets. It was designed as "educational" for Freeman's European audience.
(Some high officials in the Agriculture Department believe the United States has been "too soft-headed" in trade negotiations and needs to toughen its bargaining tactics.)
THE OECD consists of the nations of Western Europe—six of whom are the Common Market—plus Canada and the United States.
The Common Market—West Germany, France, Italy, the Netherlands, Belgium, and Luxembourg—currently buys more than a third of U.S. farm exports sold for dollars. If Britain joins the Common Market, the expanded European Economic Community (EEC) could account for more than half of U.S. dollar exports of farm products.
Under the Common Market's system of variable levy fees on imports, tariffs can be raised or lowered to keep out certain products, or let them in.
Poland,YugoslaviaMay Seek Common Market Affiliation
BELGRade. Yugoslavia — (UPI) An official visit by Polish Foreign Minister Adam Rapacki raised speculation today that Yugoslavia and Poland may seek some form of association with Western Europe's Common Market.
Rapacki arrived for the start of a five-day visit here today and there are a number of obvious subjects that will come up between him and Yugoslav Foreign Minister Koka Popovic.
THEY PROBABLY will discuss Rapacki's plan for denuclearizing Central Europe and the strained relations between Red China and the Soviet Union.
But the common economic problems of the two nations raised the most intriguing possibilities.
Poland and Yugoslavia have much in common. Both are considered the most liberal of the Eastern European nations. Both have relatively prosperous farm economies built more along capitalistic rather than collective lines.
And both have been hit by the new U.S. trade law requiring President Kennedy to raise tariffs against them as soon as possible to the levels imposed on the rest of the Communist bloc.
POLITICAL OBSEVERS thought it possible that Poland, faced with a loss of U.S. markets, might join Yugoslavia in seeking a close relationship with the six Common Market nations which may be expanded to include Britain and other Western countries.
Western diplomats in Belgrade reported last week that Yugoslavia already has sent out feelings toward the Common Market. This is believed to be the first such move by a Communist country.
Rapacki and Yugoslavia also are expected to talk over the Cuban situation. Yugoslav sources say President Titov's government feels the Cuban problem still is "very dangerous."
State Farm Insurance
Paul E. Hodgson Local Agent
Off. Ph. VI 3-5666 530 W 32rd.
Res. Ph. IV 3-5944 Lawrence, Kan.
See Us Before You Buy
TYPEWRITERS
NEW AND USED PORTABLES STANDARDS ELECTRICS Sales - Rental Service
Sales - Rental Service
LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER
Now is the time
735 Mass. VI 3-3644
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
LOOK!
Going Home for Thanksgiving?
Why not call us before you go? We will pick up your laundry or dry cleaning today or all the rest of the week, as usual.
While you are home devouring turkey, we will be busy cleaning and expertly pressing your clothes for your return.
When you do come back next Tuesday,you will find your clothes waiting at your house, ready for you to wear.
Now is your chance to really catch up on all your cleaning.
Wouldn't it be nice to come back to a completely cleaned and pressed wardrobe?
Remember, your clothes will be Sanitone cleaned. Call us before you leave.
Lc A
"Quality Guaranteed" LAWRENCE
launderers and dry cleaners 10th & N.H. VI 3-3711
It v nished "poor never sional early
SAM
Dennim
mity o
to the
never
Exp
floode
FOI man, when worki legisla man a
Tru public higher man."
Cha Los Ch house
Chave grew sions,
adulat Mexit
In t was k can w tion mite
Monday, Nov. 19, 1962
University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Late Sen. Chavez Aided Poor People
SANTA FE, N. M.—(UPI)—Sen.
Dennis Chavez rose from the anonymity of a dusty New Mexico village to the United States Senate, but never forgot his poor background.
It was this background that furnished his preoccupation with the "poor people," a preoccupation he never lost from his first Congressional term 32 years ago to his death early Sunday morning.
Expressions of grief and sympathy flooded the homes here of his family.
FORMER President Harry S. Truman, called "The Boss" by Chavez when the New Mexico Democrat was working with Truman's proposed legislation, said Chavez was "a great man and a very good friend."
Truman said Chavez was "a good public servant, and that's about the highest thing you can say about a man."
Chavez was born April 4, 1888 in Los Chavez, a small cluster of adobe houses in Valencia County. The Chavez family under his leadership grew to politically-powerful dimensions, while he himself drew the adulation of thousands of fellow New Mexicans with similar backgrounds.
In the hills of New Mexico Chavez was known as the "Fatron," a Mexican word given a rough interpretation of protector or benefactor. A mite of a man, wasted in his later
years by cancer, Chavez made few speeches because of his throat difficulty, and after his larynx was removed in 1931 spoke hardly at all.
BUT WHEN he had his health, his followers at political meetings would watch his every movement, listen to catch a possible whisper. Chavez would on occasion see a friend of long standing, and throw his arms about him in a violent embrace.
Chavez, who ranked fourth in the Senate in seniority, always kept his roots in the state despite wide travels to examine U.S. defense installations. He was the third-ranking member of the Senate Appropriations Committee, and chaired the committee's defense subcommittee. He was chairman of the Senate Committee on Public Works and the Senate Building Commission.
The 74-year-old Democrat was always known as a liberal, using government funds where there were no private funds.
We Rent Most Anything
ANDERSON RENTAL
812 N. H.
KU Faculty Senate Appoints Members to Committees
The advisory committee of the KU Faculty Senate has made assignments to four ad hoc committees.
The Faculty Senate is the all-university governing body composed of senior faculty members.
The new committees are:
Committee on library violations: James E.
Gibbs, dean of history; Lawrence C.
Woodruff, Dean of Arts; Stuart Forth, associate director of Watson
Library and Keith L. Nitcher, compi-
Committee for creation of a senate standing committee on research: Karl D. Schwalb professor of education, George B. Smith, professor of engineering, institutional planning; Dan Hopson, associate professor of law; William P. Smith, professor of electrical engineering; Anderson, professor of history, and Richard H. Benson, associate professor of geology.
Committee for policy on non-University
associates professor of political science;
Earl B. Shurtz, associate professor of law; Ethet P. Eain, professor of political science, and Wiley Mitchell, acting dean of the School of Business.
Committee on research, teaching, and other duties: Arthur W. Davidson, professor of chemistry; Ivan V. Nemecek, professor of chemistry; Danish Andersen, engineering; Howard Baumgartner, associate professor of human relations; Frederick E. Samson, associate professor of comparative biochemistry and physiology, and William P. Albrecht, professor of English.
Pub-Keeper Off Wagon
RICHMOND, England—(UPI) —Horace Redknap, retiring as a pup keeper, celebrated with friends last night by drinking a glass of lemonade. It was the strongest drink the teetotaler has had in 40 years behind the bar.
KU SPORTS
on
DIAL
KLWN
1320
7:30 a.m. ___ Daily Sports Shorts
5:00 Today ___ Calling the Coaches
5:20 ___ Tom Hedrick Sports
Schick engineering solves the two biggest problems in shaving!
Tough beard?
Schick designs the first electric shaver that shaves really close
Sensitive skin?
Schick makes a completely different shaver that ends razor burn forever
Only Schick makes two different electric shavers...pick the one to match your face!
Both new Super Speed shavers have Schick's exclusive washable head, made of surgical stainless steel. Snap it off and wash away dirt, stubble, and germs.
SCHICK
the mark of quality
Get the new Schick Easy Shine Electric Shoe Shiner for a bootblack shine in 60 seconds!
SCHICK
Fort tough & regular beards
For sensitive skin
M
A
Open Every Evening
S
Safeway
S
P
O
Key Rexall Drugs
P
Western Auto
N
ACME Laundry & Cleaners
Speed-Wash
T. G. & Y.
Malls Barber Shop
Ronnie's Beauty Salon
G
Little Banquet
C
Count Down House
Peggy's Gifts & Cards
Z
Elms
Sinclair
Service
Maupintour Travel
Kief's Record & Hi-Fi
R
Shop Evenings
Page 10
University Daily Kansan Monday. Nov. 19, 1962
71
California quarterback Craig Morton is on a strict diet of pigskin on this attempted pass play. KU tackle Marvin Clothier (71), and end Jav
Roberts (89), move in to force-feed him the ball. Despite this big KU rush, Morton completed 10 of 19 passes for 170 yards and three touchdowns.
Baughman Leads Hawks Past Bears' Air Assault
Kansas' Armand Baughman should have the starting fullback assignment tucked away in his hip pocket considering the part he played Saturday when the Jayhawkers blasted California, 33-21.
Baughman, who has alternated at fullback with Ken Coleman during the Hawkers' first eight games, carried the ball 32 times, a Kansas record, and netted 142 yards rushing against the Golden Bears. He was pressed into full-time duty when Coleman injured a knee against Nebraska the week before.
What made Baughman's performance more outstanding was that he made the necessary yardage on important first down plays exactly a dozen times.
NEARLY 32,000 cold, wet fans, including several thousand state high school band members, watched Baughman steal the rushing honors from KU's sophomore sensation, Gale Sayers.
Sayers went over the 1,000-yard mark in his rookie season the fourth time he carried the ball, and became only the seventh player in Big Eight history to break the barrier. Overall, he picked up 81 yards in 12 carries to boost his league-leading rushing total to 1,053 in nine games.
The Omaha speedster is now only 76 yards away from the Kansas all-time rushing mark set by halfback Wade Stinson in 1950.
HAWKER quarterback Rodger McFarland added to the KU ground offensive picking up 87 yards in 23 carries. The machine, so formidable until it met the Nebraska line a week ago, supplied all of the Kansas offensive power against California, as it rumbled for 347 yards.
Saturday, however, Sayers was used mainly as a decoy running wide, to open up the middle of the California defense for Baughman's thrusts into the line.
***
As advertised, the Golden Bear came to town passing and their own sophomore sensation, quarterback Craig Morton, did most of the throwing. He completed 10 of 19 passed for 170 yards and three
touchdowns matching Baughman's scoring output.
★★
JOE'S BAKERY
Open 24 Hours
Night Deliveries
412 W. 9th VI 3-4720
Kansas jumped off to an early 21-0 lead in the first two periods, but did not have the game iced until the final two and a half minutes when Sayers flashed around his own right end and rambled 24 yards to score the final Hawker touchdown.
Sayers' sprint climaxed a 73-yard drive and came when it was most needed.
AT THE TIME, KU was leading only 27-21, and the crowd was convinced that Cal could score again if Morton got his hands on the ball. During the second half, his tosses had been particularly effective in picking apart the stymied Jayhawk defensive secondary.
Sayers' sprint climaxed a 70-yard drive that had been sparked by Baughman's rushing. He carried five times for 31 yards, including a 15-yard gain on a slick pitchout from McFarland.
Just before the final Hawker drive, Morton had moved the Bears 75 yards in five plays to narrow the Kansas margin to 27-21. He completed a 10-yard pass to end Bill Turner, a 36-yard aerial to end Ron Mazik, a 12-yarder to Turner again and then a final 14-yard scoring strike to the same target. Tom Blanchfield's conversion came with eight minutes left in the game
California had been within one touchdown of the Hawkers once before at 21-14 with slightly more than two minutes remaining in the third period.
THE BEARS DROVE 80 yards in 11 plays and Morton threw another bullseye to Turner. Key yardage in this drive came on Alan Nelson's 31-yard jaunt to the KU 20. Morton then throw a 14-yard pass to Turner on the Kansas six which set up the Cal tally two plays later. Larry Balliette passed to Nelson for a two-point conversion, which made it 21-14 with 2:30 remaining in the third quarter.
At that point, however, the Jayhawkers came marching back as they did all afternoon, driving 75
yards in 12 plays for what proved to be the clincher. Baughman ripped the tiring California line for a 14-yard gainer at midfield, and Tony Leilker galloped 17 yards to the Bear eight, on the only two long-yardage plays.
Baughman scored two plays later from the four, but Gary Duff's conversion attempt was blocked by Cal center, Roger Stull.
Nevertheless, this was the drive that actually climaxed the Jayhawkier victory, for the Bears could not surmount the two-touchdown deficit.
IM Basketball Deadline Nears
Intramural managers must have all teams registered for the 1962-63 intramural basketball season by 4 p.m., Nov. 28.
A meeting for all intramural managers will be held in Room 202. Robinson Gymnasium, at 4 p.m., Nov. 29.
The entry fee is $2 for each 10-
man team entered. Each team must
consist of at least 10 players.
There will be three classes of competition for both fraternity and independent groups. The groups will be limited to one "A" and one "B" team, and as many "C" teams as they wish.
D&G AUTO SERVICE
VI 2-0753
1/2 blk. E. 12th & Haskell
Who Will It Be?
NEW YORK—(UPI) One of the major sports arguments of the year is shaping up today with impending announcement that Arnold Palmer in golf and Willie Mays in baseball were the "Athletes of the Decade" from 1950 to 1960.
GRANADA
NOW SHOWINGI
ONE SHOW ONLY!
AT 7:15
Along the JAYHAWKER trail
Never try to equate two teams or paper. It simply can't be done, as Colorado and Texas Tech proved last weekend.
By Ben Marshall
CU went to Lubbock, Texas, with one win and seven losses—Tech's record was 0-8. The two teams' opponents had been relatively equal in strength, so I picked the Buffaloes by one touchdown.
And what happened? Texas Tech won its first game of the season, 21-12.
EL CID
Famed as
70 MM SUPER
TECHNIRAMA
TECHNICOLOR*
The moral of this story is: It's a good thing this is the last week of picking the Big Eight winners "Misses" like these are hard on the ego.
The overall record of "hits and misses" now stands at 35 right, and nine wrong, for a .795 percentage. Last week's choices turned out four right and one wrong (CU-Texas Tech).
OKLAHOMA STATE OVER KANSAS STATE: The Wildcats have picked up some offensive momentum in their past three games, with quarterbacks Larry Corrigan and Doug Dusenbury sparking an aerial attack, and Willis Crenshaw doing the groundwork.
The Purple, however, have defensive problems. Opponents have scored 258 points against Kansas State, and Oklahoma State has the best passing game in the league with quarterback Mike Miller calling the shots.
In addition, the Cowboy line is bigger and tougher. Oklahoma State by two touchdowns.
AIR FORCE OVER COLORADO. What else can I say? CU has one of the best passing attacks in the league with Frank Cesarek at quarterback, and two of the Big Eight's top receivers in John McGuire and Ken Blair.
The Falcons will win by two touchdowns.
But Colorado can't beat anybody. The Buffaloes barely slipped by Kansas State, 6-0, when the Wildcats were at their weakest.
IOWA STATE OVER OHIO: Ohio University has had some of the best small-college teams in the nation during the past few years. This year, however, coach Bill Hess' team is rebuilding, and Ohio U. is having problems.
Iowa State, on the other hand, is once again on the move. The Cyclones handled K-State last weekend, 28-14, with sophomore fullback
BLACK TIGHTS
HELD OVER
Shows At 7:00 & 9:05 p.m.
VARSITY ART Attractions
NEXT
STARTS THURSDAY
King of The Wolfpack
WALT DISNEY presents
the legend of LOBO
TECHNICOLOR
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI 3-1065
MISSOURI OVER KANSAS: But anything can happen in this game, as one glance at the record books will show, but comparing the teams on paper . . . . oops, here we go again.
Tommy Vaughn taking some of the load off of Dave Hopmann's shoulders. Iowa State should win by three touchdowns.
Regardless of last week's games (Mizzou lost and KU won), both teams will be up for this one. But the stronger Tiger line will make the difference, if KU's game against Nebraska is any indication. Missouri will win by two touchdowns.
OKLAHOMA OVER NEBRASKA:
The Sooners are smelling orange blossoms for the first time in several years. The team now has the momentum to go all the way, and Nebraska, in spite of strong forward wall, will be no match for the Sooner spirit.
Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI3-1065
OPEN 24 hrs. a day
Oklahoma will win by two touchdowns.
Stay bright. Fit drowsiness and be at your brilliant best with Verv® continuous action alertness capsules, Effective, safe, not habit-forming.
838 Mass.
BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY
JIM'S CAFE
WHO IS THE POWER BEHIND
MARK PETTINGTON
THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE? Frank Sinatra Laurence Harvey Janet Leigh
EUF
Euro
The
Manchurian
Candidate
COMING SOON!
Granada
THEATRE ··· Telephone VI 3-5788
PRC
Bibl
Box
Aus with Wri
HAR
Driv
in
Mod
wee
Monday. Nov. 19, 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.
TRANSPORTATION
Ride wanted to New Orleans or Louis-
ton over Thanksgiving. Phone
7045. 11-19
Travel-only a limited number of airline flights still available for Thanksgiving and Christmas Holiday.
!
First National Travel Agency
746 Mass. VI 3-0152
Suggest making reservations Now!
EUROPE--Discover this bargain! Write:
Europe, £25 - Sequoia, Passadena, CA
1-800-763-9325
Need ride to Topeka afternoonnoons 2:30-4:00
p.m. Call M6-7-2393 in Topeka 11-19
FOR SALE
PROF SNARF vs. L.M.O.C. 4th book of
Bibler cartoons just published, S.I. P.
O.B. 1533, Monterey, Calif. Merry Xmss
11-70
Austin-Healey 3000 for sale. A fine car.
Write Bill English, St John Kernag,
Brand New; Ancestor 35mm camera & case, $64; Ancso Memo 8mm projector; $22; Kodak Brownie movie camera & lites. $20. Call VI 2-609. Ask about other buys in cameras, films, and photofhishing. 11-29
Kittens: Seal Point Siamese kittens 6 weeks old. Females. House broke. Phone VI 2-3420 mornings or evenings. 11-19
Slightly used Spanish guitar. New strings.
Must sell this week for best offer over $10. Leave name and telephone number at VI 3-4711. 11-27
UPRIGHT FREEZER 32 cu. ft. 2 yrs. old,
new HYDRAKE by Carrier; Best offer
takes. 3-78-85
A DX-20 transmitter Hallcrafter SX-99.
A DX-30 transmitter Hallcrafter SX-99.
Dave Shreer VL w 3-1944, $110. $100.
Coleen B. McCann w 3-1944, $110. $100.
'55 Ford like new, 2-door Custom Lin
with radio, heater, overdrive and almos
new engine. New clutch, new transmis-
sion, new paint, new exterior, interior
7-tires, uses no oil. More than 20 mpg
on the highway. $555. Phone VI 3-7642.
on the highway. $595. Phone VI 3-7642.
11-19
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's
in the midwest—Pet phone, VT-2897
1935 Ford Customline; radio, heater.
1936 Ford Customline; included.
VI 5-305 after 6 p.m.
11-20
Stereo or hi-fi diamond needles for most makes. Half price during November. Don't wait, buy them now at Pettengill-Davis, 723 Mass. tf
new stereo FM—new portable stereos—
new AM-FM radios—new FM radio dis-
count as low as $39F—on month,
month, at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Massachusetts.
11-20
All kinds of house plants. Potted ...
Including philodendron to be used for
room dividers and in picture windows.
Phone VI 3-4207.
tt
TV shopping? Magnavox 24" automatic TV has a 3 year picture tube warranty. Magavox from just $149.90. See the magnificent Magnavox at Pettigrew-Diass, 723 Mass.
Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extensively comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.00 per call. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. 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
TYPING PAPER BARGAINS: Pink
typing paper . 85c per ream. Yellow
paper . 100c per sheet. Per
pound. The Lawrence Outlook. 100%
Massachusetts, open all day Saturday. t
Luxurious, warm beaver fur coat, Japanese cultured pearls, alexandrite-dia-
sels, hardwood components, classical recoup,
and hi-fi components, trommel
savings. VI Cl I 2-1610. 11-21
A 2 bedroom house 1½ block from campus. Fully carpeted, screened porch, wood floor. Great location with full basement with a large lot. $10,900. Interested call VI 2-2202 after 5 p.m.
FOR RENT
Large furnished apartment with private bath and entrance. Newly furnished and decorated. 1 block from campus. Phone VI 2-3350 or VI 3-2263. 11-21
MORE JOBS BETTER PRODUCTS LOWER PRICES Advertising works for you!
3 room furnished apartment on 25th St.
birth private bath, patio space.
Call VI $7-8190. 11-26
For boys. I room with refrigerator in
upstairs. $25 a month.
Phone VI 3-9201 11-30
2 bedroom home, fireplace, dining room,
carpeting, electric stove, basement.
A choice location adjacent to South KU.
Phone VI 3-3293. 11-29
A 3 bedroom house for a family or graduate students. Includes a bath and a half, utility room, attractive part or entire room. Would furnish if necessary. Phone VI 2-1982.
2-room kitchenette apartment—furnished.
phone or phone V1 3-7645.
11-19
Furnished apartment room efficiency. 1 three room, 1 four room, private baths,
off street parking, one block off campus.
Phone VI 2-3919. 11-28
Vacancies for young men in contemporary home with swimming pool, shower bath, private entrance, 5 evening meals weekly. $65 an hour. Call VI 3-9653. tt
3 room apartment, private bath. 1 block
across street from the apartment.
paid. Come and see. 1142 Indiana, tf
Furnished or unfurnished units, singles or doubles. Park Plaza South Apartment Inc. 1912 West 25th. Phone VI 2-3416. 11-22
Why walk up the hill when you can be on a bus? Or walk to 1245 La. $1's block from Union. Excellent accommodations for 4 boys. Nice parking. Call VI 3-6153 or see after 3:30 p.m. call
A lovely two bedroom apartment now being redecorated. Partially furnished. Private parking. $7 a month. Room for 8158 after 5 p.m. or see at 610 25th. 11-21
2 bedroom house 1/2 block from campus.
Fully carpeted, screened porch, wood burning fireplace, fully air conditioned,
full basement with a large lot. $100 a month. If interested call VI 2-2202 after
5 p.m. 11-21
FURNISHED OFFICE SPACE is now available by the day, week or month. Call (801) 356-9200 for custertarial & Answering Service. Call VI 3-5290 or see them at 10211's Mass.
BUSINESS SERVICES
M-W-F-1t
EXPERIMENT with Sleep-Learning:
Fascinating, educational. Details free.
Research Association, Box 24-CP.
Olympia, Washington. 11-28
TYPING
RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. V. 3-1267. tjcc.net
GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I study notes.
Completely revised and extremely comprehensive.
$4. For free delivery call VI 3-$245. ff
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center. 1218 Conn. Personal service - sectionalized ginners, chameleons, turtles, guinea pigs, etc., plus complete pet supplies. H
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
more details, call Nicola. Ola Smith
9391% 839% . Call MV. SI-32633.
TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rental
equipments and electronics. Royal, Olympia, Smith Cornei
Olivetti and Remington portables. Bond
Typewriter, Typewriter 7,
Mass, Phone VI 3-3644.
LARRY CRUM suggests all kinds of Pancakes. T-Bone steak only 99c. We are open 24 hours a day. "K"-Pancake Grill and Sundries. 14th and Mass. tt
Will do neat and accurate typing in my home. Experienced in themes, theses, and term papers. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Adcock, VI 2-1785. tt
Typist experienced in theses and term papers. Prompt service, reasonable rates, electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Howard Mhlinger at VI 3-4409. tt
German national will tutor students in English language. Call VI. 31-2780 after 6 p.m. 11-21
TYFING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, magazine issues, magazine rates. Electric writer, Ms. M. Eldowney. 2521 Alabama. Ph. VI 3-868.
English major and former secretary will type themes and theses on electric typewriter. For neat and accurate work call Mrs. Mellisand Jones, VI 3-5267. tf
MILLIKEN'S "S.O.S." Open 24 hours
1pm; Specializing in Efficiency
4pm; Specializing in Efficiency
- COMPLETE SECRETARIAL & AN-
WAREMENT SERVICE, Office Space
Available.
- 1021$\frac{1}{2}$ Massachusetts Ph. VI 3-5920 M-W-F-$\ddagger$
- STUDENT TYPING & THESIS
* CUSTOM BUSTER DUPLIP
EXPERIENCED TYPEST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, these and with an electric typewriter, Reasonable rates. Car Mrs. Charles Fatti, III 8-3799.
This Christmas Give Your Portrait by
Fast accurate typing Secretary for 51s
fast accurate typing Robertson, VI 3-624-
at 703 Lawrence Ave.
Typing reasonable rates, meet and accep-
tion --- Barrie VI VI 3-3188,
Mosin, Bodin. 535 Grey Creeper烤
WESTERN CIVIL UNION
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tf
RASCAL COLUMN
Manuscripts, theses and term papers.
Also dissertations written on wide carriage.
Please prewarm 35 special keys.
Experience education and education.
Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. VI 2-1546. tf
Efficient typist. Would like typing in her
home letters. Attention: call at vi 3-2651
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast,
accurate, neat work. Reasonable rates.
Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff
VI 2-1748. tf
MILLIKEN'S. S.O.S. — always first quality typing on IBM machines, equipped with carbon ribbons. Open 24 hours a day. *1021½* Massachusetts. VI. M-W-F'
Experienced secretary with electric type-
ers and typeset to these types, etc.
Phone: Nancy - 3-805-1234
Phone: Mandy - 3-805-1234
Experienced typist. 7 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rate. Mrs. Barlow, 2047 Yale Rd, VI, 1648.
Lost: Stampee kitten, in neighborhood at
Duncan at VI 3-1780.
11-19
Duncan at VI 3-1780.
I don't have an umbrella. Will the person who found a plaid, cloth topcoat, I. C. Penney type, please call VI 2-2760, my time. 11-30
OST: 1962 L.H.S. class ring, Reward.
VI STI 3-7487 after 4 p.m.
11-27
post. Reddish bollie collie pup 5 months
starting red harness. Reward.
I 2-160 I 11-29
Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority pin (in the shape of a key). Lost Monday probably at Strong or Murphy. Phone VI 3-5660. 11-19
HELP WANTED
Lost—Japanese binoculars, 7 x 35. Left in section 32 at NU-KU game Saturday,
Nov. 10. Reward. Phone VI 2-1340. 11-28
Married Woman age 20 to 30 for
masher and housewife check-out. Stendy
will work for the school year. No experience necessary.
school year. No experience necessary.
W. 90th. W. 6th. St. Phone VI 37446. 11-40
OVERSEAS OPPORTUNITIES under 2 year contract for single persons over age 20 to serve on rural agricultural, and education projects. expenses plus international exp. International Voluntary Services, 3636 Sixteenth St., N.W., Washington, D.C. 11-28
RESEA
MIN
AMES RESEARCH CENTER
NATIONAL AERONAUTICS AND
SPACE ADMINISTRATION
OFFERS CAREER OPPORTUNITIES
IN AERO-SPACE TECHNOLOGY FOR:
ELECTRICAL ENGINEERS
ELECTRONIC ENGINEERS
AERONAUTICAL ENGINEERS
PHYSICISTS
PHYSICAL CHEMISTS
MECHANICAL ENGINEERS PHYSICAL CHEMISTS
For detailed information read our brochure in your Placement office - then sign up for an interview with:
School of Engineering Office Interview date: February 7,1963
NASA
*If you are interested, but unable to schedule an interview at this time, a letter to the Personnel Officer at Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, California, will bring full details.
Positions will be filled in accordance with Announcement No. 2528.
Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Nov. 19, 1962
Trainee—
(Continued from page 1)
surprised when one of my students handed me a gift.
"The 58-year-old woman smiled and said when you go to school, you always take the teacher a present," he said.
Shaffer was graduated in 1946 from Pittsburgh (Penn.) University, where he majored in psychology and minored in chemistry, English, literature and biology.
Upon graduation, Shaffer began work for the Rubber Reserve, a governmental agency, where he checked the research Germany and Russia had done on rubber.
AFTER A TRY as advertising manager for a chemical supply house, Shaffer moved to New Orleans and a personnel placement job.
The past nine years, Shaffer has worked for two New Orleans radio stations, WBOK, a Negro radio station, and WYLD. At nights, he attended school at Tulane University.
Red Chinese-
headquarters at Dirang, 25 miles to the north.
(Continued from page 1)
The new deep thrust into Indian lines followed capture by the Red Chinese of key positions on three fronts along the border in slashing human wave attacks by tens of thousands of Communist troops.
PRIME MINISTER Jawaharlal Nehru announced in Parliament today the Reds had seized the key northeastern anchor town of Walong along with its airfield, near the Burmese border, and had taken Se La Pass, a two-and-one-half-mile high mountain pass 300 miles to the West near Bhutan. The Walong drive punched a hole at least 12 miles deep in Indian positions.
India Club to Discuss Student Aid to India
The India Club will meet at 7 p.m. today in the Kansas Union to discuss contributions from its non-Indian friends to the Indian National Defense Fund.
The club has pledged its support to Prime Minister Nehru in the conflict with Communist China. The club has collected $192 from its members, and is hoping to collect money and clothes from various living groups on the campus.
Nehru said the Reds, in their biggest drive since the border war started Oct. 20, had also advanced on the northwest in the Ladakh area, where they were shelling the Chusul Airport runway, the only landing strip in that region of Kashmir.
Fraternity Jewelry
Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals
Balfour
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
AL LAUTER
BROOKLYN
COLLARED: THE OXFORD LOOK
The Arrow "Gordon Dover Club" has captured the Oxford look with a newer, softly rolled button-down collar. A trim placket front, button in back of collar - and back center plait completes the tradition. Comfort is tailored right into the cotton Oxford cloth. Come in and collar yours now! $5.00
Weaver MEN'S STORE
HOW
CORRECTLY CASUAL
The shirt that makes the scene is the Arrow "Gordon Dover Club" shirt. It is a cotton Oxford classic with the comfortable medium-point, softly rolling button-down Arrow collar. Placket front, plait in back and back collar button. Master craftsmanship gives sharp appearance and comfortable trim fit. $5.00.
ARROW FOUNDED 1851 Traditionally the Finest for Discriminating Men
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
Food Service Vacation Schedule
UNION FOOD SERVICE
CAFETERIA--Remains Open Regular Hours
Breakfast----7:30-8:30
Lunch----11:00-1:30
Dinner----5:00-6:30
Coffee and Coke Bar----7:30 a.m.- 6:30 p.m.
CAFETERIA CLOSED THURSDAY, NOV. 22
HAWK'S NEST-Closed Tuesday, Nov.20,4 p.m. Open Sunday, Nov. 25, 3 p.m.
HAWKLET—Closed Tuesday, Nov. 20,3 p.m.
Open Monday, Nov. 26,8:15 a.m.
PRAIRIE ROOM-Closed Tues., Wed., Fri. and Sat.
PRAIRIE ROOM - OPEN THANKSGIVING
8:30 a.m.- 11:00 a.m.— Rolls and Coffee 11 a.m.-1:30 p.m.-Lunch $1.25
Roast Turkey and Dressing Giblet Gravy Candied Sweet Potatoes Frozen Buttered Peas
Cranberry Jello Rolls and Butter Pumpkin Pie Coffee
4:30 p.m.-6 p.m.-Coffee & Sandwiches in Main Lounge
Daily hansan
60th Year, No. 48
Tuesday, Nov. 27, 1962
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Debate Centers On Eurich Report
by Bernard Henrie
The 54-page Eurich report in its blue, soft-bound cover looks as harmless as the KU phone directory and not at all like the center of a three-week long controversy in Kansas higher education. The Eurich report—accepted in full by the State Board of Regents but not in full by the State Legislature—calls for the establishment of Wichita University as a State Universities Center. According to the plan, Wichita would be administered by the University of Kansas and Kansas State University.
WICHITA SCHOOL OFFICIALS successfully argued that such a plan would mean that Wichita University would lose its identity and merely become a satellite extension school for the two larger state universities. Sidney Brick, chairman of the Wichita Board of Regents, indicated that if WU would suffer a lowered "stature" the school would not enter the state system.
"We will continue to pursue this effort to become a part of the state system," Brick said Nov. 12 in Wichita, "but not at less stature."
Faced with such determination the Legislative Council voted to delete the section in the Eurich report which would strip WU of its independent status.
THE ACTION BY THE LEGISLATIVE Council means that the Eurich report-minus the section opposed by Wichita officials—has been accepted by the State Legislature.
The Council will recommend to the Legislature that Wichita University be taken into the state school system as a university under direct supervision of the State Board of Regents.
No opposition to WU being taken into the system was expressed at the council meeting.
THE EURICH REPORT was prepared by a panel working under the chairmanship of Alvin C. Eurich, vice-president and director of the fund for the Advancement of Education. Eurich is the former vice-president of Stanford University.
The report deals with subjects such as intensive use of classroom and laboratory facilities through an extension of working hours, introduction of an 11-month school year, the problems of waste and duplication, and a number of other problems related to higher education.
KU CHANCELLOR, W. Clarke Wescoe, termed the report a "framework for progress." Chancellor Wescoe said he hoped the report would be read in its entirety, and said that there was some misunderstanding about the specific recommendations of the report
Wichita school officials were in agreement with the general conclusions of the report, but balked at the one specific recommendation which would turn the $17 million worth of physical facilities at WU over to the state to be governed by an 11-man board. Five board members would be from KU, five from Kansas State, and one from Wichita University.
THE EURICH REPORT STATED six objectives it felt Wichita should concern itself with:
- "Offer a wide variety of academic programs leading to the B.A. or B.S. degrees. These degrees should be awarded by the University of Kansas upon completion of the various programs of study..."
- "Offer whatever programs are needed at the graduate and professional levels leading to master's degrees, doctorates, or degrees in professional areas. . . ."
- "Offer a wide variety of programs for technical and sub-professional training leading to the associate in arts or science..."
- The complete utilization of "all properties, resources, and personnel of the University of Wichita..."
(Continued on page 8)
Alabama Gets Negro Bids
TUSCALOOSA, Ala. — (UPI) The University of Alabama yesterday acknowledged the receipt of applications from two more Negroes, apparently for the spring semester beginning in February.
The applications were received during the Thanksgiving holidays, said University officials who added that no names would be released.
A Negro coed at Alabama A&M at Huntsville, Ala., Vivian Malone, said yesterday she had mailed her application last Wednesday. She said she had not received a reply.
The University, in keeping with a policy announced with the application of another Negro last month, would not say what semester the Negroes seek to enter.
Miss Malone, a junior in business education at all-Negro A&M, said the University had several courses
Since the University of Alabama was founded 131 years ago, only one Negro has attended. Authorine Lucy was admitted under a still-standing court order in 1956.
not offered at A&M. She said by telephone she intended to go into personnel management or some related field on graduation.
The university student newspaper, Crimson-White. urged mature leadership to oppose violence, and the University hired two private detectives to protect its editor, Mel Meyer of Starkville. Miss. Meyer said he received telephone threats and a cross was burned on his fraternity house lawn.
Her attendance provoked daily riots. She was expelled three days after she entered for making alleged statements that the University officials permitted the riots.
Weather
Fair weather is forecast for northwest and extreme west portions of the state this afternoon and evening, otherwise cloudy tonight and Wednesday. Occasional drizzle east portion this afternoon, tonight and tomorrow and occasional rain or snow west late tonight or tomorrow. Colder extreme west tomorrow. Low tonight 30 northwest to 40 southeast. High tomorrow 50 to 55 east to the 40s extreme west.
Elections Head Has No Support From Committee
It is a lonely John Stuckey who will end his stint as ASC election committee chairman tonight.
Stuckey complained of the loneliness of his job at the last meeting of the fall 1962 committee just before the Thanksgiving holiday.
Six persons attended the preholiday session. But the 'committee' consisted of one, Stuckey.
"This is the fourth meeting I have called this year with poor attendance," John Stuckey, the chairman, complained. "Only one person showed up at the first meeting and only two at the second."
OF THE SEVEN ASC members on Stuckey's committee, none of them attended the meeting. Only six persons including the UDK reporter were present.
Stuckey said the meeting was open to the public so that anyone could "air their criticisms" of the handling of recent ASC elections.
He said yesterday that he would present any ideas to improve elections to the ASC meeting tonight. "Obviously, since none of my committee members were present at the Nov. 19 meeting, official action will be carried out by a new elections committee," he said. "I go off the council Tuesday night."
HE SAID HE HAD sent postcards notifying all the members of the meeting well in advance. No one told him that they would be unable to attend, he said.
Stuckey also complained that neither of University Party's Nancy Lane, Hoisington junior, or Bob Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore, attended the meeting. Roger Wilson, Wichita senior and president of Vox Populi, was present.
Stewart said he had talked privately with Stuckey during and after elections concerning improvements he felt were necessary.
"I would have attended the meeting had I felt my presence could have added anything new," Stewart said.
Kay Cash, Fairview Park, Ohio junior and election committee member, said she could not attend because she was taking a biology examination at the time.
RICHARD BRITZ, Severna Park,
Md., senior, said he had been in Ala-
bama since the preceding Friday and
did not know about the meeting until
he returned.
A member of Theta Tau, Bill Beyers, Overland Park junior, requested that the fraternity be allowed to vote in the Professional fraternity district. He said that members of Theta Tau were dissatisfied with a ruling made by Stuckey the night before the Nov. 14-15 elections.
Stuckey ruled that Theta Tau must vote in the social fraternity district.
STUCKEY SAID THAT LIVING groups could not be allowed to fluctuate from year to year in their voting choice. "I declared Theta Tau in the social fraternity group," he said, "because they voted in that district last year."
YD's Renew Fight Over Last Election
By Joanne Prim
The president of the KU Young Democrats has charged that the president of the KU Young Democrats is not the president of the KU Young Democrats.
Right to the office is being claimed by both Barry Bennington, Cheney senior, and Peter G. Aylward, Ellsworth senior.
AFTER A SQUABBLE AROSE concerning the distribution of membership cards by Bennington supporters shortly before the March 14 meeting when Bennington was elected, Aylward's supporters held a special meeting March 28 and elected him president.
Dan Hopson Jr., associate professor of law and last year's adviser to the YD's, said in a telephone interview, "As far as I am concerned, neither the first group of officers nor the second group was validly elected.
The disputed election lay dormant for the first two months of the fall semester until Carl M. Logan, Holliday junior, wrote a letter to the editor of the Kansan shortly before Thanksgiving vacation, questioning Aylward's presidency. In remarks later, Logan said he had waited to write the letter because of the Nov. 6 elections.
Bennington said "The only possible solution is to have another election with a completely new set of officers. It should be supervised by the faculty adviser and possibly the president of the Collegeiate Council of YD's and the state chairman of the YD clubs.
The Collegiate Council is composed of YD groups at colleges and universities in Kansas. It is a part of the state organization of YD clubs.
Bennington said he has no desire now to serve as president.
"IT'S NOT WORTH fighting for any more," he said. "My term of office is almost up and I'm not interested in running for any office in the Young Democrats."
Aylward was unavailable for comment yesterday. He declined comment earlier on any aspect of the situation.
Prof. Hopson said, "I hope both groups will get together and have a new election."
NO YD MEETINGS have been held so far this year.
Gary F. Conklin, Hutchinson third year law student, was elections chairman at the March 14 meeting when Bennington was elected president. He was not present at the special meeting, March 28, when the second election was held.
"We found no peculiarities in the election," he said, referring to the first election. "We thought we had the best check set-up ever used."
The two contending factions (although they were not recognized as such) were represented on the elections committee.
Membership cards were checked as potential voters came in the door. Conklin explained. Names were then checked on a membership list provided by Verne D. Gauby, last year's president.
BENNINGTON WAS ELECTED president. Aylward, the defeated candidate, said he intended to investigate the possibility that the faction supporting Bennington had handed out membership cards prior to the meeting.
He said then that he had affidavits from seven persons not on the election committee's voting list who were members of the Young Democrats.
Conklin said last night that the names of 10 or 12 girls were left off the list for either of two reasons:
"Either they registered an intent to join and didn't follow it up," he said, "or they joined after the cut-off date."
THE CUT-OFF DATE provided in the YD constitution is a day shortly before spring elections after which membership cards if purchased do not carry the privilege of voting in that election.
“Prior to last spring.” Conklin continued, “there was never any check. Anyone who walked in could vote.”
He called the election dispute a "tempest in a teapot that got out of hand."
"If as much attention had been focused on elections every year as there was last year, the UDK would be full of this sort of thing every spring."
A PETITION REQUESTING a "special" meeting was signed by 28 persons. According to the YD constitution, the club president is obligated to call such a meeting if he is presented with a petition and if there has been no general meeting that month.
Jim L. Lawing, Okmulgee, Okla., first year law student, who circulated the petition, said at the time that the March 14 meeting was invalid because the election held at the meeting was invalid. He said the March 28 meeting was the only valid meeting held in March and therefore, actions taken at the meeting were legal.
Bennington gave two reasons yesterday for Aylward's interest in the presidency of the YD's. One was that it would enhance his father's (Paul Aylward) chances of being elected to the U.S. Senate.
THE OTHER CONCERNED the election of the state chairman of the Young Democrats. Aylward supported one candidate, and Bennington, another.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday. Nov. 27, 1962
Musings On Mitchell
Jack Mitchell and crew came out of the Missouri game about as well as they could have expected. Whenever an underdog team outplays its opponent and manages a tie there is some satisfaction derived. But a tie against a supposedly better team is the best way the Jayhawkers and bosses could have closed the season as far as receiving any derogatory comment is concerned. People take a neutral attitude toward such an outcome and do not bother to worry about the season.
This is not necessarily to imply that there should be a deluge of negative comment poured upon Allen Field House for the fourth place finish and the embarrassment of the Nebraska game. There is undoubtedly much which could be criticized unfavorably if one were to analyze the season in light of what was expected. The point here is that demanding scrutiny should be made of the KU football program in the next two years and if the results are not at least equal to 1961, preferably better, there should be a huge step taken in the direction of a revamping of the situation.
MITCHELL HAS JUST finished his fifth season here and is preparing for another at this time although the season closed less than a week ago. These five years have been one continuous story of "almost." There were two years of development, one title taken from KU, one disappointing and hard to explain second place finish, and this year. This certainly is not a record to be ashamed of. It is one which should be looked upon as the groundwork for great teams—not the good, adequate, near great, or whatever, squads Mitchell claims to have had thus far.
The football program here should be considered to be at the crossroads. Starting with next season there will either be a constant upward surge which will last several years or the Mitchell regime will stumble along with a couple of crowd-teasing teams which will provide many
trills and equal disappointments and only enough wins to maintain a respectable finish. It is, of course, hoped that the trend will be one of continual building to the point that KU will be not only a contender for the Big Eight Conference championship but a favorite annually.
The complaints against the performance of the Jayhawkers this past season should be withheld, generally. A coach cannot be expected to pull such a young team to the top after the heavy losses as were experienced from the Bluebonnet Bowl group. Years such as the one just completed are to be expected and, possibly, welcomed. They show the coaches are willing to admit that they are starting over again almost at scratch to build toward a championship a couple years to the future.
But, it might be noted, Oklahoma is in the Orange Bowl in a rebuilding year.
THE FRESHMAN TEAM WALTZED to victory in both of its games this season and a few individuals showed they will be of considerable help to the varsity next fall.
These two reasons plus the additional factor that Mitchell has been here long enough to establish himself in every possible manner and has accustomed the area fans to his coaching methods, be they what they are, point to unprecedented success in the near future.
THIS FUTURE SUCCESS should be expected and demanded. The talent is evident. The experience is present and growing. The spectator interest is ballooning. The power to recruit top high school athletes is available.
The problem now is to see if each of the preceding four factors can be molded by Mitchell to nudge KU to the zenith of the football world.
This editorial is not a call for the head of Jack Mitchell. It is too photogenic at present. Maybe if a few too many grey hairs and losses creep into the picture the axe should be raised.
Bill Sheldon
The Battle's Over
Editor:
... Letters ...
(Ref: The failure of KU's plan to use MU's trick against them)
There were two temples on the north and south sides of a city in Japan. Each day a runner was sent into the Market, from each temple to buy food. One day, as the southside runner passed the northside runner he called to him, "Where are you going?" to which the other replied, "Wherever the wind blows me." The confused runner reported this to his teacher who instructed him to ask next time, "What if there were no wind?" So on the following day when the two passed, the southside runner called out, "Where are you going?" to which he got the reply, "Wherever my feet will carry me." This too he reported to his teacher who instructed him to inquire next time,
"What if you had no feet?" The next morning when he saw the other runner, the southside runner called out again, "Where are you going?" and the northside runner answered, "To Market."
Perhaps KU coaches should take a lesson from this anecdote and not fight last year's battle plan so.
K. C. King
Junction City, senior
* * * *
Hospital Staff Praised
Hospital Staff Praised
Editor
While I was sitting in the Kansas Union watching the television on Saturday, November 10, I felt a pain in my heart which made me unable to breathe. A friend who was sitting near me took me to Watkins Hospital. The nurse called the doctor on duty who ordered something to be given to me. I was afraid that that medicine would affect my ulcers so I asked the nurse
to call Dr. McClure who was taking care of me the week before. She told me that he was not on duty that night. I asked her to tell him only that I was at the hospital. He came at once and ordered some shots and each half hour all night he was in contact with the hospital checking on me. He visited me twice on Sunday. He checked all the possibilities of the causes of my troubles. Since that time he always comes to visit me at least twice a day and spends a long time with me. I believe such a doctor is not only a physician but more a psychiatrist. I haven't found in my life such care and interest from any private doctor.
Regarding the nurses, I couldn't find such nice people or such good services elsewhere as they have given me. From time to time they clean the room, change bed sheets and towels, bring all the newspapers and supply me with different medicines.
Daiilaj Wicksere
University of Kaasas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Telephone Viking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office
Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Richard Bonett, Dennis Farney, Zeke Wigglesworth, and Bill Mullins, Assistant Managing Editors; Mike Miller, City Editor; Ben Marshall, Sports Editor; Margaret Catcart, Society Editor.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Managing Editor
Scott Payne
Clayton Keller and Bill Sheldon ... Co-Editorial Editors
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Martinache Business Manager
Jack Cannon, Advertising Manager; Doug Farmer, Circulation Manager;
Gene Spalding, National Advertising Manager; Bill Woodburn, Classified Advertising Manager; Dan Meek, Promotion Manager
Lastly, the very wonderful system — the hostesses, which I haven't seen in the hospitals in other countries. Each morning a lady comes to ask me if I need anything. One of them wrote a letter for me and typed it. Another called two friends to bring my mail. A third one brought me a magazine and the last one wrote this letter as I dictated it to her.
For the food, the dietitian comes from time to time to ask me if I have any complaint or any kind of special dish which I want.
I am really unable to say anything except deep thanks to Dr. McClure and all the other doctors who devote every minute for the patients, to Mrs. Stene and to each of her staff of nurses who are very kind to me, to the hostesses whose names I don't know, for their voluntary services, to the dietitian for her clean and healthy food, to all American and foreign friends who burden me with their kindness and generosity. And lastly, thanks to Mrs. Mumo who was always kind to my visitors. To all of these I can only say thank you so much.
Dr. Samy Affy
Cairo, UAR,
graduate student
COMMEN t Galling the Gauls
A classic lesson in human affairs, one that might well have come from the Old Testament, can be seen today in the relations of Algeria and its former master, France.
French Premier Georges Pompidou and Jean-Marie Jeanneney, the French ambassador to Algeria, have made statements that Ahmed Ben Bella, premier of Algeria, is not being kosher in his dealings with France.
FRANCE HAS more or less supported Algeria since Algeria became independent this year. France has poured millions of francs into Algeria for economic and technical aid. Now Ben Bella, like a rat, has gone behind France's back and done it dirt.
French ire hinges on two acts by Ben Bella. First, he recently made a speech in which he said he is seeking aid from the U.S.S.R., Bulgaria, the U.A.R., Hungary and Czechoslovakia. Secondly, French officials claim Ben Bella has not honored the agreements made at the Evian conferences by which France agreed to free Algeria.
These acts have rankled the French gentlemen in Paris. They now are asking themselves whether Ben Bella really wants French aid. They are hurt, befuddled and irate. They cannot grasp why the dog is biting the hand that feeds it.
The situation is clearly a case of old-fashioned, textbook poetic justice.
The whole thing started with the French colonial treatment of Algeria—which at best was bad.
Algeria had been considered a part of France since the middle of the 19th century—as far as the European-Algerian population was concerned. As for the Moslems of Algeria who constituted 90 per cent of the population—that was another tale.
THE MOSLEMS in Algeria finally received French citizenship, on paper, with the enactment of the Algerian Statute of 1947. The statute set up two electoral colleges, one to represent the Europeans, another to represent the Moslems. It was an interesting system-one college to represent 10 per cent of the population (the Europeans), and one to represent 90 per cent of the population (the Moslems).
Such a setup would have satisfied most dictatorships, but to the colonial-minded French it was just a start. Not satisfied with an unequal system of representation, they proceeded to stuff the ballot boxes during "elections."
A brilliant example of this hanky-panky took place in the spring of 1954. Demaghlatrouus Larbi, a Moslem, was running for reelection in a district containing some 980 voters, 280 of whom were members of his own family. After the ballots were counted, it was announced that Candidate Larbi had received 11 votes.
HE WAS somewhat indignant. He stormed the local court armed with affidavits from 400 people who said they had voted for him, plus evidence showing that 33 of those who voted against him were dead and 400 had long since moved to France. His case was thrown out for "lack of evidence."
Election-rigging was not the only area in which the French used the lead-foot approach to the Moslems. In education, for example, only French was taught in the schools, and Algerian history was unknown. Instead, little Arabs went home and told their daddies about the glories of Napoleon and Joan of Arc.
Another factor concerning the Algerian Statute of 1947: all properties belonging to the Islamic church were confiscated (they called it nationalized) by the French authorities. Mosques where once Allah was God were now Christian churches—for the good of the people, no doubt.
YES, INDEED, the French racked up quite a record in Algeria, just as they had in Indo-China and their other colonies. In light of this record, it is surprising that the fight for Algerian independence was not bloodier than it was.
Evidently, the French officials who are so distraught have forgotten all this. They seem to think that since France has been so benevolent in giving Algeria its independence, the Algerians should be nice children—neither seen nor heard.
I suggest that they take a minute and remember what happened in Algeria. Then maybe they won't be so eager to condemn Ben Bella for what he has done.
—Zeke Wigglesworth
Student Loan Shortage May Occur in February
The endowment association may run out of funds again in February.
Heavy borrowing in February could mean a repeat of the office's October situation when the endowment association ran out of loanable funds.
ROBERT BILLINGS, director of the office of aids and awards, said the office expects to make approximately 600 loans totaling $100,000 in February.
These programs are sponsored by the KU-Y.
Page 3
The Yale Russian Chorus, singers of Russian folk music from Yale University, will appear here March 19.
KU will hear a Russian concert this spring and may also host a Russian-exchange program.
Beatty Hunter, Hutchinson freshman in charge of the programs, said the exchange program might be in the spring. He said a letter from the East-West Relations Committee arranging the Russian tour has indicated that the Russian students touring the western United States may stop at KU in March or April.
THE RUSSIAN-EXCHANGE is pending final verification, depending on whether Russian students touring the United States can stop here.
Russian Exchange Program Possible
If these students can come, Hunter said, the program would be similar to the Russian-exchange program held here in 1961.
"WE WOULD INVITE them to speak at forums and lectures," Hunter said, "and introduce them to mid-western living."
The Yale Russian Chorus is a 30member group of American students versed in Russian folklore and history and proficient in the Russian language.
Billings said that he expects an increase of 25 to 30 per cent in the volume of student loans next semester.
Touring Russia last summer, the group won wide acclaim among the people for their singing of Russian folk songs.
"Business is greater second semester. Students usually have enough money saved for the first semester," he said.
"WE ENCOURAGE people who need help to come in early. If they wait we may not have the money to help them."
The National Defense Student Loan Program provides that students may borrow as much as $1,000 a year at three per cent interest. Loans for a student's entire college education may not exceed $5,000.
Loans are made on the basis of need and scholarship. An over-all grade point average of C is required. Long-term loans are payable at the rate of three per cent.
THE UNITED STUDENT Aid Fund is sponsored by local banks. Students may borrow $1,000 a year or a total of $3,000 at six per cent. Repayment begins four months after graduation.
HE POINTED to several other financial plans open to students.
Billings said that the reasons most people are turned away are low academic record and insufficient need.
Students have 30 months in which to repay the loan.
It is better to borrow and take a part-time job to finish school and get out in an earning situation than to leave school, Billings said.
Repayment of the principal is ten per cent per year beginning one year after graduation and completion of military service.
John B. Johnston assistant professor of mathematics, will discuss "A Formulation of Logic" during a mathematics staff seminar at 3:30 p.m., Nov. 29, in 119 Strong Hall.
Math Prof. to Discuss Logic
Tuesday, Nov. 27, 1962 University Daily Kansan
SPALDING. England — (UPI) — The Rev. Graham Jakeham said today attendance at his church has picked up marvelous since he did a little modernizing.
Less Sermon, More People
He streamlined his service from 80 to 67 minutes.
For Best Results Use Kansan Classified Ads
SUA
CLASSICAL FILM SERIES
Presents
Mae West
in
She Done Him Wrong
at
Gary Duff, Kansas Halfback
7 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 28
Admission 60c at door
FORUM ROOM OF UNION
KANSAS 28
PLAYER OF THE WEEK
Gary Duff
for his outstanding performance in kicking against Missouri.
For outstanding performance against dirty clothes, let us earn your laundry-of-the-week award.
1-HOUR
PERSONALIZED JET LIGHTNINE' SERVICE
Acme
Hillcrest Shopping Center VI 3-0928
LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANERS
Downtown
1111 Mass.
VI 3-5155
Malls
Shopping Center
VI 3-0895
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Nov. 27, 1962
Faculty Club Audience Enjoys Readings By Prof.Crafton
Allen Crafton, professor emeritus of speech and drama, tickled the funny bone of young and old with his interpretation of "The Odyssey of Runyon Jones" and "How Come Christmas?"
Speaking to a group of faculty members and their families at the Faculty Club recently, Prof. Craf-
Police Check Prowler Tip
City police were called at 3 a.m. this morning to the Phi Kappa Tau house after three Phi Tau's reported a prowler entering the house. The man escaped after finding some lights still burning.
Richard Whitaker, Kansas City junior, told Lawrence police that a man entered the house about 2:50 am. and made his way about half-way up the stairs to the second floor of the Phi Tau house.
GEORGE GRONEMAN, Kansas City freshman, was at his desk studying. "I heard him come about half way up, but I just thought it one of the up in the house," he said.
Whitaker had seen the figure down the steps north of Douthart Hall, across the street from the Ph Tau house. "He came past the house about 2:30 a.m. last night and stopped and looked at the house for a long period of time and then went on," Whitaker said. "He did the same tonight . . . just stood there awhile.
"AFTER HEARING the door open,
I looked out and saw that the man had disappeared from the steps. So I went in and woke up Dennis Bowers, Kansas City junior, and together we went downstairs to investigate.
We searched the house but nobody was there and the door was closed.
Evidently he must have left after seeing lights and hearing the movements upstairs." Whitaker said.
Be Prepared!
SALISBURY England—(UPI) Six senior Boy Scouts advertised today for a haunted castle.
They want to spend the night in it to test their courage.
PATRONIZE YOUR
ADVERTISERS
ton took the parts of nine characters in a radio play about a boy — Runyon Jones — and his dog Pootsie.
CHILDREN IN the audience listened intently as Prof. Crafton dramatized Runyon's search for Pootsie, an inverteate "car-chaser and tire biter." In his latest escape with cars Pootsie had been bit and is now in "curgatory."
Prof. Crafton became a grauff clerk, a brisk secretary, the feeble-voiced Father Time and kind Mother Nature as Runyon continued his search.
Roark Bradford's "How Come Christmas?" was a dialogue in which a group of Negroes try to determine who came first; Jesus or Santa Claus?
In oldstyle Southern Negro dialect Prof. Crafton tells how "everybody was givin' the poor little Jesus presents because they thought he was goin' to grow up and chop off their heads."
WHEN SANTA HEARS "Miss Mary" had a baby he takes poor little Jesus an apple. This makes the child so happy the Lawd says that "Santie Claus will live forever to make my children happy."
"The Lawd made Jesus for grown folks, but chillin gotta have some fun too and so he made Santie Claus." Prof Crafton concluded.
ASC Members Will Be Sworn In
Newly-elected All Student Council (ASC) members will be sworn in at the general assembly meeting tonight.
Dean Salter, Garden City senior and ASC chairman, said the Council will nominate officers tonight to replace Jo Ann Snyder, Bethesda, Md., senior, secretary, and Trudy Meserve, Abilene junior, vice-chairman. Both terms expired this fall.
The Council is expected to approve delegates to the Big-Eight Student Government Conference to be held December 14th and 15th in Columbia, Mo.
An investigatory committee will be appointed to consider an Intramural Council.
Jerry Dickson, All Student Body president, said the committee would discuss the possibilities of a Greek-Independent Intramural program.
A report on the ASC elections is also slated for tonight's session. John Stuckey, Pittsburg junior and elections chairman, will make recommendations for future ASC elections.
(GETTING RID OF DANDRUFF, THAT IS!)
DOING IT THE HARD WAY by hoff
(GETTING RID OF DANDRUFF, THAT IS!)
easier 3-minute way for men: FITCH
Men, get rid of embarrassing dandruff easy as 1-2-3 with FITCH! In just 3 minutes (one rubbing, one lathering, one rinsing), every trace of dandruff, grime, gummy old hair tonic goes right down the drain! Your hair looks hand-somer, healthier. Your scalp tingles, feels so refreshed. Use FITCH Dandruff Remover SHAMPOO every week for positive dandruff control. Keep your hair and scalp really clean, dandruff-free!
FITCH
LEADING MAN'S
SHAMPOO
"Gesang im Feuerofen," a staged reading by Carl Zuckmayer will be presented in German at 8:30 p.m. tonight in the Experimental Theater.
Theatre to Present 'Gesang' Tonight
Twenty KU students will take part in the foreign language program directed by Henriette Mandl, Vienna graduate student.
HILLCREST LAUNDROMAT HILLCREST LAUNDROMAT HILLCREST LAUNDROMAT
FITCH
LONG-LASTING
SHAMPOO
The program is part of a one year theater experiment in cooperation with the department of Germanic languages and literature.
It is designed to orient students on an international basis.
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
Wednesday Night
CHICKEN SPECIAL
All You Can Eat
ONLY $1
drink and dessert extra
Little Banquet
Ample free parking on the Malls
Read and Use Kansan Classifieds
HILLCREST LAUNDROMAT HILLCREST LAUNDROMAT HILLCREST LAUNDROMAT
10c WASHEREE!
Last 10 Days of November Beginning Nov.21 thru Nov.30
WASH 10c - DRY 10c
at
HILLCREST LAUNDROMAT
HILLCREST SHOPPING CENTER
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK — 24 HOURS A DAY
HILLCREST LAUNDROMAT HILLCREST LAUNDROMAT HILLCREST LAUNDROMAT
ENGINEERING OPPORTUNITIES
for Seniors and Graduates in MECHANICAL,
AERONAUTICAL, CHEMICAL,
ELECTRICAL, NUCLEAR,
and METALLURGICAL
ENGINEERING
ENGINEERING MECHANICS
APPLIED MATHEMATICS
PHYSICS and
ENGINEERING PHYSICS
CAMPUS INTERVIEWS
THURSDAY, DEC. 6
Appointments should be made
in advance through your
College Placement Office
Pratt & Whitney Aircraft
DIVISION OF UNITED AIRCRAFT CORP.
An Equal Opportunity Employer
SPECIALISTS IN POWER...POWER FOR PROPULSION—POWER FOR AUXILIARY SYSTEMS.
CURRENT UTILIZATIONS INCLUDE AIRCRAFT, MISSILES, SPACE VEHICLES, MARINE AND INDUSTRIAL APPLICATIONS.
T
J
T yea
ican
atee
the
bee
L D
Things 'Gray' in Strong
Tuesday, Nov. 27,1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
By Bernard Henrie
Over at Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe's office things are looking gray.
But that is as it should be; because things are going according to plan.
The outer office of the Chancellor's suite is being painted.
IT'S A HANDSOME color—a little somber, perhaps, but in keeping with the serious business of University administration.
The sturdy gray walls fuse—at their lower edges—with the mush yellow carpeting which rolls across the room.
The aesthete may note that the carpet compliments the room while the less sensitive investigator will note simply that it makes walking on it fun.
In a very specific way the carpet adds personality to the room, making one feel accompanied even though alone.
IN ADDITION to the new paint and carpet, long time visitors to the Chancellor's outer office will note a new, walnut divider separating the room in half.
In the old days an itinerant Kansan reporter who wandered by or an alum in search of football tickets who happened into the outer office could choose one of three secretaries to explain himself to.
That time of choice has ended.
Jayhawker Book Receives All American Honor Rating
Two of the secretaries now sit behind the walnut divider and the office visitor has only one secretary with whom to visit.
The 1962 Jayhawker magazine-yearbook has received an All-American Honor rating from the Associated Collegiate Press (ACP). This is the first time the KU publication has been awarded that rating.
Blaine King, Emporia junior and editor of the Jayhawker last year; said:
"SOME OF THE COPY was the fifth draft. That was one reason why the Jayhawker was late. We wanted to make the best story of KU's international program that we possibly could.
"We felt we had to choose between
Leadership Day Friday
Approximately 125 high school senior girls will be on campus Friday and Saturday for Associated Women Students (AWS) High School Leadership Dav.
- See a fashion show by the AWS Fashion Board;
- Attend the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority skit, "McGoo at KU," which won first place in the women's division at the Student Union Activities (SUA) Carnival in October;
- Hear the Alpha Phi sorority small ensemble, a first-place winner in the Greek Week Spring Sing last year;
- Hear folk songs by Charles Old-father, professor of law;
- Listen to a dramatic reading by Danielle M. Goehring, Moundridge freshman;
- Meet Michelle S. Blaine, Mission sophomore, this year's SUA Carnival queen.
Saturday's program will include a keynote speech by James Gunn, administrative assistant to the chancellor, and talks by Miss Emily Taylor, dean of women, and Marilyn J. Mueller, Houston, Tex., senior, and president of AWS.
Members of Mortar Board, senior women's honorary, will serve on a panel. They and AWS Senate members, they will lead discussion groups.
MEMBERS OF CWENS, sophomore women's honorary, will conduct campus tours, including Watkins Hall and Alpha Chi Omega.
The seniors will be housed in freshman women's residence halls and scholarship halls with freshman hostesses. A luncheon for the seniors and hostesses will be held in the Gertrude Sellards Pearson dining room Saturday.
"To be sure that information obtained at High School Leadership Day is spread by the girls attending, we are emphasizing a communications follow-up with the girls and their high schools," Sharon Menasco, Wichita sophomore and chairman of High School Leadership Day, said.
getting the yearbook out on time and getting an All-American rating. We chose the All American rating."
Factors in the success of the Jayhawk were "excellent layout, general brightness of copy, and the evidence of plan and forethought," King said, quoting the judge.
"THE JUDGE especially liked the 16-page international spread at the beginning of the fourth edition."
He said the division pages were "very effective and attractive."
KING SAID the judge objected to the use of different type faces throughout the book. The Jayhawker staff used this idea to add interest. Allnutt also felt athletes should appear in appropriate attire, not street suits.
Thomas Yoe, faculty adviser for the Jayhawker, said that the award, the highest possible, was "most gratifying in that the Jayhawker uses a radically different format than do yearbooks from which the standards tend to be derived.
"The Jayhawker is a magazine instead of a yearbook," he explained. "Since it is issued in four sections, it is really a magazine-yearbook."
"FOR MANY YEARS the Jawhawkier staff did not submit the publication to the ACP for judging because KU's book was so different that members of the staff assumed it would get a very poor rating." Yoe said.
"We tried to produce the best book consistent with our standards. If it coincided with the ACP standards, fine. It not fine."
KING SAID Kansas State University had received the top rating for 27 years.
"Kansas State's is a much more formal book," he said.
The Jayhawker was judged in the division for yearbooks in schools with enrollment of more than 10,000.
Interviews for People-to-People placement chairman will be 6 p.m. Thursday in the Kansas Union.
Patricia Price, Bartlesville, Okla. junior and P-t-P membership chairman, said last night the job placement chairman will help locate jobs, especially summer jobs, for foreign students.
P-T-P Interviews Thursday
Students may pick up applications in the P-t-P office in the Kansas Union.
KANKAKEE, Ill.—(UPI)—Willie Miller, Eugene Mitchell, Albert Tuggle and J. D. Nathaniel were fined a total of $454.60 this weekend after opening the hunting season on a pheasant farm.
'Hunters' Open Season
Farmer Olen Bolin saw them shoot three birds in his pens and put them in a car. Bolin gave police the license number who captured the "hunters."
Survey Tabulators Needed by Corps
The KU Peace Corps committee is looking for six students to help tabulate results of a national Corps survey.
The survey attempts to measure the extent of student involvement in the Corps program and is designed to heighten interest in the Corps.
ROBERT GUENTHNER. Augusta junior and survey committee chairman, said his committee will compile the information and forward it to the Washington Corps office.
Robert Swan, Topeka junior and chairman of the KU Corps committee, said the three-page survey is being sent by the Washington bureau to 2,000 college and university campuses.
"THE NATIONAL CORPS seems very impressed with our committee
Rothwell to Read Betjeman
Dr. Kenneth Rothweil, professor of English, will read the poetry of John Betjeman, a modern English poet, at the Poetry Hour Thursday at 4:30 p.m. in the Union's Music and Browsing Room.
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
Coffee will be served.
and its organization. It placed tremendous confidence and responsibility in our students when it selected KU to handle the survey," he said.
Swan said he suggested the survey idea last summer to Samuel Babbitt, Corps director of the universities division of public affairs. The KU committee and the Washington bureau have worked together to word the questionnaire.
Interviews for the survey committee will be held from 3-5 p.m. Sunday in the Kansas Union. Application blanks are available in the Corps office in the Union.
FAST FINISHED Laundry Service
RISK'S
613 Vermont
Now-
give yourself
"Professional"
shaves
with...
Old Spice
SUPER
SMOOTH SHAVE
NEW
Old Spice
SUPER
SMOOTH SHAVE
SUPER SMOOTH SHAVE
New "wetter-than-water" action melts beard's toughness in seconds. Remarkable new "wetter-than-water" action gives Old Spice Super Smooth Shave its scientific approximation to the feather-touch feel and the efficiency of barber shop shaves. Melts your beard's toughness like hot towels and massage-in seconds.
Shaves that are so comfortable you barely feel the blade. A unique combination of anti-evaporation agents makes Super Smooth Shave stay moist and firm. No re-lathering, no dry spots, Richer and creamier...gives you the most satisfying shave...fastest, cleanest—and most comfortable. Regular or mentholated, 1.00.
Old Spice
M
A
Open Every Evening
S
Safeway
Key Rexall Drugs
T. G. & Y.
CENTER
Little Banquet
Speed-Wash
Ronnie's Beauty Salon
ACME Laundry & Cleaners
Western Auto
Malls Barber Shop
Count Down House
Peggy's Gifts & Cards
Elms Sinclair Service
Maupintour Travel
Kief's Record & Hi-Fi
Shop Evenings
1
d1
---
University Daily Kansan
Page 6
Tuesday, Nov. 27, 1962
---
Head of Local Fraternity Refutes Unwritten Bias
Rv Blaine King
The president of the KU chapter of Kappa Sigma last night denied any knowledge of a "gentlemen's agreement" that supposedly figured in the suspension of the Kappa Sigma chapter at Swarthmore College in Pennsylvania.
The president, Fred Green, Leavenworth senior, said, "As far as I know, neither I nor any other man in the house is bound by such an agreement."
The University of Kansas has nominated five seniors to compete for Danforth Fellowships.
Spokesmen for the Swarthmore chapter attributed the suspension to the chapter's recent efforts to "change the unwritten discriminatory policy of the national fraternity."
THE CHAPTER at Swarthmore was suspended by the national fraternity Nov. 7.
the national fraternity said it suspended the chapter "for attempting to involve other chapters in organizing to defy the national's basic principles, and failure to maintain standards of scholarship."
MEMBERS OF THE Swarthmore
Five KU Seniors to Compete For Danforth Fellowships
The Danforth Foundation offers the fellowships to talented men who plan careers of college teaching. They are renewable for a total of four years of full support at the institution of the fellow's choice.
The five seniors, all enrolled in the college of Liberal Arts and Sciences, are Larry L. Blackman, Leavenworth; William H. Breckenridge, Louisburg; Grant A. Fults, St. Louis, Mo.; Paul C. Schaich, Topeka; and David C. Scott, Jackson Heights, N.Y.
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results!
Sister sister oh so fair, why is there blood all over your hair?
Sister, sister, oh so fair, why is there blood all over your hair?
group said they had solicited support from other chapters of the fraternity for the removal of the "gentlemen's agreement" barring non-whites from membership in Kappa Sigma.
SHOULD NOT BE SEEN BY
WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE?
2. WOMEN IN A DELICATE CONDITIONI
In answer to the charge that they had failed to maintain "standards of scholarship," the Swarthmore group admitted it had received letters about their grades from the national in the past, but that the chapter grade average was up from last year.
1. CHILDREN WHO FRIGHTEN EASILY
Green said the KU chapter of Kappa Sigma has had a local autonomy clause in its constitution since at least 1935." Green said. "That is the first year for which I have a copy of the constitution."
3. ANY WOMAN WHO HARBORS VENOMOUS HATE FOR A SISTER!
Spokesmen for the Swarthmore chapter said the group would probably disaffiliate from the national and become a local fraternity.
4. HEART PATIENTS FOR WHOM THE SUSPENSE MIGHT BE FATAL!
5. ALFRED HITCHCOCKI (He would never get over his envy!)
A note taped to the head of the statue said "To whom it may concern. This statue belongs to the University of Kansas. Would you please return it."
The sculpture, entitled, "Resurrection." was ripped from the pedestal in the Arthur Weaver Memorial garden sometime after the KU homecoming game with Nebraska.
THERE WERE THREE scratches, one on the nose, another on a hand and one on the hair but they are not serious enough to reduce the value of the work.
GRANADA
THEATRE ... Telephone VKING 3-5788
STARTS
SATURDAY
GRANADA
THEATRE ... Telephono VIKING 3-5788
A bronze sculpture stolen from a pedestal outside the KU Museum of Art Nov. 10 was found Saturday night on the sidewalk in front of the Marysville police station.
Joseph Skillman, chief of the campus police, said Sunday there are no
VARSITY NOW SHOWING!
Shows At 7:00 & 8:50
Stolen Statue Returned to KU
Misses Bus, So He Steals One BOURNEUMOUTH. England —(UPI) —Army Pvt. Brian Long, 18, was fined $86.80 yesterday for stealing a-decker city bus.
SHOWS AT 1:00 & 6:00
WALT DISNEY
presents
the legend of
LOBO
TECHNICOLOR™
Bentley Enterprises, Inc. - The Walt Disney Production
ALSO
WALT DISNEY'S
"ISLANDS OF THE SEA"
Long said he had missed the last bus back to camp.
GRANADA
NOW SHOWING!
PLEASE! SEE IT FROM
THE VERY START!
Shows At 7:00 & 9:10
TURKEY
Frank Sinatra
Laurence Harvey
Janet Leigh
The
Manchurian
Candidate
RELEASED THRU / UNITED ARTISTS
SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT - 4 DAYS ONLY STARTS TOMORROW VARSITY ART Attractions
VARSITY ART Attractions
TIME:
TIME: "INCREDIBLE PICTURE"
LIFE:
"A POIGNANT TRIUMPH"
The prize winning comedy drama of a young girl's passionate love for life...
a taste of honey
WINNERS--BEST FILM PERFORMANCE AWARD, CANHES FILM FESTIVAL,
1962: Rita Tushingham and Murray Melvin. WINNER OF 4 BRITISH
ACADEMY AWARDS: Best Picture--Best Screenplay-Best Actress
(Dora Bryan)--Most Promising Newcomer (Rita Tushingham)
Performances 7 and 9 Admission $1.00
leads on how the valued statue ended up in Marysville, but he said investigation will continue.
The 30-inch high German expressionist piece was cast in 1920 by the late George Kolbe.
This was the second piece of art stolen from the museum recently.
Off. Ph. VI 3-5666 530 W 23d. Res. Ph. VI 3-5994 Lawrence, Kan.
Paul E. Hodgson
Local Agent
State Farm Insurance
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
LA
On Campus with Max Shulman
Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf", "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.)
Last week the Student Council met at the Duluth College of Veterinary Medicine and Belles Lettres to discuss purchasing a new doormat for the students union. It was, I assure you, a desperate problem because Sherwin K. Sigafoos, janitor of the students union, threatened flatly to quit unless a new doormat was installed immediately. "I'm sick and tired of mopping that dirty old floor," said Mr. Sigafoos, sobbing convulsively. (Mr. Sigafoos, once a jolly outgoing sort, has been crying almost steadily since the recent death of his pet wart hog who had been his constant companion for 22 years. Actually, Mr. Sigafoos is much better off without the wart hog, who tusked him viciously at least once a day, but a companionship of 22 years is, I suppose, not lightly relinquished. The college tried to give Mr. Sigafoos a new wart hog—a frisky little fellow with floppy ears and a waggy tail—but Mr. Sigafoos only turned his back and cried the harder.)
COMMITTEES:
AN AGONIZING RE-APPRAISAL
To those of you who stay out of your student government because you believe the committee system is just an excuse for inaction, let me cite an example to prove that a committee, properly led and directed, can be a great force for good.
A man turned his back and cried the harder.
He only turned his back and cried the harder
But I digress. The Student Council met, discussed the doormat for eight or ten hours, and then referred it to a committee. There were some who scoffed then and said nothing would ever be heard of the doormat again, but they reckoned without Invictus Millstone.
Invictus Millstone, chairman of the doormat committee, was a man of action—lithe and lean and keen and naturally, a smoker of Marlboro Cigarettes. Why do I say "naturally?" Because, dear friends, active men and women don't have time to brood and bumble about their cigarettes. They need to be certain. They must have perfect confidence that each time they light up they will get the same gratifying flavor, the same Selectrate filter, the same soft soft-pack, the same flip top flip-top box. In brief, dear friends, they need to be sure it's Marlboro—for if ever a smoke was true and trusty, it's Marlboro. Get some soon. Get matches too, because true and trusty though Marlboros are, your pleasure will be somewhat limited unless you light them.
Well sir, Invictus Millstone chaired his doormat committee with such vigor and dispatch that when the Student Council met only one week later, he was able to rise and deliver the following recommendations:
1. That the college build new schools of botany, hydraulic engineering, tropical medicine, Indo-Germanic languages, and millinery.
2. That the college drop football, put a roof on the stadium and turn it into a low-cost housing project for married students.
3. That the college raise faculty salaries by $5000 per year across the board.
4. That the college secede from the United States.
5. That the question of a doormat for the students union be referred to a subcommittee.
So let us hear no more defeatist talk about the committee system. it can be made to work! © 1982 Max Blumland
* * *
You don't need a committee to tell you how good Marlboros are. You just need yourself, a Marlboro, and a set of taste buds. Buy some Marlboros soon at your favorite tobacco counter.
---
University Daily Kansan
Page 7
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
FOR SALE
Used guitars, drums, and all instruments.
Wide selection. Richardson Music Co.
18 E. 9th. VI 2-0621 Lessons for all
instruments.
11-29
Black coat. Princess style. size 12. Bex-
before 5 p.m.
11-30
Ladies' coats: one blue wool chinchilla
sweater, two white wool chinchilla
sweaters. $15. Like new. Phone VI 3-7473. 12-4
Wedding set. Emerald cut diamond 6.5 points, 4 baguettes totaling 40 points. Resumes to Kansas Business Office. Ext. 376. In Kansas City phone HE 2-0467. 12-4
Brand New; Ancisotet 35mm camera & case, $64; Ancsco Memo 8mm projector, $52; Kodak Brownie movie camera & lites, $20. Call VI 2-0609. Ask about other buys in cameras, films, and photofinishing. 11-29
German Shepherd AKC. 1 year old, obedient school, long-worth bloodlines. Office or mail replies to Kansan Business Center, 376. In Kansas City phone HE 2-0487. 12-4
PROF SNARF vs. L.M.O.C. 4th book of
Bliber cartons just published. $1. P.O.
Box 1533, Monterey, Calif. Merry Xmas
11-30
Slightly used Spanish guitar. New strings.
Must sell this week for best offer over
$10. Leave name and telephone number
at VI 3-4711. 11-27
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in the midwest-Pet phone 713-289-5000-service. Open 8 to 6:30 pm weekdays.
Stereo or hi-fi diamond needles for most makes. Half price during November. Don't wait, buy them now at Pettengill-Davis. 723 Mass. tf
All kinds of house plants. Potted ...
Including philodendron to be used for
room dividers and in picture windows
Phone VI 3-4207. tt
Used guitars, drums and all instruments.
Wide selection. Richardson Music Co.
18 E. 9th. VI 2-0021. Lessons for all instruments.
11-30
TV shopping? Magnavox 24" automatic TV has a 3 year picture tube warranty. Buy from just $149.90. See the magnificent Magnavox at Pettengil-Davis, 723 Mass.
Printed Biology Study Notes: 70 pages, completed by the student.
Compiled diagrams and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the
Algebraic Communication VI C1 II-3701. Free librery. $4.50. **If**
Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.00 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
TYPING PAPER BARGAINS: Pink
typing paper 85c per team. Yellow
paper 100c per team. Red paper
per pound. The Lawrence Outlook. 1005
Massachusetts, open all day Saturday. tl
Luxurious, warm beaver fun coast, Japanese cultured pearls, alexandrite-diamond ring, top-condition classical records, trumpet savings, Call VI 2-1610. 11-28
A 2 bedroom house $ \frac{1}{2} $ block from campus. Fully carpeted, screened porch, wood stained floors, hardwood flooring, full basement with a large lot. $ 10.500 . If interested call VI 2-2262 after 5 p.m.
Tuesday. Nov. 27, 1962
TRANSPORTATION
RASCAL COLUMN
EUROPE-Discover this bargain! Write:
Europe, 255-C Sequila, Pasadena, Calif.
I don't have an umbrella. Will the person who found a plaid, cloth topcoat, J. C. Penney type, please call VI 2-2760, any time. 11-30
LOST: 1962 1. H.L.S. class ring, Reward.
CALL VI 3-7487 after 4 p.m.
11-27
Lost: Reedish brown collipe pup 5 months
Carried red hair. Reward. VI 2-16-8
11-25
TYPING
Experienced typist does term papers, experienced typewriter. Special symbols and signs. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs. Clark at 200 Rhode Island. Phone VI 3-7485.
Lost—Japanese binoculars. 7 × 35. Leaf
Nov. 10. Reward. Phone 811-2-1340, 11-28
Typing, Spanish, French, and German.
Call Amy Summers at VI 2-0276. 12-4
Will do neat and accurate typing in my home. Experienced in themes, theses, and term papers. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Adcock, VI 2-1795. tf
Typist experienced in theses and term papers. Prompt service, reasonable rates, electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Howard Mhlinger at VI 3-4409. tt
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, books, journals and rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney. 2521 Alabama. Ph. VI 3-8568
English major and former secretary will type themes and theses on electric type-writer. For neat and accurate work call Mrs. Melesdand Jones, VI 3-5267. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPEPST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, these texts. In addition, the typescript typewriter, Reasonable rates, Call Mrs. Charles Patti, I-3-8379, tf
Fast accurate typing. Secretary for 51%
87 at 703 Lawrence Abbott. VI 3-52@
at 703 Lawrence Abbott.
Typing a reasonable rates, neat and accu-
sional, in podium II V-3184,
Mrs. Bodin, 825 Grey Terri.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Ms. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tf
Manuscripts, theses, and term papers.
Also dissertations typed on wide carriage.
Also newspapers 35 each keys.
Experience education 15 each keys.
Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. VI 2-1546. tf
Efficient typist. Would like typing in her
notes. Send to: letter@tech.harvard.edu.
thesis, letters. Call anytime at VI 3-2651.
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast accurate, neat work. Reasonable rates Familir with legal terms. Marsha Goff VI 2-1749 tf
Experienced secretary with electric type-
er equipment, telephone and computer,
either Phone Nancy Coin at i1-3 05244
Experienced typist. 7 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable salary. Mrs.Barlow, 2401 Yale Rd., VI 1648.
LET VITALIS® KEEP YOUR HAIR NEAT ALL DAY WITHOUT GREASE! Keep the oil in the can. In your hair, use Vitalis with V-7®, the greaseless grooming discovery. Fights embarrassing dandruff, prevents dryness—keeps your hair neat all day without grease.
BUSINESS SERVICES
saby sitting in my home. 15 block from
hill. References. Phone VI 3-283. 12-4
hold.
EXPERIMENT with Sleep-Learning-
fascinating, educational. Details free.
research Association, Box 24-CP,
Olympia, Washington. 11-28
Vitalis
v.1.
CONDEMOS DE ALCOHOL
DE LEY DE MAYORAL
DE LA DISTRICTA DEL CÓDAR
MADRID
SIN ACEITE DE JUANITO
RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI-3-1267.
GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I study notes.
Completely revised and extremely comprehensive.
$4. For free delivery call VI 3-8246.
tf
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
ward to 1530's. Ola Snilh. 1939's; Mass. Call VI-2-$563.
TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rental,
and used portables, standards and
electrics. Royal, Olympia, Smith Corona.
Divlveti 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
drafters, chameleons, turtles,
guinea pigs, etc., plus complete lt.
pet supplies. 11f
FOR RENT
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. tt
310 Kentucky, 3 furnished apartments
ready by Dec. 1. Utilities paid. One 2-
room and two 1-room apartments.
May be seen between 10 a.m. and
1:30 p.m. only.
3 room furnished apartment on 28th St.
Room 1: private bath, private bath,
Call VI 3-8190. 11-36
for boys. I room with refrigerator in
room upstairs $25 in home
'hone VI 3-9201 11-30
1 bedroom home, fireplace, dining room,
carpeting, electric stove, basement.
A choice location adjacent to South KU.
Phone VI 3-2293. 11-29
A 3 bedroom house for a family or graduate students. Includes a bath and a half, a kitchen with pantry and station room with pottery stove. Would furnish if necessary. Phone VI 2-1982.
Furnished apartment room efficiency, 1 three room, 1 four room, private baths, off street parking, one block off campus. Phone VI 2-3919. 11-28
Furnished or unfurnished units, singles
Inc. 1912 West 25th. Phone VI 2-3418.
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.
3 room apartment, private bath, 1 block
from the street. Pay $5.00 per night.
Paid. Come and see. 1142 Indiana. ft.
44' x 76'.
11-23
Why walk up the hill when you can buy a bus?
1245 La $1.5 block from Union. Excel lent accommodations for 4 boys. Nite move to campus. Call ment call VI 3-6153 or see after 5:30 p.m.
A lovely two bedroom apartment now being decorated. Partially furnished. Private parking. $77 a month. Phone 818-649-8523 at 5 p.m. or at see 60-75th. 11-21
2 bedroom house 1/3 block from campus,
2 bedroom house 2/3 block from campus,
burning fireplace, fully air conditioned,
full basement with a large lot. $100 a month.
If interested call VI 2-2022 after calling
517-486-8900.
STUDENTS
Grease Jobs . $1.00
Brake Adj. . . . 98c
Automotive Service Motor Tue-Ups, Wheel Balancing 7 a.m. 11 a.m.
7 a.m.-11 p.m.
PAGE CREIGHTON
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results!
HELP WANTED
Married Woman — age 20 to 30 for cashier and fountain check-out. Steady evening work for the remainder of the school year. No experience necessary. Contact Tom Dixon — Dixon's Drive-in. 2500 W. 6th St. Phone VI 3-7446. 11-30
Wanted: student to do delivery work from 4 to 11 p.m. For complete details contact Tom Dixon at Dixon's Drive In at 2500 W. 8th or phone VI 3-7446. 12-4
OVERSEAS OPPORTUNITIES under 2 year contract for single persons over age 20 to serve on rural agricultural, and reasonable project expenses, plus reasonable salary. Warner International Voluntary Services, 3636 Sixteenth St. N.W., Washington, D.C. 11-28
Kentucky
FRIED CHICKEN
Baskets - Barrels - Tubs
BIG BUY
23rd & Iowa
See Us Before You Buy TYPEWRITERS
NEW AND USED
PORTABLES STANDARDS
ELECTRICS
Sales - Rentals - Service
LAWRENCE
TYPEWRITER
735 Mass. VI 3-3644
KU SPORTS
on
DIAL KLWN 1320
7:30 a.m. Daily Sports Shorts
5:00 Today ___ Sports Outdoors
5:20 Tom Hedrick Sports
Are your formals ready for the Christmas Parties?
You'll want to look your best throughout the party season. Check now to see that your formals are in perfect wearing order . . .
New York Cleaners scientific dry cleaning methods keep all your clothes looking bright and new . . .
ir
A
New York Cleaners VI 3-0501
926 Mass.
Merchants of Good Appearance
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Nov. 27, 1962
Debate Centers on Report-
(Continued from page 1)
- Tuition "comparable to that at the two state universities."
- The establishment of "a close liaison with all the industrial and commercial interests in the area needing advanced training for employees along the lines followed by urban institutions in other parts of the country..."
THE REPORT ADDED that Wichita should become a "universities center" and some Wichita readers interpreted this to mean extension arm. The difference between the two is not immediately apparent, but apparently extension arm has a certain negative connotation that the more euphemistic "universities center" does not have.
November 12, the night of the Wichita Board of Regents' meeting. WU students, irked by the thought that their school was to lose its Wichita University status, held a protest march.
Signs outside the Wichita University's Fine Arts Hall, where the Regent meeting was held, read:
"KU ANNEX;"
"The Kaw Is a Strange River to be Sold Down;" And "Thank You, Furich."
And "Thank You, Eurich."
Husband,Wife Sing Debussy
Marie Wilkins, soprano, and Joseph Wilkins, tenor and professor of voice, honored composer Debussy last night at a faculty recital in commemoration of the composer's 100th birthday.
Professor Wilkins, chairman of the voice department since 1935, has appeared in leading roles with various opera companies in Italy, with the St. Louis Municipal Opera and in such touring Schubert productions as "Blossom Time," "The Desert Song," and "Die Fledermaus."
Mrs. Wilkins has sung with the Metropolitan Opera Company in New York. She made her debut by replacing Lily Pons in "Lakme." She has appeared in recitals in Town Hall, New York, and has been soloist with the Kansas City Philharmonic, with the Lindsborg and Asheville Mozart festivals and at the University of Michigan. From 1946 to 1949 she served as artist-teacher on the KU Fine Arts faculty.
Campus Problems Contest to be Held
One of the oldest contests at KU begins today.
The campus problems speaking contest tryouts will be held at 4:30 pm. Thursday in the Kansas Union.
Students will give six minute argumentative speeches.
E. C. BUELHLER, speech and drama professor, said recently that "This event is my baby. I started it when I came to KU in 1925.
"Since that time," Prof. Buehler said, "I've seen many contests come and go, but the campus problems competition has continued for 37 years."
Finalists in the preliminary contest will compete Thursday night. Two trophies will be awarded to the two top speakers.
Prof. Buehler said the purpose of the contest is to give all students an opportunity to speak on subjects applicable to KU student life.
International Club Needs Female Tango Partners
International club is sending up a plea for women of all shapes and sizes to tango tonight at 7 in the Trail Room of the Kansas Union.
Male students have been learning the latest dance steps each week, but a shortage of partners has made it difficult to perfect timing and coordination.
In an effort to attract females, lessons have been rescheduled for Tuesday nights.
Official Bulletin
For International Students: Field trip to the Harry S. Truman Library, Indiana, Kansas Union, 1:00 p.m. International students are reminded that they have until Wednesday noon to make reservations for a trip. Bring forms to 228 Strong Hall.
TODAY
Tau Sigma. 7 p.m. Robinson Gym.
8 p.m. Worship. 9:15
p.m. Wesley Foundation.
Campus Problems Speaking Contest Tryouts, 4:30 p.m., 114 Strong Hall.
German Christmas Choir: First meeting, 5 p.m., 502 Fraser. All interested in singing German Christmas Carols are invited.
the joy of Diamonds
comes once in a lifetime ...
make that magic moment last forever with an exquisitely styled ...
COLUMBIA
Continental
SERIES
$100.00
19.75
$150.00
19.75
$200.00
19.75
$300.00
19.75
COLUMBIA Continental
Palette 16
Palette 16
19.75
$300.00
Palette 16
Palette 16
19.75
You Buy the Rings We'll Buy the License
It's O.K. to Ome RAY
It's O.K. to
One RAY
Ray Christian
JEWELERS
809 MASS.
(formerly Gustafson)
Ray Christian
JEWELERS
809 MASS.
I Am A Popular KU Student!
---
Color me "socially accepted." One of the reasons why I am so popular is my clothes are always so neat and well-pressed.
Color the crease in my pants sharp. Color my coat neat and perfectly laundered and pressed.
Another reason I am so popular is that I always feel at ease. Color the collar of my shirt comfortable and starched just the way I like it. Don't color it scratchy or stiff.
Notice the tie? It's spotless and perfectly cleaned too.
You may color my clothes, but you don't have to color yours. Simply take them down to the friendly folks at Lawrence Laundry and Dry Cleaners.
They won't color your clothes either. They will restore the bright original colors of your garments. You see, they use the nationally advertised Sanitone cleaning process to restore the colors. They are the only cleaners in Lawrence with this exclusive process.
You'll also find your clothes will be returned to you perfectly pressed for you to wear.
Just call Lawrence Laundry and Dry Cleaners and they will immediately pick up and deliver your cleaning or laundry.
You too can be popular and loved by all!
"Quality Guaranteed"
LAWRENCE
launderers and dry cleaners
10th & N.H. VI 3-3711
"Specialists in Fabric Care"
Daily hansan
60th Year, No. 49
Wednesday, Nov. 28, 1962
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
U.S. Tries to Establish India-Pakistan Accord
RAWALPINDI, Pakistan—(UPI)—Averell Harriman said today that the tide is running in favor of a settlement of problems between India and Pakistan, including the bitter quarrel over Kashmir.
Harriman, assistant secretary of state for Far Eastern Affairs, arrived here at 6 a.m. (CST) from New Delhi, where he surveyed Indian military assistance needs at the direction of President Kennedy.
"I FOUND IN New Delhi many people concentrating on problems arising from the Chinese aggression," he told newsmen after he landed.
"I certainly hope nothing happens to change this." Harriman said of his view about possible betterment of Indian-Pakistani relations.
He said he would meet with President Mohammad Ayub Khan tomorrow and discuss the situation caused by the Sino-Indian border conflict "and how it relates to the security of Pakistan and the entire sub-continent."
Observers noted that no high government official met Harriman and his party, which included Gen. Paul Adams, head of the U.S. Strike Command, and Paul Nitze, assistant secretary of defense. He was greeted by Mohammad Sultan, deputy protocol officer.
Before Harriman left the Indian capital he told newsmen that the United States felt that any military aid given India in its fight against Communist Chinese aggression also was part of the Defense of Pakistan.
PAKISTANI OFFICIALS have been demanding an end to the alliance with the United States if American arms are given to India. The Pakistanis are fearful that any such arms might be used against them in the long smouldering dispute over Kashmir.
Pakistani President Mohammad Ayub Khan and officials of his government have charged India's Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru with over-exaggerating the Communist Chinese attacks in an effort to obtain large-scale military supplies for eventual use against this country.
It is believed Harriman will try to convince Ayub's government that it is in its own interests to line up with India against the Communist onslaught.
ASC Lists Nominees For Executive Offices
Election to the All Student Council is more than just something to write home about.
This is what Rab Malik, Pakistan graduate student and ASC representative, told new members last night, following their induction at the ASC general session.
He added that the ASC is the only
Influenza Strikes Pope John XXIII
VATICAN CITY — (UPI) — Pope John XXIII cancelled his audiences today for the second day in a row because he is "indisposed" with influenza, nausea and lack of appetite
Dr. Luciano Casimirri, head of the Vatican press office, said:
"His holiness is suffering from influenza and has nausea and lack of appetite. That is all I can say at the moment and I do not believe any communique will be issued."
However, a few minutes later, when newsmen insisted on some form of communique, the head of the press office said:
"You can say, the Pope was not able to hold his regular general audience today because he is slightly indisposed."
Casimirri denied as "completely unfounded" published reports that the 81-year-old Pope may have to undergo an operation because of prostate gland trouble.
Casimirri noted that the Pope's personal physician was the only person who could make a decision on an operation "and he has not even seen the Pontiff for some time."
However, Prof. Antonio Gasbarrini, named Papal physician only eight days ago after the death of Dr. Filippo Rocchi who had attended the Pope for some time, came to Rome from Bologna this afternoon.
The ASC also named candidates for secretary and vice-chairman, Thomas G. Turner, Seattle, Wash., senior, and Phyllis Wertzberger, Lawrence graduate student, were nominated for the vice-chairmanship. The office of secretary will be filled either by Jane Breckenridge, Louisburg sophomore, or Jerrier Sue Trantum, Kansas City junior.
elected-representative body on campus. As such, Malik concluded, "We do have an obligation and a right to speak up."
He was referring to criticism of his classification of Theta Tau engineering fraternity as a social group. Stuckey also was criticized during elections for alleged poll worker inefficiency.
He said he had not received full support from ASC members and from election committee members
Stuckey urged the ASC to cooperate more fully with the elections committee chairman in the future. He also made the following recommendations:
IN OTHER Council action, John Stuckey, Pittsburg junior, gave a report on the elections. He said:
"I bear no ill feelings about the ASC elections."
- The revision of an ASC bill which requires the elections chairman to get a financial statement of both party expenditures within two weeks after the election.
WASHINGTON—(UPI)—President Kennedy today picked Budget director David E. Bell as his new foreign aid chief.
Kennedy Picks Bell To Head Aid Program
- Extension of ASC elections to 8 a.m. until 5:45 p.m. to allow 25 minutes to vote after the last classes
- The storage of ballois should be in a more convenient location than the business office.
- The rescheduling of primaries for Monday and Tuesday and of generals for the Wednesday and Thursday of the next week to allow more time to get ballots from the printer.
Bell will succeed Fowler Hamilton whose resignation the President accepted to become effective Dec. 7.
(Continued on page 12)
The White House said Kermit Gordon, now a member of the President's Council of Economic Advisers, will succeed Bell as director of the Bureau of the Budget.
- The permanent classification of
Bell's recess appointment climaxed a long search by the White House for a man both able and willing to take over the unpopular task of bossing this country's economic assistance program.
Bell, a native of Jamestown, N.D., is 43 and a graduate of Pomona college in California. He holds graduate degrees from Harvard.
- Former Queen Wilhelmina, who ruled the Netherlands for 58 years and became a symbol of strength against Nazi aggression, died in her sleep early today of a heart ailment complicated by old age. She was 82.
APELDOORN. Holland — (UPI)
Dutch Queen Dies at 82
At her bedside in the wooded estate of Het Loo Palace were her daughter, Queen Juliana; Prince Bernhard, Juliana's husband, and two granddaughters, Princesses Margriet and Marije.
THIS NATION of 11.4 million was plunged into deep mourning for the beloved Queen Mother who had lifted its spirits and bolstered its courage during the darkest days of World War II.
A Queen's household spokesman said Wilhelmina's funeral "will not take place before next Wednesday," allowing for the customary eight-day mourning period. The body is expected to lie in state in the Delft Cathedral beginning next week.
Both houses of parliament met to commemorate Wilhelmina's death.
Apeldoorn Lord Mayor Antoine L. Des Tombes announced the local church bells will peal three times daily for 15-minute periods until Wilhelmina is buried.
She had ruled from the throne longer than any other member of the House of Orange, ascending at the age of 10 in 1890. She was officially crowned 8 years later.
SUA Charters Bus To New York Area
Students who are going to the New York City area will be able to save $20 travel费 by taking the Student Union Activities bus.
The chartered bus, which will leave Lawrence Dec. 19, is sponsored by the SUA travel committee and will allow students to travel to the New York area for about $40 instead of the regular bus rate of $60. There will be no extra charge for luggage.
Tonto Mays, Lyons sophomore and member of the travel committee, said that SUA will charter busses to other area of the country if enough student interest is shown.
Students interested should contact Mays at VI 3-4811 before Friday.
Weather
Considerable cloudiness with little change in temperature is forecast for today, tonight and Thursday. Scattered light drizzle will occur late tonight and Thursday. Low tonight will be in the upper 40s.
Castro May Stand Alone In Demands
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.—(UPI)—Top U.S. and Soviet negotiators went into a closed session at the Russian embassy today amid reports the Kremlin had dropped Fidel Castro's five-point demands for a Cuban crisis settlement.
Reliable sources said Soviet Deputy Premier Anastas I. Mikoyan informed Acting Secretary General Thant Russia would not insist on Castro's demands for U.S. withdrawal from Guantanamo Naval Base, cessation of "pirate" attacks and "subversive" activities, ending of the economic blockade of Cuba and stopping of the island's aerial
Swedes Urge Panel on Arms
GENEVA — (UPI) Sweden called on the 17-nation disarmament conference today to set up an international scientific panel to police a moratorium on nuclear testing throughout the world.
Swedish Ambassador Rolf Edberg told the conference's 84th plenary session:
"If we do not act very soon it will be too late because we do not know how long the favorable circumstances will last which now seem to facilitate an agreement."
The Swedish proposal was an attempt to break the deadlock between the great nuclear powers of East and West — Russia, the United States and Britain — who were meeting later today.
EDBERG SAID the proposed commission of scientists could serve as the nucleus of a disarmament organization to police a fully-disarmed world.
He said such a watchdog commission would "greatly reduce the risk which the Western nuclear powers believe to be inherent in a so-called uncontrolled moratorium."
The Swedish ambassador said the scientific panel would be of value if allowed to make on-site inspections of recorded seismic events. He said he felt the Soviet Union "does not object to the opening up of such a possibility."
Chances for an early agreement among the three nuclear powers appeared slim, however.
There was no immediate reaction from the Soviet delegation. Sources close to other Eastern-bloc delegations showed great interest in the proposal.
BUT THEY SAID Mikoyan stood behind Castro's refusal of on-site inspection of offensive weapons systems in Cuba unless the United States agrees to reciprocal inspection of "invasion" bases in Florida and elsewhere in the hemisphere.
U. S. Ambassadors Adlai E. Stevenson, John J. McCloy and Charles W. Yost went to the Soviet embassy in midtown New York at 11:30 a.m. for a session with Mikoyan, Deputy Foreign Ministers Vasily V. Kuznetsov and Valerian A. Zorin, and Foreign Office expert L. I. Mendelevich.
THEY HOPED to reach an accord which could be put before the security council to wind up the diplomatic phase of the Cuban crisis possibly early next week. Failing agreement, it appeared likely that the United States, Russian, Cuba and Thant would file written reports of the position with the 11-nation body.
Thant was reported to have told intimates of the switch in the Soviet position. It was conveyed to him, informants said, by Mikovan in a private meeting before the U.N. Chief gave a dinner Monday night for the top negotiators from both sides. No Cuban was present.
STEVENSON AND John J. McCloy, chief of President Kennedy's Cuban crisis diplomatic task force, made a full report on the dinner meeting to the President in Washington yesterday.
The reported Soviet shift left the situation virtually where it was before the crisis was disclosed by Kennedy in his Oct. 22 television appearance.
TOLLAND INDIAN CORPORATION
CONSTRUCTION PROGRESS—A workman points to the new School of Engineering and Architecture laboratory building which will be ready for use next fall. The $1,900,000 structure will expand KU's engineering training and research facilities.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Nov. 28, 1962
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
The 'Open Door' Policy
Before too long, the Kansas Board of Regents will have to face a problem which will make the Wichita University problem appear insignificant in comparison.
This issue is that of the traditional "opendoor" policy of college admissions—the requirement that any graduate of an accredited high school in Kansas must be admitted to the state colleges and universities.
MOST STATES have the same "open-door" policy which Kansas has. An increasing number of states, however, are beginning to talk of modifying this policy in the light of increasing enrollments.
The recently-released Eurich Report did not advocate selective admissions in Kansas, but it did hint that a discussion of this possibility would be valuable. One of the causes of waste in Kansas higher education, the report said, is "the practice of enrolling in the state universities many undergraduate students who have not demonstrated their capacity for high quality academic study."
The solution of restricting admissions to only the "best qualified" students is full of pitfalls chiefly the definition of "best qualified."
TO LIMIT their enrollments to the "best qualified," some universities admit only students in the top portion of their high school graduating class. Others use entrance examinations.
Both methods have their drawbacks. Standards of grading differ widely between high schools, making a student's rank in his graduating class almost meaningless. And some authorities believe that tests such as those given by the College Entrance Examination Board and the Educational Testing Service do not have all the answers. A recent book by Prof. Banesh Hoffmann of Queens College suggested that such tests tend to block thought and originality while
penalizing bright students and favoring the "speedy guesser."
Some universities do not restrict enrollments but make it difficult for unqualified students to stay in school. A recent study by the University of Chicago Maroon brought out the fact that a number of large institutions have especially designed freshman courses almost guaranteed to flunk the required percentage of students.
THE BEST SOLUTION to the problem may be the method used in California, which is recognized by many educators as having the best state-supported system of higher education in the nation.
In California, only the top one-eighth of the high school graduates may enter one of the seven University of California campuses directly as freshmen. Anyone in the top one-third of his high school graduating class may enter one of the 16 state colleges. All high school graduates may be admitted to one of the 64 state-supported junior colleges.
Students in the state colleges and junior colleges, if they demonstrate their capacity and desire for serious study, may transfer to the University after a year or two.
THE EURICH Report's recommendations, if implemented would set up Kansas higher education on similar levels. If this is done, it would be a relatively simple matter to instigate an admissions policy similar to that of California.
As the Eurich Report said, there has never been "public enthusiasm for anything less than a wide-open-door policy of admission to universities and colleges for any graduate of a high school within the state." But the date is rapidly approaching when serious consideration will have to be given to a modification of this policy.
—Clayton Keller
Self-starting Parole On Trial
By Dennis Branstiter
A self-starting parole system is being considered in Missouri.
Fifteen years ago Howard Richard Walker escaped from the Missouri penitentiary. He had only 18 months to serve on a 10-year
term for robbery when he walked away from a prison dormitory in Jefferson City, Mo.
THE TERRIBLE CRIME for which Walker had been imprisoned: he stole about $12 from a Springfield, Mo., street conducte-
the took world
SAM CLEMENS OF HANNIBAL, by Dixon Wecter (Sentry, $1.85).
Dixon Wecter had contemplated the definitive biography of Mark Twain, and it is sad to record that only this volume appeared. For it is warm and rich and evocative. It makes one yearn to make a pilgrimage to Hannibal, stand on "Cardiff Hill" and look out over the Mississippi, and ramble the streets, and have a look at the celebrated cave, and realize that not only Sam Clemens but Midwest America was growing up in this village.
tor. Twelve dollars is rather a low wage for 10 years.
This is a beautiful story, a fine biography. Weeter describes for us the ancestors of Sam Clemens, his father the Judge, his mother, so obviously the prototype of Aunt Polly, his good brother Henry, who became Sid in "Tom Sawyer." All the other people are here in some form—the boys who became Huck Finn and Joe Harper, the town drunk, the ne'er-do-well who became Muff Potter.
But regardless of the justice of the original sentence, Walker did steal and he did escape — two acts rather unacceptable in modern society. He had to be punished and/or rehabilitated.
Sam Clemens is shown here as printer's devil, as assistant to his unimaginative brother Orion (a relationship that recalls James and Ben Franklin of a century earlier). This is fascinating reading. America was moving west, and coming down the river, and Sam Clemens was recording this story, as he would do years later in his great novels—CMP
The best book about the American prairies was written by a Norwegian immigrant, in Norwegian. That book is "Giants in the Earth," by O. E. Rolvaag, and it should be read by everyone interested in understanding the minds and hearts and passions of the people who were homesteading in this rough part of America 100 years ago.
GIANTS IN THE EARTH, by O. E. Rolvaag (Harper Classics).
This is a deeply compassionate tale, telling of Per Hansa, the Norwegian farmer, and his wife Beret, of the treeless South Dakota prairie, of the never-ending wind, and the cold, the Indians, the long winter, and the incredible loneliness that overcame the wife and the death that overtook the husband.
In this novel one grasps more than in any others written in this country the meaning of the immigrant experience. Beyond that, here is a novel which has great psychological power, as well as sweeping story and believable atmosphere.-CMP
It would seem that he was both punished and rehabilitated. For after escaping he lived quietly and lawfully in Chetopa, Kan. He married and had seven children.
The question is whether Walker's apparent rehabilitation overbalances the escape and unfulfilled prison term. This question leads to a more basic one: Is the purpose of prison today to punish or to rehabilitate? This is the decision that must be made by the Missouri board of probation and parole.
BUT HIS APPARENT rehabilitation did not hide him from the proverbial long arm of the law, which reached over 15 years to pull him back to prison.
Elder is right when he says a premium must not be put on escapes. But a premium must be put on rehabilitation. Waiker's escape is an unquestionable fact—but his rehabilitation also is a fact. Which fact is more important?
THE PURPOSE of a parole board is to select the prisoners sufficiently rehabilitated to reenter society. Walker certainly has proved that he is rehabilitated. He has 15 years of proof — more proof than can be offered by anyone still in prison.
George N. Elder, head of the Missouri board, said "...we don't want to move rapidly or carelessly on this matter. We can't put a premium on escapes."
The only question is whether an admittedly good end justifies Walker's questionable means. A self-starting parole system undoubtedly is out of the question—but Walker is not a system — he is a man, a rehabilitated man.
walker is a single case. And while good ends do not universally justify the means, neither do questionable means nullify good ends.
In Walker's case, the end justifies the means.
C-56
"FOR HEAVEN'S SAKE NO; WORTHAL — JUST THE UNDERWEAR!"
It Looks This Way
Crown a New Champ
As hard as the ex-vice president of the United States of America tried to earn immortality through a lack of grace, he must yield the top spot for bad taste to commentator Howard K. Smith of the American Broadcasting Company.
When Richard Nixon spewed his sour-grape swan song across the nation, he was crowned "The King of Bad Taste." But here it is less than a month later and we have a new champ.
This is no protest of Good Ole Howie's right to review the career of a national figure who has been in the political spotlight since 1946. Every public figure must be prepared to face criticism. As Harry Truman said, "If you can't stand the heat, get out of the kitchen."
GOOD OLE HOWIE saw a chance to kick a man when he was down and he handled the task with marvelous facility. The kick in the ribs was entitled "The Political Obituary of Richard M. Nixon."
But Good Ole Howie did more than apply the heat; he slapped a former public servant in the face, and he did so with little apparent justification. Not satisfied with machine-gunning a political corpse, he had to laugh at his victim before he pulled the trigger.
AND TO BEST capitalize on his right to practice fair comment and criticism, Good Ole Howie decided that in order to write Mr. Nixon's obituary in full stereoscope, he needed Alger Hiss's opinion of the man who helped prove Alger Hiss to be a perjuror.
Nixon was a congressman serving on the House Committee on Un-American Activities when Hiss, then a high-ranking State Department official, told the committee in 1948 that he was not a member of a Communist espionage ring. The same denial before a grand jury led to his conviction on perjury charges.
Just how in the world Alger Hiss qualifies as a fair and impartial judge of Richard Nixon is a mystery. A jury convicted Alger Hiss as a perjuror whose devotion to his country is subject to suspect—to express the facts in understatement.
James Hagerty, ABC vice-president in charge of news, said the program was "a fair presentation, giving both sides of a controversy." If the show was fair, maybe it should be a continuing series.
ALGER HISS could have said that Richard M. Nixon was a red-hot prospect for canonization and the result would have been the same—a slap in the face.
"The Political Obituary of Abraham Lincoln," featuring John Wilkes Booth.
"THE POLITICAL Obituary of Alexander Hamilton," featuring Aaron Burr.
And for a series closer, Good Ole Howie could direct another tasteful treatise entitled, "The Political Obituary of Jesus Christ." The panelists? Pontius Pilate and Judas Iscariot.
—Terry Murphy
Daily Transan
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Telephone VIkng 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.
Nuclear Rocket Debate Is On
By Alvin B. Webb, Jr.
CAPE CANAVERAL (UPI) — The U.S. space program, never without a good controversy or two going, is warming up a brand-new one for 1963 up the nuclear-powered space rocket. The one it does not have.
By Alvin B. Webb, Jr.
The atomic rocket project is somewhat secretive, and the main points now evident are that it has a potful of names, a matching lot of problems, a rather fuzzy timetable and a price tag to date of $500 million.
THE IDEA OF building a nuclear space rocket was studied by the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) as far back as 1956. It became known as "Rover" when the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) got into the act.
Added to that is a new argument:
should the program be pushed even harder, and will the results be worth it?
Theoretically, the nuclear rocket is pound for pound twice as efficient as the conventional rocket — or roughly comparable to a high-powered sports car matched against the ordinary family automobile.
That's an impressive talking point, particularly for those seeking an impressive jump on the Russians. U.S. space leaders swung project Rover full speed ahead and set 1965 as the target date for the first flight of the atomic rocket. That was in 1960.
Then yesterday, along came Dr. Edward Teller to raise the question of whether the nuclear rocket, as proposed in the Rover program, will turn out to be what it's cracked up to be after all.
TWO YEARS, several hundred million dollars and a wealth of new problems later, the nuclear rocket still is five years away from the launching pad.
The 54-year-old physicist was not opposing the nuclear-propelled rocket ("one should explore it") but instead was warning against expecting too much of the result.
In Washington, Sen. John O. Pastore, D-R.I., yesterday presented some of the more glowing ideas of what the result would be.
"I am not quite convinced that nuclear rockets will offer significant advantages over chemical engines," said Teller.
"In chemical engine development," Pastore said, "there is little hope of closing the gap — unless the Soviets suddenly cease their development work. This is hardly likely."
Patronize Your
Kansan Advertisers
FREE
PROSPECTUS BOOKLET tells how to acquire shares of
Accumulative United Fund through
UNITED PERIODIC INVESTMENT PLANS
These plans (up to $100,000 in multiples of $2.500) enable you to invest a minimum of $125 to start, and $25 periodically, in more than 100 Ameri- periodically, in invest in United Accumulative Funds a diversi- managed mutual fund seeking possible long-term growth of capital.
For free copy of the Prospectus-Booklet and other information mail this ad today or call
Waddell & Reed, Inc.
Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
El Atenco se reunirá hoy a las 4:30 de la tarde en la la casa 11 de Fraser. El atenco será realizado en conferencia sobre Garcia Todos, todas ordinalmente invitados. Refrescos
National distributor—Represented locally by
Radio Production Center, 7:30 p.m.
Room 220 Flint. Executive Comm. Meeting
Westminster Foundation, 8:00 p.m.
Pine Room. Student Union, Dr. Maynard Strohmann; "The Philosophy of Albert Schweitzer."
MRS. FREDRICK MOREAU
1942 Louisiana VI 3-4588
TODAY
Official Bulletin
Mathematics Staff Seminar. 3:30 p.m.
Mathematics Staff Training. 2:15 p.m.
Johnson. A Formulation of Logic.
Organic Chemistry Colloquium, 4:00 p.m., 233 Malott. Douglas Neckers; "Mechanisms of Perester Decompositions."
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses, 7:00 a.m. 11:40 a.m.
Shrine Celebration, Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road
Der Deutsche Verein, 5-00 Donnerstag,
der November, Student Union, Robert
Beruch; und Walter Hakey, Cello, werden
Brahmus und von Webe spielen.
Name ...
Muslim Society, Parlor C. Student Uni-
cerity, Islam Architecture" with II slide,
Muslim, Architecture
Name ...
Address ...
Page 3
In three model years, two-ply tires have supplanted the older, stiffer four-pilces on an estimated 80 percent of new cars, according to The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Company. The more flexible two-ply, say experts, offers a smoother, softer ride.
"Works of the modern poet: John Betjeman" will be the Poetry Hour lecture topic at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union. Guest speaker will be Kenneth Rothwell, assistant professor of English.
Poetry Hour Talk On John Betjeman
Zu Loewenstein To Speak at KU
Wednesday, Nov. 28, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Prince Hubertes zu Loewenstein, author and historian, will give a public lecture on "German Foreign Policy," this Thursday at the University of Kansas.
The German prince will speak at 4 p.m. in the Big 8 Room of the Kansas Union. He will be sponsored by the German and political science departments.
On April 30, 1933, Prince and Princess Loewenstein left Germany when their lives were threatened by the Nazis.
Loewenstein has contributed to the Atlantic Monthly, American Mercury, American Scholar, Social Science, New York Herald Tribune, and other publications.
'Great Men' Group Will Begin Tonight
Maynard Strothmann, director of Westminster Center, will initiate the study tonight of Albert Schweitzer, noted missionary and musician.
The Rev. Strothmann will discuss Dr. Schweitzer and his philosophy at 8 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Kansas Union.
This will be the first of three public meetings in which the Great Men of the 20th Century study group, sponsored by the KU-Y will study this "great man."
D&G AUTO SERVICE VI 2-0753 1/2 blk. E. 12th & Haskell
Barrel of Chicken
25 pieces, 10 hot rolls
$5.00
BIG BUY
23rd & Iowa
FROSTY 2.2
FROSTY ??
JERRY'S Phillips 66 GRAND OPENING December 1, 1962
FREE
Complete Lubrication and Carton Pepsi with Gas purchase
"The Mostest In SERVICE"
25th & Iowa, Next to Chuck Wagon
university men —
remember how hard it is to find the perfect gift for your favorite girl — sister — or mother?
diebolt's affords you the opportunity to buy these gifts in a men's storeat their alley shop
The Alley Shop
at
diebolt's
843 Mass.
P. S. — the alley shop is at the back of diebolt's
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Nov. 28, 1962
Picture taking Time Extended
Poor student turnout to the Registrar's office request for new students to have ID pictures taken has forced a new picture-taking schedule.
The pictures are no longer used on the KU-ID, as in past years. The new pictures are to be used in files in the various University offices.
William Kelley, assistant registrar, said today that only 50 to $60\%$ of the students, who were asked by mail to have their pictures taken, have done so.
KELLY SAID. "I realize that many students had classes when we were taking pictures, so we think the new schedule, which runs all day, will attract more students."
Picture taking has been operating for the last three weeks on the second floor of Strong Hall. A letter sent out at the beginning of that period urged all new students to get this picture taken.
A second letter was recently sent out to those people who failed to have their pictures taken, urging that they come during the remainder of this week or next week, with their KU-ID.
Pictures will be taken any time between 8:30 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. to tomorrow or Friday or Dec. 4, 6, or 7, in Strong Hall, second floor, Rotunda.
Study Contends Bell Rates High
TOPEKA — (UPI) — The Kansas Supreme Court received a recommendation yesterday that a lower court ruling in favor of the $5.8 million telephone rate increase for Southwestern Bell be reversed.
E. H. Hateher, a Topeka attorney appointed by the High Court to make a fact finding study of the three-year-old court battle, concluded that a method used by Bell for computing phone rates was too high.
The company sought the increase in intrastate rates in 1959 to pay for replacement of equipment. Shawnee County District Judge Paul Heinz ruled in 1960 that Bell's rate increase was proper and should be allowed. The ruling allowed Bell to boost its rates to produce the extra $5.8 million despite a Kansas Corporation Commission (KCC) ruling that Bell was entitled to an increase of only $1.3 million.
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
TRADING POST 7041/2 Mass. Ph.VI 3-2394
Located 1 door South of K.P. & L.
in basement.
Youth bed complete ... $29.95
Wooden office swivel chair ... $ 4.00
Child's roll top maple desk and swivel chair $24.50
5 pc. dinette set ... $29.95
Metal wardrobe ... $14.00
F. ech Provincial wing
...k chair $24.50
Filling cabinet $19.95
G.E. electric dryer $89.95
3 drawer chest $10.00
Room divider $ 7.00
Baby bed with mattress $16.50
21" Console T.V. $19.00
Portable T.V. $69.95
Console model record player $42.50
AM table model radio $ 8.00
Metal kitchen cabinet $13.50
Twelve military ball finalists met with an Air Force representative last night to discuss a revised queen selection procedure that will cut their ranks to three.
Queen Procedure Revised by ROTC
The meeting was scheduled after the military science department released a statement reporting that "due to recent misunderstandings and confusion with respect to nomination procedures" student Army, Navy, and Air Force R.O.T.C. representatives would each submit three candidates as queen finalists. The queen will reign over the Dec. 7 Military Ball.
We invite you to come in and look around. Remember a few steps down gives you a big step up in savings.
The nine semi-finalists will be selected from undergraduate KU women regardless of organizational affiliation. The queen will be selected by five judges who are not affiliated with the military science department, rather than by Scabbard and Blade, a triservice honorary military organization, previously scheduled to make the selection.
A military ball committee member said the action came after department heads heard rumors of dissatisfaction that all 12 finalists were now or had been members of Angel Flight, women's student Air Force organization.
"Our theory is that many of the houses on campus chose their Angel Flight members as queen candidates. We had our pick of all the girls on campus for Angel Flight so this amounted to a second screening," the committee member said.
Coordinators To Share P-t-P Responsibility
The KU People-to-People chairman last night shifted several of his responsibilities onto the shoulders of three coordinators.
William Schaeffer, Shawnee Mission junior and P-1-P chairman, announced reorganization plans at an executive board meeting in the Kansas Union.
UNDER THE NEW PLAN the three coordinators will be directly responsible for several committees and sub-committees. The coordinators will report weekly to Schaeffer on committee activities.
The coordinators are Arlo Schurle, Green sophomore and administrative director, Michael Bush, Glendale, Mo., junior and vice chairman, and Jerry Harper, Lawrence junior and public relations director.
They will head seven main committees — hospitality, special projects, membership students abroad, brother-sister, job placement and public relations — and 38 sub-committees.
SCHAETER SAID the executive board (seven committee chairmen and three coordinators) will meet every other week instead of weekly.
"With the growth of P-t-P," he said, "too much responsibility has been centered in me as chairman.
Several times I have been forced to make decisions without knowing the feelings of the executive board. Also it has been difficult to retain effective communication with each committee chairman and their respective sub-committees.
"Under the new setup," Schaeffer said, "the coordinators will be able to devote more attention to the committees than I can alone."
Revenue Service Sets
Two Days to Hear Gripes
WASHINGTON—(UPI)—The Internal Revenue Service (IRS) has received so many protests over its tough new expense account rules that it has reserved two days instead of one for a public hearing.
IRS announced yesterday that a hearing would be held Dec. 3 as well as Dec. 4, the date originally scheduled. A spokesman said more than 200 letters of comment about the proposed expense account regulations have been received.
Pershing Missile Tests Successful
Cape Canaveral — (UPI) — The Army's 30-foot Pershing Missile roared 350 miles across the Atlantic last night in a successful long-range test.
The missile flew an unerring course and landed its dummy warhead in a planned target area southeast of here. The Pershing closely resembled the war-ready model expected to be shipped to U.S. defense forces in Europe starting sometime next year.
It was the 36th success in 43 tries for the Pershing.
State Farm Insurance
Paul E. Hodgson
Local Agent
Off, Ph. VI 3-5666 530 W 23rd.
Res, Ph. VI 3-5949 Lawrence, Kan.
KU SPORTS
DIAL
on
KLWN
1320
7:30 a.m. Daily Sports Shorts
5:00 Today Football Forecast
5:20 Tom Hedrick Sports
Hungry
for flavor?
Tareyton's
got it!
Taneyton
MILK CHEESE
"Tareyton's Dual Filter in duas partes divisa est!"
says Titus (The Chisel) Aurelius, Ars '63 B.C. "O tempora! O mores!', I used to wail," says The Chisel, "where today can you get a filter cigarette with some flavor? Then I discovered Tareyton—the magnum opus in cigarettes. Put a pack in your toga and enjoy de gustibus you never thought you'd get from any filter cigarette."
Dual Filter makes the difference
RITZBACH
DUAL FILTER Tareyton
Product of The American Teleco Company - Teleco is our middle name
.
U of M Accreditation Up for Vote by SACS
DALLAS—(UPI)The College Delegate Assembly of the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS) votes today on the question of the accreditation of the University of Mississippi and six other Mississippi colleges and universities.
The executive council of SACS will make its recommendation before the 384 members of the assembly.
The association warned the Mississippi schools Sept. 28 that they might lose their accreditation because Mississippi Gov. Ross Barnett took over as registrar and tried to bar Negro James Meredith from the Ole Miss Campus. Meredith was finally registered under the protection of U.S. marshals and troops.
OLE MISS and the other six schools are under the same state
rage ɑ
The KU-Y is sending encouragement to its counterpart at the University of Mississippi.
With the continuing bitterness there over James Meredith's entrance into the University, the KU-Y has drafted a letter affirming its fellowship with the Mississippi "Y" and supporting that group's action at a recent meeting. According to a story by United Press International in the UDK Oct. 30, the "Y" members at Ole Mesc endorsed the chancellor's appeal against disturbances at the University.
KU-Y Letter To Ole Miss
"We write to you to reaffirm the belief in a brotherhood of man which is basic to our common organization. We believe that the student Y's are committed to the ending of racial discrimination."
THE LETTER to the Mississippi youth groups reads in part:
Jim Fields, Lawrence junior, who worked on the letter said the KU-Y believed strongly enough in equal rights to send the letter supporting the Mississippi "Y" stand.
But, Fenus said, "we tried to keep in mind we are not northerners sitting on a throne, but persons trying to understand their problems."
One Killed as Slaves
Riot on Village Square
BELGRADE — (UFI)— A battle between 150 police and intoxicated peasants left one person dead and five seriously injured in a village square in Bosnia, police said yesterday.
board in Mississippi. Three courses of action were open to the association.
The Delegate Assembly could leave the accreditation of the seven Mississippi schools untouched, revoke accreditation, or it could put the schools on probation.
The other schools besides the University of Mississippi, are Mississippi State, University of South Mississippi, Delta State, Jackson State, Alcorn A&M, and Mississippi State College for Women.
DR. GORDON W. Sweet, executive secretary of the Commission on Colleges, expressed the opinion that the vote today would be "ayes" and "nays" rather than secret ballot. The college delegates also vote today on whether to accept a new set of standards for admission.
The proposed new standards have been in preparation three years. Although phrased in general terms, the new standards would provide for improved administration, better libraries, a better system of college and university accounting and an improved graduate program.
If the Mississippi schools lose accreditation, students will have difficulty transferring to accredited schools in other states. Also, students from disaccredited schools will have difficulty taking graduate work at accredited schools.
Sweet said that schools generally lose repute with loss of accreditation.
Mississippi representatives appeared Sunday before members of the college commission and made statements on the case. Gov. Barnett promised the association there would be no political interference in Mississippi colleges.
Interviews to fill vacancies on five sub-committees will be held from 3-5 p.m. Sunday, in the Kansas Union.
Corps Seeks Student Help
Positions are open on the national survey, speaker's bureau, counseling service and regional publicity sub-committees. The Corps committee will also hold interviews for special events and counseling service chairmen.
Robert Guenthern, Augusta junior and survey sub-subcommittee chairman, said interested students will tabulate results of a national survey on student interest and participation in the Corps program.
ROBERT STEWART. Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore and former speaker's bureau chairman, said bureau members will publicize the Corps program to area civic, high school and college groups.
Robert Swan, Topeka junior and KU Corps committee chairman, said the special events sub-committee will plan Corps programs for forums and discussions in the area
Jerry Harper, Wichita junior and chairman of the regional publicity sub-committee, said he needs students with artistic ability.
The counseling service, he said, requires students "well-informed" on the Corps program to be in the Corps office daily to assist students interested in joining the Corps.
Students may pick up applications in the Corps office in the Kansas Union.
Chancellor Wescoe Will Speak Sundav
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will discuss "Religion and the University" at a meeting of campus religious organizations at 2:30 p.m. Sunday in the Kansas Union ballroom.
William J. Moore, dean of the School of Religion, will moderate a question and answer session following the talk.
Wednesday, Nov. 28, 1962 University Daily Kansas
The first issue of the Jayhawker magazine-yearbook will be out by Dec. 10.
"The printers are exceptionally busy before Christmas," said Jerry Pullins, Council Grove junior and business manager of the Jayhawker.
1st Jayhawker Due December 10
"How soon we can distribute the book will depend on how soon they can get it finished." He said Dec. 10 is the best present estimate.
The number of Jayhawkers being printed (6,200) is a record high.
At fee payment this year, 5,400 Jayhawkers were sold. Only 5,000 were sold at the same time last year.
"The second edition will be distributed during second semester enrollment." Pullins predicted. "We finished laying it out Monday. It is approximately 60 per cent complete.
"Included in that section are 70 living groups. Only two of them have not had their pictures taken yet," he said.
CRC Committees To Give Reports
Civil Rights Council (CRC) members will hear preliminary reports from two committees checking for alleged violations of the state's fair accommodations statute at 7:30 p.m. tonight in the Kansas Union.
Members of the two committees are tight-lipped about their activities but Don Warner, Topeka senior and CRC chairman, said no violations have been found.
Warner declined to outline the committees' methods or the specific kind of accommodations being reviewed
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
Fraser Flag Found In Dickson's Mail
A KU flag stolen from Fraser Hall on Nov. 17 was found by Jerry Dickson, all student body president, in his mail Sunday night.
When Dickson returned from Thanksgiving vacation, a large package was waiting for him addressed to "Student body president, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kans."
SOUTHERN FRANCE
Study in
An undergraduate liberal arts year in Aix-en-Provence
French Language & Literature European Studies Art & Art History Mediterranean Studies
Students live in French homes.
Institute students enrolled at the University of Aix-Marseille, founded in 1409.
Classes in English and French satisfying American curriculum requirements.
Senior Party!
SATURDAY, DEC. 1
at ELDRIDGE HOTEL
BOTH BALLROOMS
Popcorn, Peanuts, etc. FREE
Cokes, 7-Up Dry Soda
Will Be Available
SWING BAND
FROM 9-12
Dress Will Be School Clothes
FREE WITH YOUR SENIOR I.D.
$1 WITHOUT I.D.
Tuition, Trans-Atlantic fares, room and board, about $1,850.
INSTITUTE FOR AMERICAN UNIVERSITIES
21, rue-Gaston-de-Saporta Aix-en-Provence, France
Town & Country Shoes
Flat Heels that LEVEL OFF
... ready for fashion orbit!
T & C SHOES
chosen exclusively
as the
Official Shoes
of the
SEATTLE
WORLD'S
FAIR!
PICCOLO
$9.95
Black & Brown
AAAA to B to 10
Royal College Shop
837 MASS.
VI 3-3644
Page 6
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Nov. 28, 1962
835 Pass English Tests
English proficiency examination results show that 835 University of Kansas students passed the test.
Of the 1,040 students who took the test,205 will have to take it over before they can qualify for their degrees.
According to figures released by James A. Seaver, chairman of the English proficiency committee, fluency in the language has increased, at least statistically. Those who passed the exam represent 80.4 per cent of the total, an increase of 3.8 per cent over those taking the exam in the Fall of 1961.
Students who failed may examine their papers at the KU writing clinic in Room 28 Strong annex C from 3:50-5 p.m. on Mondays and Wednesdays and from 3:20-4:30 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday.
No grade scores are given on the tests.
Ackerman-Ash
Paul Dennis Ackerman, Gary W. Albertson, Stephanie Alexander, Marduk Alkassez, Jack Elson, Nelson Allan, Alanta Kay Amquist, Sandra Lou Amato, Danny Joe Amen, William C. Amos, Carol E. Andersen, Richard Anderson, Sandra Lou Amato, Judith F. Anderson, Patricia J. Anderson, Stewart S. Anderson, William A. Anderson, Phyllis Antrite Anderson, Charles Kay Arnold, Ronald Ray Arnold, Robert Morton Ash Jr;
Atkins-Bertholf
Judith L. Atkins, Sandra E. Aylor,
Charles K. Baber Jr., Larry Lee Bailey,
aecque J. Baber Jr., Larry Lee Bailey,
names F. Ballinger, Peter Bentley
Barham, Eugene F. Barnard Jr., Michael
L. Barnes, Georgia D. Barry, Ronald L.
Butcher, Barbara L. Butcher, L.
Butcher, Beesley, Gale Ann
Beaty, Pamela M. Beezley, Patricia A.
Behen, Carol Lynn Behrens, Betsy Jean
Belote, Juncie Bena, Ann Cecilia
Johnson, Benz Corinne C. Berbach,
Dennis Earl Bertholf;
Riel-Rrady
Barbara Anne Biel, Pamela A. Biggar Stephen J, Binder, Kenneth J, Bingman Semler, Katherine J, Bingman Kay Blackmin, Terry J, Blackshire, Catherine Lou Biede, Charlene Ruth Blish, Elffe J, Goldridge, William C, Bosseau, Gene Curtis Boswell, Mary P, Botts, Jean Lynnette Bowans, Edmond Anthony Bower, Buddy Buck Bowles, Betty E, Buddy Buck Joan E, Armentrout, Priscilla Ann Boyns Mary K. Bradbury, Patricia A; Brady;
Brandon-Burrage
Diane Brandon, Linda Mary Brehm,
Shirley Kay Brehm, Hairy Bretschneider.
Steven Taylor, Robert Schmidt,
Gary Wesley Brient, Richard David
Britz, Cheri Kelner Brooks, Robert A.
Brooks, James Michael Brown, Larry Lee
Brucer, Derek Bowling, Brewing,
Brucer, Sam Kare Bryant, Marsha Ann
Brunson, Janet Gail Bryant, Nancy Marie
Bryant, Annie Sue Buckmaster, David
Buckmaster, Rachel Burke, Jane
Jane Bunnis, George Edward Burket
Donna Jean Burns, Susan E. Burrage;
Burton-Catiin
Robert E. Burton, Robert Michael Bush
Jane M. Bushfield, Larry E. Butcher, Carlo
Clyde Buckton, Matthias A. Cable, George
A. Cabrera, Susan T. Cain, Richard J.
Calwell, Michael N. Calwell, Bertie Lou
Campbell, David W. Campbell,
Campbell, Cain T. Cindoll, Martha
Custis Cannon, William H. Cannon Jr.,
Robert M. Cantor, Diana A. Carlson,
Robin F. Cullen, Mary J. James
James Henry Carroll, Margaret Ann
Carroll, Betty Irene Catlin;
Catlin-Cooley
Pamela Ann Cullen, E. Ann Challis,
Sally Chandler, Carol Ann Chaney,
Stephen Kenny, Carol Ann Chaney,
Brian Ani Childers, Naidl A. Chriestson,
Brian Jeffries Clark, Kenneth Warren
Clark, Thomas D. Clutz, Clarence B.
Oanne Harry, Michael J. Chriestson,
Jane Jane Cole, Jon W. Coleman,
Sharon Joyce Coleman, James Stanley
Coles, Christine Collins, Tom Hall
Collinson, Peggy Conner, Ken D.
Cook, Arley Ceway, Elizabeth
Cook, Mary Lou Cooley;
Coombs-Davis
winnum D. Coombs, John Richard Cooper, Philip Dawson Coper, Marilyn Jerry David Cork, Joan Cowert, Barbara Jane Cowan, Thomas Cooper Cox, Karen Jane Crain, Carolyn Craven, Thomas W. H. Cross, Eilen I. Crouse, Sandra Anne Crynes, Shirley A. Cullen, Mary Kathryn Curl, Jean Ellen Daniels, Thomas E. Dawner, Dave A. Douglas Dwell Davenport, Betty Jane Davis, Carol Lov Davis, Dean Leigh Davis;
Davis-Dustman
John Edward Davis, Richard W. Davis
Frank Stanley Day, Patricia Sue Deam
Frank B. Day, Jerry Tucker
Marvin Leroy Degroff, Denis J. Delsarto
Joel Gibson Devore, Virginia L. Dick
Judith Ann Dickey, William R. Dickin-
ger, John L. Dickin
Jane Margaret Dobbs, Michael W. Dolan,
Yale Terry Diginow, Michael B. Downs,
Judy Ann Doley, Jan Heather Duguid,
Jack Gardner Duncan, Robert Futman
Dunn, Patricia L. Dustman;
Duwe-Feindel
Richard Kirk Duwe, Gerald William Dykes, Thomas A. Ebendorf, Marcia K. Ediger, Harvey V. Edmonson, F. Carkell John, C. Ellis, Karen Jo Emel, Charlotte E. Ensley, Donald Lee Erie, Cheryl Ann Evin, James M. Ginsburg, Eileen Eubanks, Patricia Ann Euhus, David Ray Evans, Willis Boyd Evans, Phillip A. Everly, Lowell Dean Evien, Robert M. Fanning, Marcia Evien, John D. Featherstone Frederick Feindel;
Ferguson-Francis
Grace L. Ferguson, Linda S. Fields,
Jimmy Lee Finch, Rober Lee Findlay,
Teresa M. Mackay, Roger Lee Findlay,
Mary J. Fishback, Charles F. Fisher,
Clayton P. Fisher II, Suzanne Fisher,
Cynthia Kate Fite, Mark A. Fleming,
Timothy C. Clark, Ferdinand Finder,
Flock, Richard H. Hlood, Jan L. Flora,
Diane C. Flett, Sandra Lee Flowers,
Susan Jane Fogg, Sarah Ann Ford, Thomas
Furlong Foster, P. Frossberg, Mary
Furlong Foster, James Leyro Fox, Sarah
M. Francis;
Francisco-Gimple
Carole Sue Francisco, Judith Anne Fraser, Leslie freeze, Harlan Janet W. Fuson, Linda Mary Gaede, Larry Ray Gamble, William C. Gamm, Louis W. Gangel, Anne C. Gardner, Anne P. Garlinghouse, Anne C. Gardner, Anne P. Garlinghouse, Sandra Joy Garvey, Marilyn Lea Gassiwt, Saraheb Geis, Gregg Cron Gibson, Hilda M. Gibson, Martha Sue Gill, John Decker Gilchrist, Carol Livesey Barbara B. Gimple;
Givens-Hahn
Larry Dean Givens, Gary Leryn Glasgow, Susan Frances Glenn, Jean Ann Ann Good, Melvin Dennis Goode, Gerald S. Gordon, Rona Joanne Gorthy, Charles F. Gottlieb, Howard M. Gradinger, Hubert Huntley, John Krohn, Gerald E. Greenlee, Lynn Deskins Grever, Marilyn Ann Griffin, Lilliam M. Grimes, David L. Groebe, John Allan Grothusen, Rachel Guldner, Geraldine R. Guthaun, Gustafson, Donald J. Gutteridge, Roland Eugene Hahn;
Halbgewachs-Harvey
Ronald D. Habegewachs, Dale H. Hamilton, Glenn N. Hamilton, II, Marjorie
YAHOO
TRAVELING?
TRAVELING?
Then don’t forget your Travelers Checks, cashable anywhere, with a prompt refund if lost or stolen. $1.00 per $100.
MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
of Lawrence
746 Massachusetts St.
J
1ST MEMBER FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
or Lawrence
746 Massachusetts St.
ST
Hogendobler-Jacobs
ST FIRS
Jarvis-Kelly
Linda L. Hogendobler, Edward W. Hokanson Jr., Carolyn L. Hoke, George Leon Hoke, Ferrin Curtis Holmes, Carolyn R. Hooke, James MacDougall, Kenneth Lynn Horwege, Roberta Lou House, Frances M. Houston, Sandra Sue Howard, Barbara M. Howell, Mary J. Hubbard, Steve Lynn Hull, Cynthia Jane Huls, Gene Merrill Humo, Nicomas Nicola, Jeanne Hutton, Marion Gentry Hymer, Terry Warren Immel, Carole S. Ives, Barbara Jean Jack, Paul Anthony Jacobs;
Annieice Jo Jarvis, John W. Jarvis, Julia Jarvis, Phillip R. Jarvis, Mary Linda Jewell, David Edward John, Carol Ruth Johnson, Denis P. Johnson, George K. Johnson, Richard K. Johnson, Audrey L. Jones, Judith J. Jones, Marilyn Jones, Philip M. Jones, Robert Walton Jones, Ronald Royce Jones, Margaret Jones, Katherine K. Keelin, Nancy L. Keens, Carol E. Keiser, Janis Lee Keith, Dora Lee Kelley, Nancy Sue Kelly;
Ellen Anne Hassler, Gayla Marie Hastings, Marie Emma Hawler, Janiele Sue Haury, Susan Janet Hays, Hays Judith Kary Hays, Sue Hazlett, Rae Pat Heften, Steven K. Hedden, Marla June Hefty, Susan Henbereger, Barbara F. Hick, William F. Hick, Larry C. Hickman, Barbara Higginbottom, Richard N. Higgins, Virginia May Hill, Robert A. Hiller, Carolyn Dallas Hines, Ronald G. Howard, Richard Stoner Hite, Tyler James Horne
Koltner-Laidia
Hassler-Hoare
Ann Hamlett, Jimmy, Dale Hammond,
Jerry L. Hammons, Frank Fred Hanis,
James L. Hammons, Robert M. Haralek, Linda Louse Harde,
Luedric D. Harman, Joseph S. Harman,
Michael D. Harman, Sherry Ruth Harrell, James Dean Harris,
Louvenia C. Harris, Margaret L. Harris,
Ruth E. Harris, Jonathan Dennis Hart,
M. M. Hart, Jonathan Dennis Hart,
Janet E. Hartman, Patricia Ann Harvey;
Carol Ann Kellner, Patricia G. Kendall, David W. Kennedy, Timothy D. Kennedy, Stuart J. Kessler, Young Chull Kim, Janet L. Klimbain, Kenneth C. King, Charles C. Kipfer, Patricia Rose Kirby, Frank Hanna, Richard E. Klenk, Elaine Klohr, Judith Ann Knight, Marilyn J. Knitzer, Eric Team Knorr, Theodore Heck Koch, Kathleen F. Kohlman, Iva L. Kolebran, F. Kohlman, Judith H. Kunkler, Judith Jane Laidig;
Lammers-Linley
Kay Louise Lammers. Marvin E. Lampont, George A. Lancaster, Donelle Lang, Andy Cohen, Kevin B. Arnne Ellott Larigan, Claudia J. Larson, Peter Ivan Lasho, Carol Jean Lathrop,
(Continued on page 7)
Special WED. THRU FRI.
Plain Skirts
and
Sweaters
39¢
each
No Finer Cleaning
At Any Price
Fast
1 HOUR
DRY
CLEANING
842 Mass. VI 3-9594
No Finer Cleaning
At Any Price
1 HOUR
Fast
DRY
CLEANING
842 Mass.
VI 3-9594
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
FORD
Quick Service
MINOR TUNE-UP BATTERIES LUBRICATION
TRANS. OVERHAUL BODY-PAINT-GLASS
UNIVERSITY FORD
24 HOUR WRECKER SERVICE
DAY V13-3500 NITE V13-8845
O
(2)
E
English Pro Results-
(Continued from page 6)
Philip A. Lawrence Jr., Shirley D. Lawrence, Bill Gene Lee, Gretchen Lee, Rodney Leibovich, Robert Lennard, David Leepold, John W Lettmann, Dennis Grey Lewis, Martha Ann Lewis, Gene Owen Liles, John W Lewis, Iva Ruth Lindquist, Carolyn E Linley
Page 7
Linn-Mandry
Thomas Arthur Linn, David J. Lipp,
William Livingston, Chu Kwok Loi, Rich-
mond H., Richard J. Bond, A Long, Gerald Ray Long, Mary L.
Longenecker, Anne Stoner Lowe, Larry
Leon Lubbert, Edward Q, Luhmann,
Gerald W. Gould, Leah M. Seshin,
Josh L. Jutton, Gerald D. Gyle, George
E Lvon, Linda Sue Machin, David G.
Mackenzie, John Houston Magill, Gerald
Merrill, Gerald R. Howard, Muriceen E. Maloney, Patricia Ann Maloney, Brent K. Mandry;
Marilyn J. Mavillle, John Davis Marsh,
Daniel B. Marshall, James H. Marshall,
Lois Joan Marshall, H. Michael, Gary Michael McCabe, Robert T. McCarty, Peggy Ann McClung, Kent Aves McCoin, James W.
Brown, James W. McCrain, E. McElrue, James W. McFarland, Teressa E. McGhee, Larry Dean McGinn, Joseph D. McGrath, Joan A. McGregor, Sandra Rae McHardy, Corridt D. Meeks Jr, M. Rebecca Menn, Wendell W. Mercer;
Manville-Mercer
Mesce-Morgan
Tricla M. Mesce, Jacuelyn Metcalf,
James Edward Meyer, Richard L. Meyer,
Raymond Emmett, Ann L. Meyer,
Judy Ann Milburn, Joleen
Miller, Marilyn Miller, Michael David
Miller, Robert Conard Miller, Virginia C.
Miller, Robert Conard Miller,
Michelle Mitchell, Sarah Margaret Mize, Philip
John Mohler, Betty A. Mohs, Carlyn L.
Moore, Donna Re Moore, James Robert
Isabel Moore, Sandra
Isabel Moore, Kent Walter Morey, Mary
M. Morgan, Ronald Lee Morgan;
Morrisev-Nollette
John T. Morrisie, Jerry Eugene Morton, Michael H. Mount, Robert J. Moutree, Richard Eiza, John Munroe, John Michael Murfin, Patricia K. Murnan, Julia M. Murphy, Susan K. Mustard, Martin W. Myers, Dan F. Kearney, Donald Floyd Nelson, Nancy Lou Nemeth, Cornelius E. Neufeld, Niza J. Newberry, Janice E. Newfield, John Sidney, Nickels Billian, William Tebben, Rodney Nitz, Thorne E, Nolan, Randall P, Noelle;
Nordstrom-Peterson
Edwin Alan Nordstrom, Richard E. Norman, Joe L. Norton, Carole Aime Bonneller, Jodie O'Reilly, Don mueller, Linnea E. Odeagard, Linda Jean Omara, Don C. Omer, Shirley R. Ornelas, Diana Jo Ostherhunt, Nancy K. Oyley, Daniela Peinart, Robert P. Peinart, ParinT. Ernest R. Peabody, Donna Jean Peery, Marilyn J. Penn, David H. Percival, Thomas G. Perrifer, Fred R. Peterson, Kent Trayser Perry, Carol Sue Peterson, Mary James Petersen, Patricia J. Peterson;
Peterson-Reitz
Shirley J. Peterson, Steven D. Peterson, Joseph R. Pierce II, Fred C. Piarao, Joseph H. Bacon, Mary C. Patricia M. Pomije, Nancy J. Poos, Ronald Edwin Popham, Byron Jay Porter, Rex Rocklin Powell, Joanne Marie Prim, Caroline Spencer, David W. Peter, Michael U. Quatrochi, James A. Ragan, Michael E. Rathbone, Ted Allan Rathbum, SandraJean Ray, Donald Gene Redmond, Robert C. Reed, Thomas D. Reed, Ronald R. Creech, Mary Martha Reeves, Mary E. Reitz;
Reynolds-Roelse
Donna F. Reynolds, Gordon E. Reynolds, Lois Virginus Rhodus, Stephen G. Richard, Gall M. Richardson, Lorelei Riley, Beverly A. Ringham, Donald I. Ringstrom, Susan Jane Riseley, Barbara Ritterbusch, Robert F. Robben, Suzanne
P. Robbins, Sharon L. Roberts, Sheryl Lynne Roberts, Fax Milton Robertson, Walter P. Robertson, Frances K. Robbin, Robinson, F. Robinson, Robinson, Mairen P. Robinson, Sandra L. Robinson, Robert Eugene Roeder, Marvin Leroy Roelse;
Rogers-Schrader
Rodney R. Rogers, Jeanneette E. Ross,
Patricia J. Ross, Eric J. Rothgeb, Rich-
tom B. Ross, Eric J. Rothgeb, Alice M. Rueschhoff, Paul E. Rubter,
Jay Rumberger, Jill Runnells, Kary Lynn
Rupert, Emily A. Russell, Ronald M.
Rukowski, Atha Luana Royce, Vernon
Sawyer, Susan Vernon, M. Sawyer,
Dena Scavuzzo, Ruth Louise
Scheier, Connie Scheiekoenig, Doyle D.
Schick, Alan W. Schlecting, Paula Adelae
Schrader, Otto W. Scholl, Sanaya Faye
Schrader;
Schubert-Shockley
Virginia R. Schubert, Charles F. Schwab, Virginia A. Schwank, Kathy R. Swain, Virginia A. Schwank, David Ward W. Schwindt, Joe Thomas Scolire, Sharon E. Scott, Theodore T. Scott, Carol Ann Sears, John Charles Seveers, David Seveer, Self, Robert T. Sevier, Harvey E. Sewell, Karen W. Sexton, Solomon Shatz, Neil Patrick Shea, Paula Deane Sheldon, Larry Calvin Shelton, Samanee Carolyn J. Carolyn, Elinor Biltmore Shilling, Gerald Ray Shockley, Lorraine Shockley;
Shofner-Smith
Lowell Gene Shofner, Barbara L. Short,
Paul Craig Shumild, Lillia A. Sibauste,
Florence Sidorowicz, Mary A. Sibauste,
Mary D. Simons, Milla Sills,
William M. Simons, Anne Louise Simpson,
Elizabeth A. Simpson, Judith Ann Sims,
Jane Elizabeth A. Simpson, Jody T.
Skinner, Jody T. Slaughter,
Christi Ann Sleeker, Jerome Marvin
Smeby, Dayid B. C. B. Smith, John Elgin
Michael G. Smith, Mary Ann Smith,
Michael G. Smith, Robert Eugene Smith,
Stanton L. Smith;
Snodgrass-Strafer
Charles L. Snodgrass, Jo Ann Snyder, Karen Elaine Snyder, Thomas J. Snyder, Phillip A. Spangler, Cheryl E. Spencer, Kent Norbert Staab, Daniel R. Stain, Kristen T. Williams, D. Steele, Karen Stenzel, Joy Diane Stephen, Jaclyn Kay Stern, Larry Duncan Stevens, Dan Graham Stevenson, Karen Lynn Stevenson, Dana Ruth Stewart, David Edward Stinson, William Stites, David Wyman Storer, William M. Sties, Thomas Jean Stout, Marybele M. Stout, Thomas Warren Stout, Judy Sue Strafer.
Strayer-Thomason
Jay B. Strayer, Robert G. Strevey,
Stephen B. Stuckey, Sandra Sue Stuckey,
Stephen R. Stuckey, John T. Tropp,
Dana K. Sullivan, Bradford M.
Sumner, Carl Van Sutherland, Joanna L
Sutton, Melanie Shelby, James W.
Mariyah Martyn, Swett, William K
Swinehart, Stefan O. Sylander, Ronald
V. Szczygiel, Jolynne Taibott, Mary
N. Troutman, Stephen H. Watson,
v. R. Teragawachi, James Wilson Tharp,
Franklin R. Theis, Carol E. Tholstrup,
Althea June Thomas, Becky Jo Thomas
Jimmie Lee Thompson. Leslie D Thompson. Martha Jane Thompson. Ronald Thompson. Robert Thompson. Thomas J. Thorton. Geraldine Ann Thorp. Leslie Patric Thore. Dale C. Margaret Thul. Charles Margaret Thul. Bob Charles Tieszen. James M. Tiford. James L. Tipton. Loren D. Tompkins. John E. Trimble III. Fred P. Troutwine. Robert Ray Tryon. Ronald
Thomson-Uplinger
Ray Tucker Jennifer L Tuley
Roy Tucker Lewis A Tyler
Robert J. Uplinger Jr.
Ruth Ann Vajidic, Sharon Louise Vance,
Jesus Eduardo Vaz, William J. Vognir,
acquired by Ruth Anne Woolhees, Vernon W. Voorhees, Linda G. Waddington, Frances L. Walker, Graham M. Walker, John Michael Walker, Patricia Amt Walker, Barbara L. Wallace, Robert W. Wilson, Stephen C. Gwarner, Carol Amt Weaver, Jerri Lee Wever, Judith Anne Webber, Edward Weidenbener, Kelie K. Weinnhimbeum, Wellem W. Wellenbaum, Dolan Kent, Wolland D. Welsh;
Vaidic-Welsh
Wesselowski-Wood
PARIS — (UPI) — President Charles de Gaulle today commuted to life imprisonment the death sentences of Edmond Jouhaud, former general who helped lead the Secret Army Organization (OAS), and OAS terrorist Andre (The Monocle) Canal.
Neil Franklin Wood, Robert A. Wood
Susan Elizabeth Wood, Terry Michael
Wood, Ronald D. Worlein, Barbara Ann
Wornall, Joanne T. Woster, Patsy Joy
Wright, Robert G. Yeargan, Harold Lee
Zank, Jon K. Zank, John L. Zank,
irene V. Zauski, Sherry Lee Zillner,
Fred Zimmerman, Suzanne Zimmerman
David Hairy Zook.
Eric S. Wesselowski, Donald Ralph West, Ronald C. Westfall, Mary Diane White, Susan Gail White, Carole Jean Whiting, Barbara Jane Whitney, Louis G. Wlenecke, Linda F. German, Judith J. Mullen, John Willeman, Aleen Wiley, James J. Williamson, Rebecca S. Williamson, Donald Lee Wilson, Jami Lee Wilson, Norma Irene Wilson, Jack George Wilt, Jane Kay Windbiger, Michael Robert Winn, Stephen R Witt, John Willeman, Wolfheim Wolghenthm, Judith Steele Wood, Lowell Thomas Wood;
Wood-Zook
De Gaulle's action brought the penalty of Jouhaud in line with that of the top OAS leader, former Gen. Raoul Salan, sentenced to life imprisonment May 23.
OAS Terrorist's Life is Spared
University Daily Kansan
He was arrested last March in Oran, where he was leading the resistance movement. On April 13 a nine-man military court sentenced him to death.
Jouhaud, 57, was one of four generals who headed the April, 1961 general's revolt in Algiers and then went underground to fight De Gaulle's plan to grant Algerian independence.
Because the special court was set up by decree under the special powers held by De Gaulle, there was no appeal from the verdict or sentence.
Only De Gaule had the power to commute Jouhaud's sentence. He had heard a review of the case but withheld his decision.
Wednesday, Nov. 28, 1962
About 32 members of the KU faculty will be hosts at "Sunday evening chats" in their homes Dec. 2. Each will have six or seven women students as guests.
AWS Sponsors Informal 'Chats'
The informal gatherings are a project of the Associated Women Students (AWS) Student-Faculty Relations Committee.
Betty Dwyer, Wichita junior and chairman of the committee, said the purpose of the chats is to enable the students to meet their teachers on a social level.
This group of "chats" is the first to be held here by the AWS. Another series will be held next semester, Miss Dwyer said.
"MOST OF THE faculty members were enthusiastic and feel a definite need for this type of thing," she said.
Red Agents Shadow Senator In Poland
Keating, back from his first trip behind the Iron Curtain, said his tour was to get first-hand knowledge of trade with Communist countries.
NEW YORK — (UPI) — Sen Kenneth B. Keating, R-N.Y., said yesterday he was doubtful that congress should "reinstate Poland as a favorable nation" in the U.S. Trade Act.
He told newsmen at Idlewild Airport on his arrival from Europe that Red Agents "shadowed" him and "bugged" his hotel room during his visit to Poland.
Keating is a member of the Senate Judiciary Committee, which is concerned with the U.S. Trade Act.
Evolution Expert to Talk
On 'Speciation' Friday
Harlan Lewis, authority on evolution from the University of California at Los Angeles, will speak at 4 p.m. Friday in 124 Malott at the University of Kansas. Prof. Lewis, professor of botany and dean of the division of life sciences at UCLA, will speak on "Speciation by Saltaction." The University lecture is open to the public.
This Christmas Give Your Portrait by
画图
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
HIXON STUDIO
Selling - Buying Need Help
For best results, use the University Daily Kansan Classified Page
Phone Ext. 376
Daniels Jewelry
For
Fine Watch Repair
And
Quantity Gifts
Lowest Prices
We Accept All Credit
Cards
914 Mass. St.
MAKE YOUR APPOINTMENT NOW
This will assure you of Christmas delivery of your child's Christmas portrait. Latest appointment Dec. 15.
Burch Higgins, Photographer
RANCH HOUSE STUDIO
780 Lincoln VI 3-4575
Now Available
'THE FIRST FAMILY'
L-P RECORD Sweeping The Country
KIEF'S IN THE MALL
For Best Results Use Kansan Classifieds
SUA
CLASSICAL FILM SERIES
Presents
Mae West
in
She Done Him Wrong
at
7 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 28
Admission 60c at door
FORUM ROOM OF UNION
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Wednesday. Nov. 28, 1962
British Boast Better Boots
KU British students say they get more shoe leather to the mile than their American friends.
The discussion of English soles and heels was prompted by a December displav of British goods by a Kansas City department store.
"BE IT SHOES OR safety pins we don't replace any article as often as you (Americans) do." Michael Coulson. Gloucester graduate student said.
He emphasized the superior quality of leather used in England to make a shoe.
"British girls wouldn't be seen dead in short socks and tennis shoes," Raymond Denton, Oxford grad student said. He indicated that according to English etiquette what the best-dressed British woman was wearing for tea breaks was not a pair of dingy "tennies."
"They usually wear hose and flats or low heels. Americans dress for the weather."
He poked fun at a similar contrast between American casualness and American conservativeness in the rash of bermuda shorts on campus.
"When an English girl wears shorts, she wears them for a special purpose and she wears them short."
"In England what you wear depends on who you are. There isn't the same degree of variety here. You could line up a 100 KU students and they are dressed about the same," Malec Graham, London graduate student said.
Coulson noted that the necktie was something of a status symbol in England with ties being the rule rather than the exception on a college campus.
HE SAID THAT ties are wider when they serve as a kind of badge indicating affiliation with a club or professional organization.
"The English place more emphasis on tailoring and on the double-breasted suit. I had never bought a shirt by sleeve length until I came to America. Shirts are sold by collar size in England."
"It seems that British clothes appeal to the upper class in America and they go out and buy good British goods. Mediocre British clothes never get into America except on an Englishman," Graham said.
Jack Fiscus* says...
All Premium Payments Are Refunded as an Extra Benefit if death occurs within 20 years after you take out The Benefactor, College Life's famous policy, designed expressly for college men and sold exclusively to college men because college men are preferred risks. Let me tell you about all 9 big Benefactor benefits. No obligation. Just give me a ring.
*JACK FISCUS
Area Director
P. O. Box 272
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Viking 2-3206
representing THE COLLEGE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF AMERICA
...the only Company selling exclusively to College Men
George III a Topic Of British Lecturer
A tutor and fellow at Christ Church College, Oxford University, will give "A D'enseance of George the Third" at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union. J. Steven Watson, currently a visiting professor of English History at St. john College, Indianola, Iowa, will lecture in the Eiz Eight Room.
KU to Send Four To IFC Meeting
Four KU men will leave Thursday for Pittsburg, Pa., to attend the National Inter-Fraternity Conference. Nov. 29 through Dec. 2.
Those attending are James Carr,
Carthage, Mo., senior; David Cain,
Prairie Village junior; David Stinson,
Lawrence junior; and Steve
Stotts, Prairie Village junior.
Carr, current president of the IFC at KU said all fraternity systems in the U.S. will be represented at the conference.
"Designs in Dance" will be drawn at the regular meeting of Tau Sigma, dance fraternity-sorority at KU, Dec. 11 and 12 at 8 p.m.
KU Dance Group Features Desian
The "designs" will include "Fetish," an imaginary fetish ritual; "Jeu de Rythme," or rhythmic game; "Counterpoise," patterned after the everchanging balances and counter balances of clouds or waves; "Due," and "Anyone Lived in a Pretty How Town," a dance set to a poem by e. e. cummings.
Elizabeth Sherbon, instructor in physical education at KU and dance director, said the program will be given at Central Junior High School, 14th and Massachusetts. Admission will be 50 cents and tickets may be obtained at Robinson Gymnasium or from Tau Sigma members.
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
A Portrait by
The Only
PERFECT
Christmas Gift
VI 3-1171
924 Vermont
A Portrait by
5+5
JIM'S CAFE
838 Mass.
OPEN
24 hrs. a day
BREAKFAST OUR
SPECIALTY
Tired of waiting in the cold for the bus?
You can be there in 5 minutes on a bike from:
Downtown Western Auto
Raleigh - Huffy - Western Flyer
810 Massachusetts
THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES SALUTE: ROY MOORE
Roy Moore (B.B.A., 1953) is responsible for 51,000 telephone customers served from Southwestern Bell's San Antonio office. To efficiently keep tabs on the nearly $700,000 monthly billing, Roy has a staff of 24 people including four supervisors.
A lot of responsibility, but Roy showed he could handle it right from his first assignment as a Staff Assistant in
the Houston Sales Department. From there, he progressed to Commercial Assistant, and then to Group Manager for ten exchanges around Cuero, Texas.
Roy Moore and other young men like him in Bell Telephone Companies throughout the country help bring the finest communications service in the world to the homes and businesses of a growing America.
PRESIDENT OF THE U.S. CONGRESS
THE SECRETARY OF STATE
BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES
TELEPHONE MAN-OF-THE-MONTH
5 V
Btion today Cape
T of M lock atter
Was the unde
T
mids
men
three
Se with of the Calii F104 subn
Th 24,00 Cali
LO
John
open
"mal
effect
open
Wednesday, Nov. 28, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
55,000 Missile Workers Strike
BURBANK, Calif.-(UPI)—Union machinists picketed production plants and missile bases of the huge Lockheed Aircraft Corp. today in a widespread strike affecting some 55,000 employees from Cape Canaveral to Hawaii.
The strike was called at midnight by the International Association of Machinists when negotiators said they still were hopelessly deadlocked on the crucial union shop issue which had stalled mediation attempts.
ockheed installation at Cape Canaveral was struck first at
FEDERAL MEDIATOR William Simkins said he would return to Washington to make a report to President Kennedy on the status of the deadlock. The president may order an 80-day cooling off period under the Taft-Hartley Act to end the walkout.
The Lockheed installation midnight (EST) and west coast members walked off their jobs three hours later.
Several hundred spectators milled with 40-50 pickets at the main gate of the major installation here of the California division that produces the F104 Starfighter and P30 Orion ant-submarine patrol planes.
LOCKHEED VICE PRESIDENT John Canaday said all plants are open and the firm was determined to "make every effort to minimize the effects of the strike and continue operations."
The California division employee 24,000 workers here and at Palmdale Calif.
The missiles and space division employs some 31,000 persons at Sunnyvale, Van Nuys, Santa Cruz, Rye Canyon and Vandenberg Air Force Base, Calif., and at Honolulu and the Cape.
ANOTHER 20,000 employs of Lockheed divisions at other locations, including Marietta, Ga., were not affected by the walkout.
Negotiations were broken off here last night at 10:30 p.m. (FST) and pickets then took up placards and began chanting "the strike is on" as they marched at the gates.
The pickets remained orderly and there was no sign of violence although police details remained on duty.
AT VANDENBERG and Point Arguello, launch sites for the Discoverer, Midas, Samos and other major space efforts, pickets concentrated on roads leading to the bases.
A picket at the Burbank plant said "this could go on forever."
Another commented, "We feel the strike is justified."
At the Sunnyvale facility in Northern California where groups of pickets clustered at all plant entrances, opinions of the strikers was varied.
JAMES P. LYNDON, vice-president of industrial relations at Lock-heed, said in a statement shortly after the walkout order. "This strike makes no sense at all."
"The union has rejected our contract and called the strike—not because our contract is not a good one, but because it does not yield to the union's demand for compulsory union membership or to a vote by employees on the closed shop issue.
"The strike was called by the union, not by the company. It was called surely because we did not agree to one union demand that we believed to be wrong.
"A union shop at Lockheed would force some 14,000 Lockheed men and women to join the union or lose their jobs. We refuse to place them in this position."
PremierAngry Over Downed U. S. Plane
VIENTIANE, Laos — (UPI) — An angry Premier Prince Souwanna Phouma demanded today that Communist leaders explain why they shot down an unarmed American supply plane and killed two of its three occupants.
Souvanna Phouma, who had personally ordered the private American plane to fly into Communist-dominated Pathet Lao territory to supply his neutralist troops, acted swiftly as a possible revival of Civil War threatened Laos.
"The fact that the Pathet Lao fired on this plane is a very disgraceful act," he said. "This is a question which must be settled with the Pathet Lao chiefs immediately."
HE DID NOT SAY how it would be settled, but his statement came as the shooting incident yesterday at Xiang Khouang in the Red-held Plain of Jars threatened to wreck the shaky five-month truce which ended fighting among right wing, neutralist and Communist Laotian factions.
Communist batteries downed the transport as it attempted to land near Xiang Khouang, with rice for Neutralist troops who are intermingled among the Communist forces in that area.
The C123 owned by a firm called Air America was shot down at a time when the three factions seemed to be making headway on unifying the armed forces of each into a single national army of 30,000 men with 10,000 from each group.
The C123 was the third American plane shot down by the Communists since the cease-fire took effect five months ago.
PARIS — (UPI) The United States will renew pressure on its European allies next month to increase their military contribution to the Atlantic alliance, American sources said today.
U.S. To Pressure Allies
Washington may even ask for more than the present unfulfilled minimum of 30 divisions demanded by U.S. Air Force Gen. Lauris Norstad, the allied supreme commander in Europe.
Present allied ground strength in Europe is about 25 divisions, a force which Norstad says is "critically short" in a number of ways.
Europe's contribution to allied forces is likely to be a major subject confronting the Atlantic Pact Council when it meets here Dec. 13-15.
American sources said the United States considers an increase in military manpower more urgent than the creation of the nuclear striking force America has offered its European allies.
"THIS YEAR'S speakers form the smallest number of students ever to try out in the contest. There was a time when the KU enrollment was one-third as large as it is now and when we had as many as 39 students compete in preliminary competition."
Undersecretary of State George W. Ball said earlier this month the United States is willing to help create an independent West European nuclear striking force.
American sources said the United States might sell its allies polaris missiles to be mounted on American-manned and owned nuclear submarines in European waters.
E. C. Buchler, speech and drama professor who originated and developed the annual contest in 1925, said.
Five Students in Speech Contest Finals
The finalists and their speech titles are; Analee Burns, Aurora, Colo, sophomore, "Western Civilization — What Now?" James Fox, Lawrence senior, "Position of the Independent Student on the KU Campus"; John Pulley, Kansas City freshman, "Discrimination"; Alan Gribben, Parsons junior "Indifference, Incorporated," and Gary Brient, Overland Park sophomore "Cultural Lag at KU."
Five KU students will compete in the final round of the campus problems speaking contest at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union.
The sources said it is unlikely that Washington would give or sell medium-range nuclear missiles to European countries to be mounted on the continent of Europe. It certainly would not give nuclear warheads to the Europeans, they said.
The 37th annual contest is sponsored by the speech and drama department.
Trophies will be awarded to the two top speakers.
Prof. Buehler explained the purpose of the contest is to give students an opportunity to orally editorialize on campus problems affecting student welfare.
Judges for the final round are Dan Palmquist, a former KU speech and drama professor, Gerald Pearson, director of continued education in the University extension department, and Carl Larson, Lawrence graduate student.
Duane Smith, Lawrence graduate student, will emcee the program.
CIA to Interview Job Candidates
Fraternity Jewelry
Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles, Cups, Trophies, Medals
The CIA is the executive agency responsible for the coordination of the foreign intelligence activities of the U.S. government. CIA is particularly interested in students with either graduate or undergraduate degrees who are outstanding in language ability or in the physical sciences, and who have an interest in foreign affairs.
A representative of the United States Central Intelligence Agency will be on campus during the first week of December to interview prospective job candidates.
Interested students should inquire at the placement bureau in the College office, or the engineering placement office in Hoch Auditorium for further information and interview appointments.
Balfour
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER
★ 7:30 Allen Field House ★
KU vs. MONTANA
STUDENT ID's ADMIT TO ALL GAMES
KANSAS BASKETBALL HOME OPENER
Saturday, Dec. 1
BUSHED?
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
NO PRESCRIPTION NEEDED
MORE JOBS BETTER PRODUCTS LOWER PRICES Advertising works for you!
A man is holding his head up with both hands. He is wearing a striped shirt.
TIME OUT!
for Substitutions
On the football field it is the coach who maps the team strategy and makes the substitutions. In the insurance field only a competent and experienced local agent can adequately do the coaching.
That is why we are calling time out. It's time to substitute modern, up-to-date package policies for individual contracts. This strategy can broaden your protection and save you money.
OUR ADVICE COSTS YOU NOTHING...
YOU ARE NEVER OBLIGATED TO BUY
CHARLTON INSURANCE
In Business 102 Enjoyable Years
INSURANCE BUILDING
Phone VI 3-5454
Page 10
University Daily Kansan Wednesday. Nov. 28, 1962
Along the JAYHAWKER trail
By Ben Marshall
Six-three-one. Four-two-one. Fourth place.
Translation: The Kansas Jayhawkers finished the 1962 football season with an overall record of six wins, three losses, and one tie. In Big Eight play, the Hawkers won four, lost two, and tied one.
Last year the Jayhawkers went to the Bluebonnet Bowl in Houston, Texas, with an identical overall record of 6-2-1, but this season Coach Jack Mitchell's charges had to settle for fourth-place in the Big Eight and no bowl bids.
SEVERAL FACTORS made the difference between the 1961 and 1962 seasons.
The first, of course, was the momentum which Oklahoma picked up after losing two of its first three games. The Sooner line toughened and jelled, while backs Joe Don Looney and Jim Grisham ripped up opponents on the ground. And finally, the underrated little Sooner quarterback, Monte Deere (5-10, 170), started dropping his aerial bombs on the opponents' secondaries.
Secondly. Nebraska was an unpleasant surprise.
Cornhusker halfback Willie Wood, who blandly stated the week before the KU-NU game (following the Nebraska loss to Missouri) that "Kansas will pay," turned out to be a better prophet than Mohammed.
AND THEN MISSOURL
Last week's 3-3 tie with the Tigers at Columbia shot both Kansas and Missouri out of a three-way tie for the Big Eight's runner-up position, and possibly cost the Hawkers their second straight bowl berth.
In the record books, the tie with Missouri last Saturday was the only difference between the 1961- and 1962-model Jayhawkers.
Closer observation, however, reveals two other major factors in the Hawker slip this season—passing and defense.
IT TOOK COACH Jack Mitchell nine and three-fourths ball games to realize that he might possibly have a better passer than last season's All-American, John Hadl, sitting on the bench.
While Rodger McFarland proved to be a capable field general as long as the Hawkers stuck to the ground, Brian Palmer could have added some aerial wizardry to KU's offensive machine that would have taken some of the pressure off the No.1 signal-caller.
As soon as the first and second unit lines had been molded early in the season, the Hawkers lost starting guard Ken Tiger for four games, and second unit guards Duke Collins and Ron Marsh for the last five games, which weakened the interior line considerably.
BUT THERE WERE a few bright spots in the 1962 Jayhawker football season, too.
All-Conference halfback Gale Sayers was the principle reason why KU led the Big Eight in rushing. The sophomore flash racked up 1125 yards rushing, only four short of the KU record 1129 set by Wade Stinson in 1950.
Fullback Armand Baughman, runner-up to Sayers in the rushing department, carried his share of the offensive load, too—especially in the 33-21 win over California.
The season, however, is over. It can't be replayed, even though several different decisions might have altered the Jayhawkers' record for the better.
Goodbye bowl bids. Maybe next year.
VARSITY ART Attractions
Now Showing!
Limited Engagement
PATRICK BURGER
"Words Are Completely Insufficient To Express The True Quality And Extent Of Eloquence Got Into This Picture!"
Rita Tushingham
Winner Best Performance Award
Cannes Film Festival 1962
Murray Melvin
Winner Best Performance Award
Cannes Film Festival 1962
Winner of 4 British Academy Awards
BOSLEY CROWTHER, NEW YORK TIMES
Performances 7 and 9
Adm. $1.00
AFTER LOSING two of its first three games and looking like anything but the team that was supposed to be a national contender in another year, Oklahoma suddenly found itself. With an awesome blend of explosive offense and Herculean defense, Oklahoma shocked six straight foes — shutting out four in a row — and romped unruffled to the Big Eight Conference championship and the Orange Bowl.
This was certainly welcome news to dedicated Oklahoma football fans who had watched their Sooners tumble from a perennial power to obscurity within their own conference. But even they were not fully prepared for what happened.
NORMAN, Okla. — (UPI) — One day last summer Oklahoma football coach Bud Wilkinson surprised his army of followers by announcing that he was very optimistic about his team's chances this season.
"We have people on our squad with more ability than we've had in three or four years and I really feel our team has a chance to play well this season," he said. "I think we have a squad with a chance to improve rapidly as the season progresses."
OU Success Does Not Surprise Wilkinson
a taste OF honey
The man behind this amazing resurgence, capped by Saturday's 34-6 win over Nebraska was, of course, Bud Wilkinson, the 46-year-old greyhaired genius of the gridiron
Final Stats List Big 8 Stars High
Produced and directed by TONY RICHARDSON
A Commercial Distributing Release
Adults Only!
Kansas halfback Gale Sayers, with 1125 yards rushing, is No.3 in that department among the nation's college football players in final statistics released yesterday by the NCAA.
Sayers amassed his yardage on 158 carries, and averaged 7.1 yards a carry.
John Roland of Missouri is sixth in rushing and Dave Hoppmann of Iowa State is ninth. Hoppmann is also ninth in total offense with 1,477 yards. Roland is tied for eighth in scoring with 78 points.
Joe Don Looney of Oklahoma is the nation's best punter with an average of 43.8 yards a kick.
-NOW-
named today by United Press International as college football "Coach of the Week."
Frank Sinatra Laurence Harvey Janet Leigh
Shows at 7:00 and 9:10
The Manchurian Candidate
Winning certainly is nothing new for Wilkinson, who has more victories to his credit than any other active college coach and set a national record by winning 47 consecutive games from 1953 to 1956 with three national champions to his credit, but expert coaching was never more evident than this season when Wilkinson and his staff had to practically rebuild from the ground up.
PLEASE! Note show times and see it from the starts!
WWW.WORLDWIDE.GETTABOOK.COM
RELEASED THRU UNITED ARTISTS
BUT MODEST BUD, who never did hold too much stock in winning streaks, gives full credit to the team.
-NEXT-
Breaks, too, played a big part in the Sooner comeback.
He had just two starters back from the 1961 team that won its last five games after losing the first five. Though nine seniors played key roles, Wilkinson had to go with four sophomores on the first team and four more in the alternate unit. He also had to override a crippling rash of pre-season injuries and develop Monte Deere into a top-flight quarterback.
"We have had marvelous leadership from our seniors and a dedicated team effort," he said. "Morale is awfully good. Our sophomores are coming along, but we actually are a senior team."
STARRING Bette Davis and Joan Crawford
Unbelievable Suspense and Terror!
SEVEN ARTS PRESENTS AN ASSOCIATES AND ALDRICH PRODUCTION
---
RECOMMEND IT TO YOUR ENEMIES!
THE UNBEARABLE TERROR MAY DRIVE THEM MAD! MAD!
WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE?
"There is a narrow dividing line between being good and being almost good." Wilkinson said. "You can always go back to one or two plays that could have gone either way and made the difference. They have been consistently going our way lately."
COMING
-SATURDAY-
GRANADA
THEATRE... Telephone VKJNG 3-5788
Baker Wins Heisman Cup
Baker, a six-foot, three-inch, 21- year-old senior from Portland, Ore., will be presented with the award by U.S. Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy at a dinner here on Dec. 5. The trophy is presented annually by the Downtown Athletic Club.
NEW YORK — (UPI) — Southpaw quarterback Terry Baker of Oregon State, the national leader in total offense, yesterday was named winner of the Heisman Memorial Trophy as the outstanding college football player in 1962.
Baker received a total of 707 points in the balloting by sports writers and broadcasters throughout the nation. Halfback Jerry Stovall of Louisiana State was second with 618 points and tackle Bob Bell of Minnesota third with 429.
Baker has gained 2.276 yards so far this season in 10 games and will lead Oregon State against Villanova in the annual Liberty Bowl game in Philadelphia on Dec. 15.
Baker received the first-place votes of 172 of the 1,109 electors, while Stovall received 112, and center Lee Roy Jordan of Alabama. 70. Jordan was fourth on total points in the overall balloting with 321.
Each elector voted for three players, and ballots were compiled on a basis of 3-2-1 points for votes from first to third.
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
THE CAMPUS
Jay
SHOPPE
12th & Oread
As seen in Seventeen
THE CAMPUS
Jay SHOPPE
12th & Oread
Poor Boys®
Love
Hot Dogs®
by Thermo-Jac
Poor Boy pullover . . . the sweater look at a poor boy price! In sweater colors of green, red, mocha or black. Small, medium or large. Perfect topper for Hot Dogs . . . T J's famous tapers that fit like skin! Sweater colors of green, red, mocha or black. True Junior sizes 5 thru 15. Both of soft sweatshirt knit . . . completely washable.
$3.98 each
One
Wednesday. Nov. 28, 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 F
2 pm on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion.
TYPING
Experienced typist does term papers, thesis, manuscripts and dissertations on electric typewriter. Special symbols and signs. Prompt avail reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook at 2000 Rhode Island. PHI 3-7485. tf
Typing, Spanish, French, and German.
Call Amy Summers at VI 2-0276. 12-4
Will do neat and accurate typing in my
home. Experienced in themes, theses, and
term papers. Electric typewriter. Mrs.
Adcock. VI 2-1795. $^{ff}$
Typist experienced in theses and term papers. Prompt service, reasonable rates, electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Howard MHLinger at VI 3-4409. tt
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type the papers, term papers, articles, research reports, resumes, Electric typewriter, Mrs. McEldowney, 2521 Alabama. Ph. VI 3-8568.
English major and former secretary will type themes and theses on electric typewriter. For neat and accurate work call Mrs. Melisand Jones. VI 3-5267. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate information on an electronically stored, Reasonable rates. Cf. Mr. Charles Patti, Vl 3-8379.
Fast accurate typing Secretary for 51%
fast accurate typing Robertson, VI 3-52%
63 Lawrence Avenue Ave
Typing — reasonable rates, neat and acc-
eptive.
Miss. Bedin, 825 Hesperia Terr.
EXPERIENCED TYPEIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tt
Manuscripts, theses, and term papers Also dissertations typed on wide carriage paper from a library Experience in education and sciences Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI 2-1546 t
MILLIKEN'S S.O.S. — always first quality typing on IBM machines, equipped with carbon ribbons. Open 24, a day. 1021½ Massachusetts. VI 3-5290. M_wFaF·f
Efficient typist. Would like typing in her home. Special attention to term reports, thesis, letters. Call anytime at VI 3-2651.
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
accurate, neat work. Reasonable rates.
Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff
VI 2-1749.
Experienced secretary with electric type-
phone Nancy Cain in at VI 5-0254, tf
Experienced typist. 7 years experience in theses and term papers. Electronic type writer. Test accurate service. Resumes to Barlow, Barlow. 2017 Yale Rd., VI 2-1648. MRS
GUNS: LAWRENCE FIREARMS CO.
special this week M1903 (not A3) made
at Springfield. Open upper deck.
Hook. Only $37.36. Handsrums
reblued. 1026 Ohio. 11-30
BUSINESS SERVICES
MILKILLEN'S "S.O.S." Open 24 hours a day. Regularly Open a am-12:30 Efficiency
- STUDENT TYPING & THESES
MATTERS DIDDLY
- CATING & THERMO-FAX COPYING
• COMPLETE SECRETARIAL & AN-
•
- CUSTOM GESTETER DUPLICATING & THERMO-FAX COPYING
- COMPLETE SECRETARIAL & ANSWERING SERVICE, Office Space
Availability:
1021% Massachusetts
Ph. VI 3-5920
M-W-F-1f
Baby sitting in my home i_3 block from
child. References. Phone VI 3-2263. 12-4
EXPERIMENT with Sleep-Learning! Fascinating, educational. Details free. Research Association, Box 24-CP. Olympia, Washington. 11-28
RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. V 3-1267. tt
GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I study notes.
Completely revised and extremely comprehensive. $4. For free delivery call VI 3-8246. tf
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
warding advice. Ola Smaith
9391; Mass. Call VI 91-5263.
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center. 1218
Conn. Personal service—sectionalized
birds, hamsters, chameleons, turtles,
pets supplies, plus complete pets.
tf
LARRY CRUM suggests all kinds of Pancakes. T-Bone steak only 89c. We are open 24 hours a day. "K"-Pancake Grill and Sundries. 14th and Mass. tf
TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rental
equipments for telecommunications,
electrics. Royal, Olympia, Smith Corona,
Olivetti and Remington portables. Bond
Typewriter, Typewriter 7, Mass.
Phone VI 3-3644.
RASCAL COLUMN
I don't have an umbrella. Will the person who found a plaid, cloth topcap, J. C. Penney type, please call VI 2-2760, any time. 11-50
Lost: Reddish bighorn collie pup 5 months
Making red harness. Reward. VI 2-1601.
19:29
FOR SALE
Lost- Japanese binculars, 7 × 35. Leaf-
No. 12. Reward. Phone VI 2-1340. 1340.
Nov. 10. Reward. Phone VI 2-1340. 1340.
1956 Bulk with new tires in excellent condition $665 or make of old CALL VI 3-7025.
'52 Mercury 2-door hardtop with stick shift and overdrive. Contact Mike Williams at 945 Emery Rd. or phone VI 3-7922.
1955 Ford Customline; radio, heater,
Ford V-6000 engines included
V-3500-5-203 at 6 p.m.
11-28
RCA stereo console — two years old.
Eico multiplex FM tuner, new. Component hi-fi system by Garrard, Heath, electrovice. Call VI 3-7450. 12-43 am.
TriumphTR4, 1662 model. White-red interior and fully equipped. $2450. W. R.Wycoff, 5622 Russell, Mission, Kansas. Or phone HE 2-5840. 12-4
Used guitars, drums, and all instruments.
Wide selection. Richardson Music Co.
18 E. 9th. VI 2-0021. Lessons for all instruments
11-29
black coat, Princess style, size 12. Ex-
pensive cardigan, $14. Phone IVI,
before 5 p.m. 11-30
Ladies' coats: one blue wool chinchilla-
hillie coat, one black wool chinchilla-
hillie $15. Like new. Phone VI 3-7473. 12-4-
Wedding set. Emerald cut diamond 6.5 points, 4 baguettes totaling 40 points. Receives $195,000 in gifts applies to Kansas Business Office. Ext. 376. in Kansas City phone HE 2-0467. 12-
German Shepherd AKC, 1 year old, obedient school, long-worth bloodline. Office at诉. 376. In Kansas City phone HE 2-0467. 12-4
PROF. SNARF vs. L.M.O.C. 4th book of Bibler cartoons just published. $1. P.O.
Box 1533, Monterey, Calif. Merry Xmas.
11-20
Brand New: Ancosset 35mm camera &
case, $64; Anso Memo 8mm projector,
$52; Kodak Brownie movie camera &
lites, $20. Call VI 2-0609. Ask about other
buys in cameras, films, and photofishing.
11-29
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in the midwest—Pet phone V1.20-8234 service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days.
Stereo or hi-fi diamond needles for most makes. Half price during November. Don't wait, buy them now at Pettengill-Davis, 723 Mass. If
All kinds of house plants. Potted . . .
including philodendron to be used for
room dividers and in picture windows.
Phone VI 3-4207. tf
Used guitars, drums and all instruments.
Wide selection. Richardson Music Co.
18 E. 9th. VI 2-0021. Lessons for all instruments.
11-30
TV shopping? Magnavox 24" automatic TV has a 3 year picture tube warranty. TVs have a price range from just $149.90. See the magnificent Magnavox at Pettengil-Davis, 723 Mass.
Printed Biology Study Notes: 70 pages.
bioscience diagrams and definitions; revised
for all classes. Formerly known as the
biology宝利. Call VI 2-3701. Free librery.
$4.50. tf
Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive. mimeographed and bound for $4.00 per copy. Call VI 2-1801 for free delivery if
TYPING PAPER BARGAINS: Pink
typing paper 85c per ream. Yellow
matte paper 90c per ream.
pound. The Lawrence Outlook. 1005
Massachusetts, open all day Saturday. tt
Luxurious, warm beaver fur coat, Japanese cultured pearls, alexandrite-direc-
tions, classical trombones, treasured and hi-fi components, tremendous savings. Call VI 2-1610. 11-28
A 2 bedroom house $\frac{1}{2}$ block from campus. Fully carpeted, screen porch, wood-framed kitchen, built-in full basement with a large lot. $10.500. If interested call VI 2-2202 after 5 p.m.
FOR RENT
Furnished or unfurnished units, single-
room units. Inc. 1912 West 25th Phone VI 2-3416.
EUROPE-Discover this bargain! Write
Europe, 255-C Sequoia, Pasadena, CA,
90641
2 bedroom house furnished for men students. Utilities paid. Phone VI 3-9596
TRANSPORTATION
Classified Display Rates
11-28
A 2 bedroom house 19 block from campus. Fully carpeted, screened porch, wood burning fireplace, fully air conditioned. Full basement with a large lot. $100 a month. If interested call VI 2-2202 after 5 p.m. 11-30
One time -----$1.25/inch
Monthly Rate
Large furnished apartment with private bath and entrance. Newly furnished and decorated. 1 block from campus. Phone VI 2-3:50 or VI 3-2263. 11-30
Every day ___ $1.00/inch
No art work or engraving allowed
1510 Kentucky, 3 furnished apartments ready by Dec. 1. Utilities paid. One 2-room apartment and two 1-room apartments. May be seen between 10 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. only.
3 room apartment, private bath. 1 block
paid. Come and see. 1142 Indiana. if
Call KU-376 or bring your ads to 111 Flint Hall
3 room furnished apartment on 25th St.
RentalIVATE bath, parking
Area Call VI 3-8190 11-50
For boys. I room with refrigerator in
upstairs $25 a month.
Phone VI 3-9011. 11-30
A 3 bedroom house for a family or graduate students. Includes a bath and a half, office and classroom room with potbelly stove. Would furnish if necessary. Phone VI 2-1982.
Furnished apartment room efficiency, 1 three room, 1 four room, private baths; off street parking, one block off campus. Phone VI 2-3919. 11-28
2 bedroom home, fireplace, dining room,
carpeting, electric stove, basement.
A choice location adjacent to South KU.
Phone VI 3-5293. 11-29
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
Furnished or unfurnished unit, single-
bedroom. 1912 West 25th. Phone VI 2-3416,
Inc.
12-3
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.
FURNISHED OFFICE SPACE is now available by the day, week or month. Reasonable rates are set at the Secret Service Service. Call VI 512-5320 or see them at 10211's Mass.
HELP WANTED
M-W-F-tf
Vanted: student to do delivery work from 4 to 11 p.m. For complete details contact Tom Dixon at Dixon's Drive In at 2500 W. 6th or phone V3-74468. 12-4
Married Woman — age 20 to 30 for cashier and fountain check-out. Steady evening work for the remainder of the school year. No experience necessary. Contact Tom Dixon — Dixon's Drive-in. 2500 W. 6th St. Phone VI 3-7446. 11-30
OVERSEAS OPPORTUNITIES under 2 year contract for single persons over age 20 to serve on rural agricultural, and education projects; expenses plus international salary. WWW.InspInternational Voluntary Services. 3636 Sixteenth St. N.W., Washington, D.C. 11-28
MISCELLANEOUS
Free kittens. Phone VI 2-3234.
Having a Party?
Crushed Ice
Ice Cold 6-pacs
of all kinds
PARTY SUPPLIES
LAWRENCE ICE CO.
6th & Vt., VI 3-0350
© 1962 THE PARKER PEN COMPANY, JANESVILLE, WISCONSIN.
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. It only costs $3.95, however, which should leave you with enough date money for an impressive presentation ceremony in romantic surroundings such as the second booth from the back in your local drugstore.
The new Parker Arrow comes in black,
dark blue, light blue, light gray, and bright red, with a choice of four instantly replaceable solid 14K gold points. Gift-boxed with five free cartridges.
P. S. To girls: a Parker Arrow—besides being a very romantic gift—comes in one size (the right one), should last at least ten times longer than a scarf or a tie, and should bring in a harvest of correspondence you'll cherish the rest of your life.
PARKER Maker of the world's most wanted pens
New PARKER ARROW only $3^{95}
Page 12 University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Nov. 28, 1962
Bonn Regime Still Shaky
BONN, Germany—(UPI)—Chancellor Konrad Adenauer, who apparently restored his coalition government yesterday by agreeing to oust Defense Minister Franz Josef Strauss, faced a new storm from his party's own leaders today.
The Chancellor planned to meet with members of his Christian Democratic Union (CDU) today to discuss a new cabinet and outline his plans.
ADENAUER MET strong opposition within the CDU last night when he proposed to shift Strauss to the non-cabinet position of party floor leader in parliament, informed sources said. Former foreign minister Heinrich von Brentano currently holds the post.
One unidentified CDU parliamentarian even demanded that the 86-year-old chancellor name his successor and set a timetable for retirement, it was reported. Adenauer refused to reply to the demand, one of the strongest attacks on his authority ever made within the party.
The sources said CDU Managing Chairman Hermann Dufhues rejected the appointment of Strauss as floor leader.
The CDU leaders reportedly maintained that the job of party floor leader should go to a regular CDU man. Strauss is head of the party's small Bavarian affiliate, the Christian Social Union.
AUTHORITATIVE SOURCES said Adenauer told Erich Mende, leader of the Free Democratic Party (FDF), yesterday that he would drop Strauss from the cabinet.
The FDP pulled its five ministers out of the cabinet last week and withdrew from the parliamentary coalition with the CDU, demanding the ouster of Strauss for his involvement in the arrest of five executives of the news magazine "Der Spiegel."
Mende told newsmen after his talk with Adenauer yesterday only that he and Adenauer "agreed to continue the coalition."
Eskiloo
FLEECE LINED BOOTS For Rain or Snow
100%
Cavalier with turn down fur cuff. Black or Ivory. N & M widths. Sizes to 10.
$12.95
McCoy's
813 Mass. VI 3-2091
ALLEN'S NEWS School Supplies 1115 Mass.
ASC Lists—
(Continued from page 1)
Theta Tau fraternity either as a professional or social fraternity.
In connection with the report, Lee Ayres, Wichita junior, suggested the elections committee be expanded to include non-council members.
He contended this was the only way to run the elections effectively.
TURNING TO other business, Jerry Dickson, Newton senior and student body president, proposed a committee be appointed to study the intramural program. He stressed participation in cooperation with the program of Bud Wilkinson, presidential advisor on physical fitness.
Representing KU will be: Dean Salter, Garden City senior and ASC chairman; Dickson; George Hahn, Scotch Plains, N.J., senior and student body vice-president; Kay Cash. Fairview Park, Ohio, junior, and Turner, both representatives from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences; and Scott Payne, Bethel senior and Daily Kansan managing editor.
The Council approved six official delegates to the Big Eight Student Government Conference in Columbia. Mo. December 14 and 15.
A Rhodes Scholar, born in South Africa and educated in Africa, England and Austria, will lecture at KU Friday.
African Scholar To Lecture Friday
J. N. Findlay, visiting professor of philosophy at the University of Texas, will deliver two lectures: "The Map of Value" at 4:30 p.m. in Bailey Hall auditorium and "Hegel's Notion of Teleology" at 8 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Findlay was born in Pretoria, Union of South Africa, and received his college education at Transvaal University. He was a Rhodes Scholar at Oxford University.
Findley is also author of three books in the field of philosophy: "Meinong's Theory of Objects," "Hegel, a Re-Examination," and "Values and Intentions."
AEC Explodes Latest In Nuclear Test Series
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) touched off another underground nuclear blast in Nevada yesterday.
Book Nook 1021 Mass.
ORDER
Personalized
Greeting Cards
We Rent Most Anything
ANDERSON RENTAL
812 N. H.
BALDWIN ART THEATER
"Lust of Life"
Immortal Story of the Life of VINCENT VAN GOGH
Nov. 28, 29 — 7:30 p.m.
GEM THEATER - BALDWIN, KANS.
Assignment: make our cars more rust-resistant
Salt-water bath is one of tests used to check rust protection built into Ford-built cars.
Result: '63 Ford-built cars are better protected against rust than ever before
Now zinc can be married to steel and used for vital underbody parts and rocker panels of Ford-built cars. The zinc coating forms a tough barrier to corrosive moisture—and if corrosion attacks, the zinc sacrifices itself through galvanic action, saving the steel.
To tackle this assignment, Ford Motor Company engineers turned to zinc. Galvanized, or zinc-clad, steel has long been noted for its resistance to corrosion. It presented special problems which had limited its use in automotive applications, however. It was hard to weld, difficult to paint.
Our engineers developed special techniques to solve the welding problem. They found a process which eliminates the crystalline pattern on galvanized steel and produces a surface that will accept a high-quality paint job.
Other avenues explored in the fight against rust also brought results: special zinc-rich primers to protect key body areas, aluminized and stainless steels to extend muffler life, quality baked enamel finishes that are more durable (and look better).
Another step forward in total quality—and another example of how Ford Motor Company provides engineering leadership for the American Road,
Ford
MOTOR COMPANY
The American Road, Dearborn, Michigan
PRODUCTS FOR THE AMERICAN RCAD • THE HOME
THE FARM • INDUSTRY • AND THE AGE OF SPACE
Daily hansan
60th Year, No. 50
Thursday, Nov. 29, 1962
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Demo Presidency Dispute Continues
Things have changed..
The president of the KU Young Democrats has said that the president of the KU Young Democrats IS president of the KU Young Democrats.
IN AN INTRA-PARTY squabble, Peter Aylward, Ellsworth senior, maintains his right to the office despite opposition from Barry Bennington, Cheney senior.
Bennington was elected president of the KU YD's at a meeting March 14, after which Aylward charged irregularities in the distribution of membership cards, used as voting credentials.
Aylward, who was defeated for president in the March 14 election, was elected to that office at a meeting March 28. after a petition requesting a special meeting had been signed by 28 persons.
HOWEVER, the KU YD constitution requires that a special meeting be called by the president. Neither Bennington nor Verne Gauby, the president who had preceded him, called the meeting. The special meeting was announced in the official bulletin of the Kansan.
"Even though the legality of our election is as questionable as theirs was, we were recognized by the Collegiate Council," Aylward said last night. The Collegiate Council is composed of Young Democrat clubs on campuses across the state. The council is a part of the Kansas Young Democrats.
Dan Hopson Jr., associate professor of law and faculty adviser for the Young Republicans, said, "As faculty adviser, I do not recognize either Barry Bennington as president of the club or Pete Aylward as president of the club."
"I FEEL that Mr. Bennington's election was tainted by irregularities and that Mr. Aylward's election resulted from a meeting called by Pete of his own supporters," Prof. Hopson said.
Confusion over the issuance of membership cards also caused a dispute over the validity of the March 14 election of delegates to the state Young Democrat convention.
An arbitration meeting was held March 23, to determine if there had been voting irregularities on March 14th. Witnesses testified that they had been given free membership cards by Bennington supporters before the election.
CHARLES H. OLDFATHER, professor of law, was asked by Prof. Hopson to arbitrate. He delivered a decision of "improper conduct" after hearing five hours of testimony.
Prof. Hopson explained the need for the arbitration;
"Under the rules of the state Young Democratic clubs, the Democratic county chairman (Frank McDonald in this county) had to certify the list of delegates to the state convention.
"Since a question had been raised about irregularities in the election, Mr. McDonald called me and said that he would certify the list only if I gave my approval.
"I THEN TALKED to Mr. Aylward and Mr. Bennington." Prof. Hopson said. "In order to resolve the dispute, they agreed to have Prof. Oldfather arbitrate the question of irregularities.
"I told them that if he found irregularities I would tell Mr. McDonald not to certify the delegates," Hopson said.
"Since Prof. Oldfather found irregularities, I refused to give my approval, and Mr. McDonald refused to certify the delegates," Prof. Hosson concluded.
Prof. Oldfather said last night, "The only question I was asked to arbitrate was whether there had been improper conduct in connection with the issuance of credentials for voting at that meeting.
(Continued on page 12)
Party Blocks Adenauer Move In Cabinet Crisis
BONN, Germany — (UPI) — Chancellor Konrad Adenauer's own Christian Democratic Party (CDU) appeared today to have blocked his first attempt to solve the cabinet crisis caused by the controversy over Defense Minister Franz Josef Strauss.
At the same time, there was growing pressure by CDU lawmakers on the chancellor to name economics minister Ludwig Erhard his successor. Adenauer, who will be 87 in January, has agreed to retire before the 1965 elections but thus far has refused to name a date or a successor.
POLITICAL MEETINGS continued today following Adenauer's failure to gain approval for a new post for Strauss. The Chancellor gave in to demands by his coalition partners, the Free Democrats (FDP) for Strauss' removal because of his role in the arrests of editors and the publisher of the news magazine Spiegel. They are charged with treason for obtaining and printing defense secrets.
The FDP does not object to the charges as such but to the way the men were arrested without consulting FDP justice minister Wolf-gang Stammberger, as well as to Strauss' action in arranging the detention of one editor who was vacationing in Spain.
Adenauer sought yesterday to name Strauss the CDU parliamentary floor leader, a key post in steering government legislation. But a large group of CDU deputies objected because they felt Strauss, as head of the CDU's small Bavarian affiliate, the Christian Social Union (CSU), should not头 the larger party in parliament.
(Continued on page 12)
Weather
Variable cloudiness this afternoon, turning cloudy tonight. Fog will set in again tonight and early tomorrow.
Warmer tomorrow with lows between 40 and 45 and highs generally near 60.
Customs Hold Art Exhibition
A pair of KU curators may have to turn art thief to rescue four crates of paintings from customs in Kansas City.
Museum of Art curators Marilyn Stokstad, professor of art history, and Gerald Bernstein, art history instructor, set out for Kansas City in a truck early this morning to retrieve the crates.
THE CRATES have been in Kansas City since before Thanksgiving but U.S. officials have refused to release them pending further authorization from the artists in Central America.
"There should be no problem," Prof. Stokstad said, "Original paintings for exhibition are supposed to go through customs free of charge.
"The artists filled out a form listing the works they had enclosed in the crate," she explained. The U.S. Customs Bureau refuses to accept this as proof of originality. This could take weeks.
"I WONT LET a little red tape stop me. I'm prepared to throw a real feminine fit, call Congressman . . . " Prof. Stokstad vowed.
The paintings are part of the Pintores Centroamericanos exhibition scheduled to open Sunday at the KU museum.
Prof. Stokstad spent the summer in Central America meeting artists and encouraging them to send their works.
She made arrangements with 25 artists from Costa Rica, Guatemala, El Salvador, Nicaragua and Panama to participate in the exhibit. Artists talked to their friends and 34 sent paintings.
THE EXHIBIT was planned as part of the University exchange program with Costa Rica, Prof. Stokstad explained.
Faintings range in style from the Honduran "primitive" Valasquez who Prof. Stokstad describes as a "tropical Grandma Moses" to the abstract expressionism of Armando Morales.
"These artists are not at all provincial. Their works show a complete awareness of developments in Europe and the United States. Many of them have studied abroad," she said.
Andrews' Final Chance Today
WICHITA — (UPI) — A federal appeals judge today will hear the final plea for a stay of the execution of convicted triple-killer Lowell Lee Andrews.
Andrews, sentenced to die for the Thanksgiving, 1958, shootings of his parents and sister at their Wolecott home, likely will go to the gallows at 12:01 a.m. tomorrow unless U.S. Circuit Court Judge Delmas C. Hill halts the execution.
JUDGE HILL will be asked to halt the hanging pending an appeal of Templar's decision to the full circuit court sitting in Denver, Colo.
Judge Hill agreed to hear the final plea for Andrews at 1:30 p.m. in his chambers here after U.S. District Judge George Templar yesterday refused to stay the execution and rejected a petition for a writ of habeas corpus.
Andrews' only hope if Judge Hill rejects the stay would be for a reprieve or executive clemency from Gov. John Anderson, who has indicated that he will not stop the execution unless new and important information on the case is forthcoming.
Thus, for the second time in two days, Washburn University law professor James R. Ahrens, who represents Andrews, will go against assistant attorney generals armed only with frequently-used allegations which have been consistently rebuffed in Andrews' four years in courts.
Chief among Ahren's often-used attacks is the charge that a confession by Andrews to a family minister was gained by coercion. He has repeatedly alleged that the Rev. V. C. Dameron assisted law officers in getting the "confused 18-year-old boy" to tell of pumping over 20
"Orchard," "Stuart" Tryouts Tomorrow
Open readings for major roles in two KU theater productions will be held at 4:30 tomorrow in the rehearsal room of Murphy Hall.
Male students may read for Pishchik in "The Cherry Orchard" and for Liecester, Melville, and Davison in "Mary Stuart."
"The Cherry Orchard" is a major theater production. "Mary Stuart" will be presented in the experimental theater.
Kashmir Settlement Hangs on Talks
RAWALPINDI, Pakistan—(UFI) Pakistan and India were reported ready today to announce plans for direct talks aimed at settling their bitter dispute over Kashmir and other issues in the face of Communist Chinese agression.
Informed sources said simultaneous announcements were expected in Rawalpindi and New Delhi that Pakistan President Mohammad Ayub Khan and Indian Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru will try to settle differences between their two countries.
ONE MEMBER of the National Assembly said the signs indicate the general anti-western attitude of the Pakistani people over western arms aid to India in its border war with Red China.
The reports came as "Yankee Go Home" slogans appeared on the walls of the National Assembly Building as American Envoy W. Averell Harriman conferred with Ayub in talks described by American officials as "crucial."
Duncan Sandys, British Secretary for Commonwealth Relations.
was reported flying back here from Walapalindi today for urgent consultations with Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru.
Harriman, U.S. Ambassador Walter McConaighy, Gen. Paul Adams and Paul Nitze of the Defense Department stayed behind and continued the conferences with Ayub today after Sandys took off for New Delhi.
Both Sandys and Harriman, who is surveying the situation for President Kennedy, conferred last night with Khan.
PAKISTAN has been concerned that the fresh arms supplies pouring into India from the west to stem Red China's border invasion someday may be turned against Pakistan in the dispute with India over Kashmir.
Harriman sought to assure Pakistan on his arrival here yesterday that there were extensive safeguards against this.
"The tide is running in a favorable direction toward making a settlement of the problems between India and Pakistan, including Kashmir." he said.
With the cease-fire on India's border still effective on the 8th day after Communist China initiated it, both nations were pressing a diplomatic offensive to win over key non-aligned nations.
MRS. SIRIMAVO Bandaranaike, Premier of Ceylon, has invited five other non-aligned nations to a conference in Colombo sometime in December to try to settle the Sino-India border dispute.
Reports from Ceylon said Burma, Indonesia and Cambodia have accepted and the United Arab Republic and Ghana are giving the idea favorable consideration.
India is sending Lakshmi Menon, minister of state for foreign affairs, to Colombo next week to talk with Mrs. Bandaranaike. Reports from Ceylon said Peking is sending its Vice Foreign Minister Huang Chen.
Both India and Red China have been using their ambassadors and direct messages to give their versions of the border war to foreign governments.
bullets into his mother, father and sister.
AHRENS ALSO has charged that Andrews was insane at the time of the killing, and that the state and Gov. Anderson have denied Andrews' constitutional rights by refusing to order a re-examination of his sanity. A three-man panel adjudged Andrews legally same prior to his trial in Wyandotte County.
Judge Templar rejected those points in his hearing yesterday, saying that at no time has Andrews denied killing his parents, and that he found nothing reprehensible about the manner in which the confession was obtained.
The judge added, "Over four years have elapsed since these terrible killings . . . and that is a long time."
ANDREWS HAS been rejected twice by the Kansas Supreme Court. Two federal districts courts have rejected habeas corpus petitions. A state district court rejected a habeas writ. And the U.S. Supreme Court has twice refused to give him a hearing.
Andrews was a pudgy 265-pound student at the University of Kansas at the time of the killings. Friends described his as "quiet and reserved, never a leader."
After the triple slaying, a classmate who attended high school with Andrews in Kansas City felt that the youth had lost his identity in the mass of students.
"He was no longer somebody everybody knew, as had been the case in high school," he said.
"I think he might have gotten the idea that to be a big person up here you have to have a car and money."
A FELLOW CHURCH member in Kansas City pointed to Andrews' weight problem which, he said, developed after high school.
According to one of Andrews' three confessions, he killed his family to get inheritance and insurance money from his 50-year-old father, a mechanic for Trans World Airways.
The KU student was a month behind in his rent his landlady said.
If Andrews keeps his ntn date with the hangman early tomorrow, he will be the first person Kansas has executed since 19, 16, 1954, when cop killer Merle W. Martin went to the gallows, and only the 29th person executed legally in Kansas in a century.
A maximum of 13 witnesses, including the executioner and representatives of certain specified news media, will be allowed to attend the execution at the state prison at Lansing.
'Wonderland' Cast May Get The Bird
Jed Davis, assistant professor of speech and drama, is thinking of adding a stork to his "Alice in Wonderland" cast.
The production's queen of hearts, Julia Callahan, Lawrence graduate student, is expecting her first child and the baby is a month overdue.
Prof. Davis today packed up the queen, the mad hatter, the white rabbit and the rest of the University Children's Theater cast and took them to Kansas City, Mo., for a five-performance run at the Music Hall.
If the queen should find herself making her debut at city hospital instead of the Music Hall, Jane Hess, Rogersville, Mo., graduate student, will take her part.
The play is a sort of juvenile mystery built around seven episodes of the traditional "Alice." The crime centers around the theft of the queen's sugar tarts.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday. Nov. 29, 1962
English Pro
Nearly two months ago, Prof. James E. Seaver, director of the English proficiency examination, predicted that one student of every five who took the examination this fall would fail.
The results of the English proficiency exam were released last Tuesday, and Seaver's prediction was correct.
The student must take this examination (unless he is smart enough to be an engineer) in order to receive his sheepskin from the University of Kansas. However, a student may also escape the snakes of the exam if he is wily enough to get some good grades in English as a freshman and sophomore.
For instance, if the struggling freshman can squeeze out an A in English 1 and English 2, he is exempt and if he receives an A or B in honors English 1 and English 2, he is also safe.
But these scholastic qualifications for exemption from the English proficiency examination seem a trifle arbitrary, considering the inconsistent level of instruction by qualified teachers.
A TOTAL OF 1045 STUDENTS took the examination this fall, and only 80.4 per cent (835) passed. Roughly four out of five students cut another piece of the University's long red tape—and 205 were strangled by it.
FOR INSTANCE, THE FACULTY of the
English department is composed of teachers ranging from assistant instructors to full professors—and the freshman and sophomore English students are likely to draw any one of these in first and second semester English.
Generally, the quality of the freshman and sophomore instruction in English will vary as to the qualifications of the individual instructors.
In this light, the system of picking exemptions for the English proficiency examination on a scholastic basis is inconsistent and inaccurate.
Since the test proves only that the student can write on a certain topic, during one two-hour period, on a certain night, why let it stand in the way of a college diploma?
No, the system is too arbitrary. The test can make the difference between graduation and taking another snip at the University's red tape.
In addition to this minor point, what does this test prove?
IT HARDLY PROVES that the student who passes the English proficiency exam the first time he takes it is a better writer than the student who must have a second try.
The test is useless as long as the student passes the required 10 hours of English. It is just another of the students pitfalls.
—Ben Marshall
Go To It, ASC
It's over now: the votes have been counted, the posters are down, the booster tours are no more.
An apathetic campus electorate has whispered the campus politicos are safely installed in office.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
ONE WONDERS WHAT they'll do now that they've made it there. It's an interesting question, because throughout the election campaign, the aspiring candidates kept telling us that we really mustn't be apathetic, that the All Student Council really does play a very vital and important role at this University.
It's an interesting argument, but perhaps not quite accurate. It would be more to the point to say that the ASC has the potential of becoming a vital force in University affairs—if it has the guts to try.
To rise to this potential, the ASC is going to have to devote more time to meaningful campus affairs, less to the endless partisan wrangling over petty issues and less to meaningless debates over the problems of other, far-off universities.
FOR ASC DEBATES LIKE the recent one over whether or not to adopt a resolution supporting the integration of Mississippi University just won't cut it.
Interesting as such debates may be, they have little direct relationship to the problems of students at this University and therefore can do fittle to establish the ASC as a vitally important student body on this campus.
It's so easy—and such a temptation—for ASC members to sit in the Kansas Union and pass resolutions concerning issues a thousand miles removed from Lawrence. The farther away you get from a problem, the easier it is to view it in black and white terms.
IT'S SO EASY TO TAKE a firm stand on someone else's problem. It's taking no risk to sit in Lawrence and condemn racial discrimination in Mississippi. It's a nice safe stand.
But to be a power on this campus, the ASC is going to have to debate issues close to home, issues more gray than either black or white.
It is going to have to scorn safe stands for difficult and sometimes controversial stands on local issues. Here are a few of them:
- Reports by the Civil Rights Council of discrimination against Negroes in some Lawrence barber shops.
- Discriminatory clauses in KU Greek houses.
- The alleged "necessity" for the University Theatre to alter last year's seating and ticket pricing plans.
- The need, or lack of need, for later closing hours in Watson Library, the Kansas Union and the women's dormitories.
- The desirability of continuing the present football reserved seating plan without modification, in view of fairly persistent reports of seat "pirating" and gametime confusion.
On Other Campuses
PALO ALTO, Calif.-Scoring present teaching of "introductory" psychology courses, Professor Joseph Katz of Stanford University's Institute for the study of Human Problems recently said "most of the students who elect an introductory course in psychology come to it with the desire to find out both about their own selves and those of other people."
Go to it. ASC. —Dennis Farney
He emphasized that his remarks applied only to "students who are not going on to major in psychology and are likely to take only one course in the field. Much of the disappointment and criticism that undergraduates often express about their psychology courses seems due to their disappointment at not getting out of these courses what they had come for.
"On the whole, teachers tend to disregard students' attitudes and rest content with some sort of conceptual grasp of the subject matter. The result, of course, often is that what is actually taught is either superficial or is removed from psychological reality. Very little attention is being given, at least in the curriculum, to the education of the emotions."
Dailu Hansan
Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office
University of Kansas student newspaper
1904, January 16, 1904,
triweekly 1908, daily, Jan. 16, 1912.
Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St, New York, NY 10022. United Press International. Mail subscription rates; $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sunday mornings. Subscription amination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas
Telephone VIking 3-2700
Scott Payne ... Managing Editor
Richard Bonnett, Dennis Farney, Zeke Wigglesworth, and Bill Mullins, Assistant Managing Editors: Mike Miller, City Editor; Ben Marshall, Sports Editor; Margaret Burger, Video Editor.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Classic Books and Co-Editorial Editors
Sheldon
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Charles Martiniche Business Manager
Joshua Koehler Marketing Manager;
Doug Farmer Circulation Manager;
Gene Spalding, National Advertising Manager;
Woodburn, Classified Advertising Manager; Dan Meck, Promotion Manager.
C-3
PO.807 159, MOINER CATAL
"IN ALL MY YEARS IN THE BIOLOGY DEPARTMENT, ONLY ONE OTHER TIME DID A STUDENT EVER HAVE AN ACCUMULATED GRADE AVERAGE AS LOW AS YOURS."
the took world
THE RACE WEST: BOOM TOWN TO GHOST TOWN, by Robert West Howard (Signet, 50 cents). FORTH TO THE WILDERNESS, by Dale Van Every (Mentor, 75 cents).
History and literature about the West continue to grow, and these two paperback volumes—which actually have little relation to each other—are welcome additions to the shelves. They deal with (1) the creation and collapse of vigorous and important communities in the old West and (2) the development of the first American frontier, which author Van Every defines as being in existence in 1754-1774.
Robert West Howard, in "The Race West," presents an entertaining picture of a constantly changing frontier. There were the early forts of the fur traders, the mining communities, the towns that were "Hell-on-Wheels" for the railroad builders, the communities built by the homesteaders who came along after these others had done their task.
HE TELLS US ABOUT THOSE FRAGMENTS that remain, and then provides a tourist guide on vanished towns. Without being a definitive piece of writing, this little book has definite interest.
Dale Van Every is more ambitious, and since the appearance of this paperback a new hardback volume by Van Every has succeeded it. The story is exciting and important—the Appalachian barrier that restrained the colonists but still represented a challenge, one that was met by many great names.
His heroes are not always the well-known Boones and Seviens, though they do figure in this history. There are George Croghan and the military commander Henry Bouquet, Sir William Johnson of the Mohawk country, John Stuart and the Indian leader, Pontiac, who tried to unite the Indians to drive out the encroaching British, and failed.—CMP
* *
AMERICAN BALLADS, edited by Charles O'Brien Kennedy (Crest. 50 cents).
This little volume is worth your money. It has some atrocious stuff in it but some delightful items, too. Kennedy has selected verses and songs and doggerel he likes: poems of dying hoboes, the man on the flying trapeze, piddling pups, the Erie canal, the little brown jug, the old outhouse, Yukon folks, Johnny Appleseed, railroaders, wendering boys, chaps named "Billy Boy" and "Abdullah Bulbul Amir," forgotten mothers, taverns in towns, orphans, the Panama canal, the lone prairie, oystermen, a ball player named Casey, letters edged in black, Frankie and Johnnie and McGinty and Barbara Allen and the Mademoiselle from Armentiers, sweet chariots, the Oregon trail, drunkards and rolling stones, the old oaken bucket, Clementine, Jesse James, the Alamo. And this is just a sample.—CMP
***
COUNTERATTACK, text by Abraham Rothberg (Bantam Gallery).
This paperback is worth almost anyone's time and money. It has a good text by Abraham Rothberg, pictures assembled by Pierce Fredericks and Michael O'Keefe, and design (striking, too) by Anthony LaRotonda. The period covered in this third volume of "Eyewitness History of World War II" is that of the first Axis reversals and the beginning of the road back to victory. There are texts and photographs of such things as Stalingrad, the Battle of Midway and El Alamein.
EACH MAN KILLS, by Sanford Bayer (Ballantine, 75 cents) an original paperback edition, dealing with group therapy. Cast in the form of fiction, it is clinical in approach.
Thursday, Nov. 29, 1962 University Daily Kansai
Page 3
Economy Needs Deficit Spending
In any academic field there is a huge gap between what the layman thinks and what the specialist thinks. In most cases this is unfortunate and that is all. But the lack of public knowledge about the U.S. economy is having an increasingly harmful effect.
The nation's economy isn't expanding rapidly enough, and a great number of economists are in fairly general agreement about what should be done: The government should spend more money.
THE PROBLEM is simple. Private sources are not investing enough in the economy to insure an adequate growth rate. The economy must therefore be bolstered by public investment, and during a period of sluggish growth the government should put more money into the economy than it takes out; i.e., it should operate on a deficit.
President Kennedy understands all this, and he has even had the nerve to state it publicly. But he has been reluctant to use governmental tools to stimulate the economy, the apparent reason being that he is painfully aware that the public and conservative Congressmen (those who invariably make the most noise) are at least a couple of decades behind him and his economic advisers.
The divergence began about 1936, when John Maynard Keynes published, "The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money," a book so complex that only an economist could make much sense of it. But every economist has read it. To many of them, and particularly to those to whom Kennedy is listening, the book has become a sort of Bible. The stature of Keynes shows no sign of diminishing; significantly, The New Republic's latest issue, in which 20 economists discuss various aspects of the U.S. economy, is titled, "Time For a Keynes."
PARAPHRASING KEYNES IS a formidable, if not impossible, task. To simplify (perhaps grossly), he demonstrated that two basic and chronic economic problems — low production and high unemployment — could be cured by increased investment. This investment could come from public or private sources; but if private investment were insufficient — as it would be during a depression or an extended downturn — he advocated government spending as a key method for providing the necessary stimulation to the economy.
Public spending, though important, was only one of the Keynesian remedies for economic stagnation. Above all he wanted investment, and he recognized that this could result from a tax reduction, for example, because it would leave individuals more money to spend. Other governmental measures to stimulate private investment or to discourage saving would have a similar effect.
But the intricacies of the system are not as important here as the principle. Keynes started a revolution in economics because he showed that a country need no longer remain at the mercy of mysterious and uncontrollable forces that cause economic stagnation or disaster. Investment is the answer,he said,and implicit in this solution is the frequent need for a high rate of public investment.
SINCE THE New Deal, the U.S. has not had an administration liberal enough to put the theory to a sustained test. But in the last decade virtually all the nations of Western Europe have traveled far enough along the Keynesian road to national prosperity to find that it is by no means a dead end. Yet the U.S. lags behind, our annual growth rate in the last six years standing at a miserable $2^{1/2}$ per cent. The London Economist recently found the situation suitable for the following satiric reflections:
"By all the truths Americans have lived by, the continental Europeans must be in for dire trouble. Their economic sins are almost unspeakable. First, and by all odds foremost, their governments never balance their budgets—at least as Americans understand the term. More awful still, they do their best to avoid surpluses in these budgets. All of them have some nationalized industries...
"It is clearly an unjust world that permits such economic simmers to go on getting richer and richer. . . The continental Europeans, in fact, are doing in economics what any sensible man knows is impossible; they are spending themselves rich. . . Europe is now in its fourth consecutive year without the shadow of a recession and looks like it is repealing the business cycle altogether. What moral does this hold for America?"
PRESIDENT KENNEDY is apparently getting the point, for in a speech at Yale in June he attacked several widely held ideas that crippled our economic progress. He cited the myth that "government is big and bad—and steadily getting bigger and worse"; the myth that "all our national soundness or unsoundness" can be measured by reference to the government's annual administrative budget; and the myth that the public debt "is growing at a dangerously rapid rate," when in fact "both the debt per person and the debt as a proportion of our gross national product have declined sharply since the end of the Second World War."
In essence, the President was pleading eloquently that the American public forget the taboos generally attached to deficit spending and give him the mandate to bolster our lagging economy by transforming Keynesian theory into practice.
Shortly thereafter, getting bolder, the President announced that he will propose a tax cut in January for the obvious purpose of increasing private investment. Sen. Harry F. Byrd, discussing Kennedy's decision last week, declared that a tax cut without an accompanying reduction in government spending would be "unmitigated fiscal irresponsibility." In short, it is fine to increase private investment so long as public investment is decreased, a decidedly non-Keynesian conclusion.
SEN. BYRD frets greatly — as does a majority of the American public — about the size of the national debt; yet sophisticated economists are arguing that the government is too reluctant to incur deficits when a lagging economy calls for a high rate of public investment. Ask one of these economists about the national debt and he will answer roughly as follows:
The overwhelming part of the debt now being carried by the government was incurred in financing World Wars I and II and the Korean War. It is not a grave quantitative problem simply because it is internal. Nearly all of the debt is made up of what the government owes American individuals and institutions who hold government bonds.
And since the debt is internal, interest payments stay within the country, constituting no direct loss of disposable income. For this reason, the after-dinner speaker who ends his attack on the national debt by asking the audience, "Could you run your family budget that way?" is making a false analogy. When Mr. and Mrs. Smith spend a dollar it's gone as far as they are concerned. But when the government spends a dollar in this country an American makes a dollar. There can be problems connected with a national debt, but they are not the problems that have been created by congressional reactionaries.
THE NATIONAL DEBT is comparable to the "bonded indebtedness" that shows up on the balance sheet of any profitable corporation. As Emile Benoit of the Graduate School of Business at Columbia University recently wrote:
"Corporations have been increasing their debts by $16.6 billion a year since 1953 — an amount sufficient to finance half of new investment in plant and equipment. Modern businesses do not have emotional attitudes of fear or shame in thus utilizing debt. Debt is viewed not emotionally as an evil, but rationally as a convenience...
COACH HOUSE
Cookin For Town and Country
"But while corporate debt financing is generally received as normal and entirely acceptable, federal debt financing has been interpreted . . . as dangerous, improper and almost immoral..."
ALTHOUGH PUBLIC officials like Byrd are not helping matters by their constant genuflection before the "balanced budget," the main reason Americans seem frightened of deficit financing is probably that the President has been unwilling to educate them. Most of them would be highly apologetic, no doubt, if they knew they were slowing things down so much. It's just that they've never heard of Keynesian economics, and they're never discussed the nato work with an economist.
All they know is that they sure couldn't run their family budget that way.
NEW SHIPMENTS OF
★ CULOTTES
★ WRAP SKIRTS
★ MOHAIR SWEATERS
★ PANTALETS
SALE on skirts and corduroy pants
tional debt with an economist.
Fred Zimmerman
A spokesman for the Bell Laboratory said company scientists are now concentrating efforts on plans for a second satellite, Telstar II, with hopes it can be launched in the spring.
Bell May Launch Telstar II In Spring
The original Telstar, launched four months ago, will no longer transmit on command from earth signals.
MURRAY HILL, N.J. - (UPI) - Bell Telephone scientists were working today on a successor to Telstar, the world's first trans-Atlantic television satellite.
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
IBM Exec. Is New Assist. Sec. of Army
Schaub resigned yesterday effective Dec. 1, for "personal considerations" after 28 years of government service. He became assistant Army secretary March 2, 1961.
WASHINGTON —(UPI)— President Kennedy has accepted "with deep regret" the resignation of William F. Schaub as assistant secretary of the Army for financial management. Kennedy named Edmund T. Pratt Jr. of New York, an International Business Machines executive, to succeed Schaub.
$ \textcircled{1} $ $ \textcircled{2} $ $ \textcircled{3} $ $ \textcircled{4} $ $ \textcircled{5} $ $ \textcircled{6} $ $ \textcircled{7} $ $ \textcircled{8} $ $ \textcircled{9} $ $ \textcircled{10} $ $ \textcircled{11} $ $ \textcircled{12} $ $ \textcircled{13} $ $ \textcircled{14} $ $ \textcircled{15} $ $ \textcircled{16} $ $ \textcircled{17} $ $ \textcircled{18} $ $ \textcircled{19} $ $ \textcircled{20} $ $ \textcircled{21} $ $ \textcircled{22} $ $ \textcircled{23} $ $ \textcircled{24} $ $ \textcircled{25} $ $ \textcircled{26} $ $ \textcircled{27} $ $ \textcircled{28} $ $ \textcircled{29} $ $ \textcircled{30} $ $ \textcircled{31} $ $ \textcircled{32} $ $ \textcircled{33} $ $ \textcircled{34} $ $ \textcircled{35} $ $ \textcircled{36} $ $ \textcircled{37} $ $ \textcircled{38} $ $ \textcircled{39} $ $ \textcircled{40} $ $ \textcircled{41} $ $ \textcircled{42} $ $ \textcircled{43} $ $ \textcircled{44} $ $ \textcircled{45} $ $ \textcircled{46} $ $ \textcircled{47} $ $ \textcircled{48} $ $ \textcircled{49} $ $ \textcircled{50} $ $ \textcircled{51} $ $ \textcircled{52} $ $ \textcircled{53} $ $ \textcircled{54} $ $ \textcircled{55} $ $ \textcircled{56} $ $ \textcircled{57} $ $ \textcircled{58} $ $ \textcircled{59} $ $ \textcircled{60} $ $ \textcircled{61} $ $ \textcircled{62} $ $ \textcircled{63} $ $ \textcircled{64} $ $ \textcircled{65} $ $ \textcircled{66} $ $ \textcircled{67} $ $ \textcircled{68} $ $ \textcircled{69} $ $ \textcircled{70} $ $ \textcircled{71} $ $ \textcircled{72} $ $ \textcircled{73} $ $ \textcircled{74} $ $ \textcircled{75} $ $ \textcircled{76} $ $ \textcircled{77} $ $ \textcircled{78} $ $ \textcircled{79} $ $ \textcircled{80} $ $ \textcircled{81} $ $ \textcircled{82} $ $ \textcircled{83} $ $ \textcircled{84} $ $ \textcircled{85} $ $ \textcircled{86} $ $ \textcircled{87} $ $ \textcircled{88} $ $ \textcircled{89} $ $ \textcircled{90} $ $ \textcircled{91} $ $ \textcircled{92} $ $ \textcircled{93} $ $ \textcircled{94} $ $ \textcircled{95} $ $ \textcircled{96} $ $ \textcircled{97} $ $ \textcircled{98} $ $ \textcircled{99} $ $ \textcircled{100} $ $ \textcircled{101} $ $ \textcircled{102} $ $ \textcircled{103} $ $ \textcircled{104} $ $ \textcircled{105} $ $ \textcircled{106} $ $ \textcircled{107} $ $ \textcircled{108} $ $ \textcircled{109} $ $ \textcircled{110} $ $ \textcircled{111} $ $ \textcircled{112} $ $ \textcircled{113} $ $ \textcircled{114} $ $ \textcircled{115} $ $ \textcircled{116} $ $ \textcircled{117} $ $ \textcircled{118} $ $ \textcircled{119} $ $ \textcircled{120} $ $ \textcircled{121} $ $ \textcircled{122} $ $ \textcircled{123} $ $ \textcircled{124} $ $ \textcircled{125} $ $ \textcircled{126} $ $ \textcircled{127} $ $ \textcircled{128} $ $ \textcircled{129} $ $ \textcircled{130} $ $ \textcircled{131} $ $ \textcircled{132} $ $ \textcircled{133} $ $ \textcircled{134} $ $ \textcircled{135} $ $ \textcircled{136} $ $ \textcircled{137} $ $ \textcircled{138} $ $ \textcircled{139} $ $ \textcircled{140} $ $ \textcircled{141} $ $ \textcircled{142} $ $ \textcircled{143} $ $ \textcircled{144} $ $ \textcircled{145} $ $ \textcircled{146} $ $ \textcircled{147} $ $ \textcircled{148} $ $ \textcircled{149} $ $ \textcircled{150} $ $ \textcircled{151} $ $ \textcircled{152} $ $ \textcircled{153} $ $ \textcircled{154} $ $ \textcircled{155} $ $ \textcircled{156} $ $ \textcircled{157} $ $ \textcircled{158} $ $ \textcircled{159} $ $ \textcircled{160} $ $ \textcircled{161} $ $ \textcircled{162} $ $ \textcircled{163} $ $ \textcircled{164} $ $ \textcircled{165} $ $ \textcircled{166} $ $ \textcircled{167} $ $ \textcircled{168} $ $ \textcircled{169} $ $ \textcircled{170} $ $ \textcircled{171} $ $ \textcircled{172} $ $ \textcircled{173} $ $ \textcircled{174} $ $ \textcircled{175} $ $ \textcircled{176} $ $ \textcircled{177} $ $ \textcircled{178} $ $ \textcircled{179} $ $ \textcircled{180} $ $ \textcircled{181} $ $ \textcircled{182} $ $ \textcircled{183} $ $ \textcircled{184} $ $ \textcircled{185} $ $ \textcircled{186} $ $ \textcircled{187} $ $ \textcircled{188} $ $ \textcircled{189} $ $ \textcircled{190} $ $ \textcircled{191} $ $ \textcircled{192} $ $ \textcircled{193} $ $ \textcircled{194} $ $ \textcircled{195} $ $ \textcircled{196} $ $ \textcircled{197} $ $ \textcircled{198} $ $ \textcircled{199} $ $ \textcircled{200} $ $ \textcircled{201} $ $ \textcircled{202} $ $ \textcircled{203} $ $ \textcircled{204} $ $ \textcircled{205} $ $ \textcircled{206} $ $ \textcircled{207} $ $ \textcircled{208} $ $ \textcircled{209} $ $ \textcircled{210} $ $ \textcircled{211} $ $ \textcircled{212} $ $ \textcircled{213} $ $ \textcircled{214} $ $ \textcircled{215} $ $ \textcircled{216} $ $ \textcircled{217} $ $ \textcircled{218} $ $ \textcircled{219} $ $ \textcircled{220} $ $ \textcircled{221} $ $ \textcircled{222} $ $ \textcircled{223} $ $ \textcircled{224} $ $ \textcircled{225} $ $ \textcircled{226} $ $ \textcircled{227} $ $ \textcircled{228} $ $ \textcircled{229} $ $ \textcircled{230} $ $ \textcircled{231} $ $ \textcircled{232} $ $ \textcircled{233} $ $ \textcircled{234} $ $ \textcircled{235} $ $ \textcircled{236} $ $ \textcircled{237} $ $ \textcircled{238} $ $ \textcircled{239} $ $ \textcircled{240} $ $ \textcircled{241} $ $ \textcircled{242} $ $ \textcircled{243} $ $ \textcircled{244} $ $ \textcircled{245} $ $ \textcircled{246} $ $ \textcircled{247} $ $ \textcircled{248} $ $ \textcircled{249} $ $ \textcircled{250} $ $ \textcircled{251} $ $ \textcircled{252} $ $ \textcircled{253} $ $ \textcircled{254} $ $ \textcircled{255} $ $ \textcircled{256} $ $ \textcircled{257} $ $ \textcircled{258} $ $ \textcircled{259} $ $ \textcircled{260} $ $ \textcircled{261} $ $ \textcircled{262} $ $ \textcircled{263} $ $ \textcircled{264} $ $ \textcircled{265} $ $ \textcircled{266} $ $ \textcircled{267} $ $ \textcircled{268} $ $ \textcircled{269} $ $ \textcircled{270} $ $ \textcircled{271} $ $ \textcircled{272} $ $ \textcircled{273} $ $ \textcircled{274} $ $ \textcircled{275} $ $ \textcircled{276} $ $ \textcircled{277} $ $ \textcircled{278} $ $ \textcircled{279} $ $ \textcircled{280} $ $ \textcircled{281} $ $ \textcircled{282} $ $ \textcircled{283} $ $ \textcircled{284} $ $ \textcircled{285} $ $ \textcircled{286} $ $ \textcircled{287} $ $ \textcircled{288} $ $ \textcircled{289} $ $ \textcircled{290} $ $ \textcircled{291} $ $ \textcircled{292} $ $ \textcircled{293} $ $ \textcircled{294} $ $ \textcircled{295} $ $ \textcircled{296} $ $ \textcircled{297} $ $ \textcircled{298} $ $ \textcircled{299} $ $ \textcircled{300} $ $ \textcircled{301} $ $ \textcircled{302} $ $ \textcircled{303} $ $ \textcircled{304} $ $ \textcircled{305} $ $ \textcircled{306} $ $ \textcircled{307} $ $ \textcircled{308} $ $ \textcircled{309} $ $ \textcircled{310} $ $ \textcircled{311} $ $ \textcircled{312} $ $ \textcircled{313} $ $ \textcircled{314} $ $ \textcircled{315} $ $ \textcircled{316} $ $ \textcircled{317} $ $ \textcircled{318} $ $ \textcircled{319} $ $ \textcircled{320} $ $ \textcircled{321} $ $ \textcircled{322} $ $ \textcircled{323} $ $ \textcircled{324} $ $ \textcircled{325} $ $ \textcircled{326} $ $ \textcircled{327} $ $ \textcircled{328} $ $ \textcircled{329} $ $ \textcircled{330} $ $ \textcircled{331} $ $ \textcircled{332} $ $ \textcircled{333} $ $ \textcircled{334} $ $ \textcircled{335} $ $ \textcircled{336} $ $ \textcircled{337} $ $ \textcircled{338} $ $ \textcircled{339} $ $ \textcircled{340} $ $ \textcircled{341} $ $ \textcircled{342} $ $ \textcircled{343} $ $ \textcircled{344} $ $ \textcircled{345} $ $ \textcircled{346} $ $ \textcircled{347} $ $ \textcircled{348} $ $ \textcircled{349} $ $ \textcircled{350} $ $ \textcircled{351} $ $ \textcircled{352} $ $ \textcircled{353} $ $ \textcircled{354} $ $ \textcircled{355} $ $ \textcircled{356} $ $ \textcircled{357} $ $ \textcircled{358} $ $ \textcircled{359} $ $ \textcircled{360} $ $ \textcircled{361} $ $ \textcircled{362} $ $ \textcircled{363} $ $ \textcircled{364} $ $ \textcircled{365} $ $ \textcircled{366} $ $ \textcircled{367} $ $ \textcircled{368} $ $ \textcircled{369} $ $ \textcircled{370} $ $ \textcircled{371} $ $ \textcircled{372} $ $ \textcircled{373} $ $ \textcircled{374} $ $ \textcircled{375} $ $ \textcircled{376} $ $ \textcircled{377} $ $ \textcircled{378} $ $ \textcircled{379} $ $ \textcircled{380} $ $ \textcircled{381} $ $ \textcircled{382} $ $ \textcircled{383} $ $ \textcircled{384} $ $ \textcircled{385} $ $ \textcircled{386} $ $ \textcircled{387} $ $ \textcircled{388} $ $ \textcircled{389} $ $ \textcircled{390} $ $ \textcircled{391} $ $ \textcircled{392} $ $ \textcircled{393} $ $ \textcircled{394} $ $ \textcircled{395} $ $ \textcircled{396} $ $ \textcircled{397} $ $ \textcircled{398} $ $ \textcircled{399} $ $ \textcircled{400} $ $ \textcircled{401} $ $ \textcircled{402} $ $ \textcircled{403} $ $ \textcircled{404} $ $ \textcircled{405} $ $ \textcircled{406} $ $ \textcircled{407} $ $ \textcircled{408} $ $ \textcircled{409} $ $ \textcircled{410} $ $ \textcircled{411} $ $ \textcircled{412} $ $ \textcircled{413} $ $ \textcircled{414} $ $ \textcircled{415} $ $ \textcircled{416} $ $ \textcircled{417} $ $ \textcircled{418} $ $ \textcircled{419} $ $ \textcircled{420} $ $ \textcircled{421} $ $ \textcircled{422} $ $ \textcircled{423} $ $ \textcircled{424} $ $ \textcircled{425} $ $ \textcircled{426} $ $ \textcircled{427} $ $ \textcircled{428} $ $ \textcircled{429} $ $ \textcircled{430} $ $ \textcircled{431} $ $ \textcircled{432} $ $ \textcircled{433} $ $ \textcircled{434} $ $ \textcircled{435} $ $ \textcircled{436} $ $ \textcircled{437} $ $ \textcircled{438} $ $ \textcircled{439} $ $ \textcircled{440} $ $ \textcircled{441} $ $ \textcircled{442} $ $ \textcircled{443} $ $ \textcircled{444} $ $ \textcircled{445} $ $ \textcircled{446} $ $ \textcircled{447} $ $ \textcircled{448} $ $ \textcircled{449} $ $ \textcircled{450} $ $ \textcircled{451} $ $ \textcircled{452} $ $ \textcircled{453} $ $ \textcircled{454} $ $ \textcircled{455} $ $ \textcircled{456} $ $ \textcircled{457} $ $ \textcircled{458} $ $ \textcircled{459} $ $ \textcircled{460} $ $ \textcircled{461} $ $ \textcircled{462} $ $ \textcircled{463} $ $ \textcircled{464} $ $ \textcircled{465} $ $ \textcircled{466} $ $ \textcircled{467} $ $ \textcircled{468} $ $ \textcircled{469} $ $ \textcircled{470} $ $ \textcircled{471} $ $ \textcircled{472} $ $ \textcircled{473} $ $ \textcircled{474} $ $ \textcircled{475} $ $ \textcircled{476} $ $ \textcircled{477} $ $ \textcircled{478} $ $ \textcircled{479} $ $ \textcircled{480} $ $ \textcircled{481} $ $ \textcircled{482} $ $ \textcircled{483} $ $ \textcircled{484} $ $ \textcircled{485} $ $ \textcircled{486} $ $ \textcircled{487} $ $ \textcircled{488} $ $ \textcircled{489} $ $ \textcircled{490} $ $ \textcircled{491} $ $ \textcircled{492} $ $ \textcircled{493} $ $ \textcircled{494} $ $ \textcircled{495} $ $ \textcircled{496} $ $ \textcircled{497} $ $ \textcircled{498} $ $ \textcircled{499} $ $ \textcircled{500} $ $ \textcircled{501} $ $ \textcircled{502} $ $ \textcircled{503} $ $ \textcircled{504} $ $ \textcircled{505} $ $ \textcircled{506} $ $ \textcircled{507} $ $ \textcircled{508} $ $ \textcircled{509} $ $ \textcircled{510} $ $ \textcircled{511} $ $ \textcircled{512} $ $ \textcircled{513} $ $ \textcircled{514} $ $ \textcircled{515} $ $ \textcircled{516} $ $ \textcircled{517} $ $ \textcircled{518} $ $ \textcircled{519} $ $ \textcircled{520} $ $ \textcircled{521} $ $ \textcircled{522} $ $ \textcircled{523} $ $ \textcircled{524} $ $ \textcircled{525} $ $ \textcircled{526} $ $ \textcircled{527} $ $ \textcircled{528} $ $ \textcircled{529} $ $ \textcircled{530} $ $ \textcircled{531} $ $ \textcircled{532} $ $ \textcircled{533} $ $ \textcircled{534} $ $ \textcircled{535} $ $ \textcircled{536} $ $ \textcircled{537} $ $ \textcircled{538} $ $ \textcircled{539} $ $ \textcircled{540} $ $ \textcircled{541} $ $ \textcircled{542} $ $ \textcircled{543} $ $ \textcircled{544} $ $ \textcircled{545} $ $ \textcircled{546} $ $ \textcircled{547} $ $ \textcircled{548} $ $ \textcircled{549} $ $ \textcircled{550} $ $ \textcircled{551} $ $ \textcircled{552} $ $ \textcircled{553} $ $ \textcircled{554} $ $ \textcircled{555} $ $ \textcircled{556} $ $ \textcircled{557} $ $ \textcircled{558} $ $ \textcircled{559} $ $ \textcircled{560} $ $ \textcircled{561} $ $ \textcircled{562} $ $ \textcircled{563} $ $ \textcircled{564} $ $ \textcircled{565} $ $ \textcircled{566} $ $ \textcircled{567} $ $ \textcircled{568} $ $ \textcircled{569} $ $ \textcircled{570} $ $ \textcircled{571} $ $ \textcircled{572} $ $ \textcircled{573} $ $ \textcircled{574} $ $ \textcircled{575} $ $ \textcircled{576} $ $ \textcircled{577} $ $ \textcircled{578} $ $ \textcircled{579} $ $ \textcircled{580} $ $ \textcircled{581} $ $ \textcircled{582} $ $ \textcircled{583} $ $ \textcircled{584} $ $ \textcircled{585} $ $ \textcircled{586} $ $ \textcircled{587} $ $ \textcircled{588} $ $ \textcircled{589} $ $ \textcircled{590} $ $ \textcircled{591} $ $ \textcircled{592} $ $ \textcircled{593} $ $ \textcircled{594} $ $ \textcircled{595} $ $ \textcircled{596} $ $ \textcircled{597} $ $ \textcircled{598} $ $ \textcircled{599} $ $ \textcircled{600} $ $ \textcircled{601} $ $ \textcircled{602} $ $ \textcircled{603} $ $ \textcircled{604} $ $ \textcircled{605} $ $ \textcircled{606} $ $ \textcircled{607} $ $ \textcircled{608} $ $ \textcircled{609} $ $ \textcircled{610} $ $ \textcircled{611} $ $ \textcircled{612} $ $ \textcircled{613} $ $ \textcircled{614} $ $ \textcircled{615} $ $ \textcircled{616} $ $ \textcircled{617} $ $ \textcircled{618} $ $ \textcircled{619} $ $ \textcircled{620} $ $ \textcircled{621} $ $ \textcircled{622} $ $ \textcircled{623} $ $ \textcircled{624} $ $ \textcircled{625} $ $ \textcircled{626} $ $ \textcircled{627} $ $ \textcircled{628} $ $ \textcircled{629} $ $ \textcircled{630} $ $ \textcircled{631} $ $ \textcircled{632} $ $ \textcircled{633} $ $ \textcircled{634} $ $ \textcircled{635} $ $ \textcircled{636} $ $ \textcircled{637} $ $ \textcircled{638} $ $ \textcircled{639} $ $ \textcircled{640} $ $ \textcircled{641} $ $ \textcircled{642} $ $ \textcircled{643} $ $ \textcircled{644} $ $ \textcircled{645} $ $ \textcircled{646} $ $ \textcircled{647} $ $ \textcircled{648} $ $ \textcircled{649} $ $ \textcircled{650} $ $ \textcircled{651} $ $ \textcircled{652} $ $ \textcircled{653} $ $ \textcircled{654} $ $ \textcircled{655} $ $ \textcircled{656} $ $ \textcircled{657} $ $ \textcircled{658} $ $ \textcircled{659} $ $ \textcircled{660} $ $ \textcircled{661} $ $ \textcircled{662} $ $ \textcircled{663} $ $ \textcircled{664} $ $ \textcircled{665} $ $ \textcircled{666} $ $ \textcircled{667} $ $ \textcircled{668} $ $ \textcircled{669} $ $ \textcircled{670} $ $ \textcircled{671} $ $ \textcircled{672} $ $ \textcircled{673} $ $ \textcircled{674} $ $ \textcircled{675} $ $ \textcircled{676} $ $ \textcircled{677} $ $ \textcircled{678} $ $ \textcircled{679} $ $ \textcircled{680} $ $ \textcircled{681} $ $ \textcircled{682} $ $ \textcircled{683} $ $ \textcircled{684} $ $ \textcircled{685} $ $ \textcircled{686} $ $ \textcircled{687} $ $ \textcircled{688} $ $ \textcircled{689} $ $ \textcircled{690} $ $ \textcircled{691} $ $ \textcircled{692} $ $ \textcircled{693} $ $ \textcircled{694} $ $ \textcircled{695} $ $ \textcircled{696} $ $ \textcircled{697} $ $ \textcircled{698} $ $ \textcircled{699} $ $ \textcircled{700} $ $ \textcircled{701} $ $ \textcircled{702} $ $ \textcircled{703} $ $ \textcircled{704} $ $ \textcircled{705} $ $ \textcircled{706} $ $ \textcircled{707} $ $ \textcircled{708} $ $ \textcircled{709} $ $ \textcircled{710} $ $ \textcircled{711} $ $ \textcircled{712} $ $ \textcircled{713} $ $ \textcircled{714} $ $ \textcircled{715} $ $ \textcircled{716} $ $ \textcircled{717} $ $ \textcircled{718} $ $ \textcircled{719} $ $ \textcircled{720} $ $ \textcircled{721} $ $ \textcircled{722} $ $ \textcircled{723} $ $ \textcircled{724} $ $ \textcircled{725} $ $ \textcircled{726} $ $ \textcircled{727} $ $ \textcircled{728} $ $ \textcircled{729} $ $ \textcircled{730} $ $ \textcircled{731} $ $ \textcircled{732} $ $ \textcircled{733} $ $ \textcircled{734} $ $ \textcircled{735} $ $ \textcircled{736} $ $ \textcircled{737} $ $ \textcircled{738} $ $ \textcircled{739} $ $ \textcircled{740} $ $ \textcircled{741} $ $ \textcircled{742} $ $ \textcircled{743} $ $ \textcircled{744} $ $ \textcircled{745} $ $ \textcircled{746} $ $ \textcircled{747} $ $ \textcircled{748} $ $ \textcircled{749} $ $ \textcircled{750} $ $ \textcircled{751} $ $ \textcircled{752} $ $ \textcircled{753} $ $ \textcircled{754} $ $ \textcircled{755} $ $ \textcircled{756} $ $ \textcircled{757} $ $ \textcircled{758} $ $ \textcircled{759} $ $ \textcircled{760} $ $ \textcircled{761} $ $ \textcircled{762} $ $ \textcircled{763} $ $ \textcircled{764} $ $ \textcircled{765} $ $ \textcircled{766} $ $ \textcircled{767} $ $ \textcircled{768} $ $ \textcircled{769} $ $ \textcircled{770} $ $ \textcircled{771} $ $ \textcircled{772} $ $ \textcircled{773} $ $ \textcircled{774} $ $ \textcircled{775} $ $ \textcircled{776} $ $ \textcircled{777} $ $ \textcircled{778} $ $ \textcircled{779} $ $ \textcircled{780} $ $ \textcircled{781} $ $ \textcircled{782} $ $ \textcircled{783} $ $ \textcircled{784} $ $ \textcircled{785} $ $ \textcircled{786} $ $ \textcircled{787} $ $ \textcircled{788} $ $ \textcircled{789} $ $ \textcircled{790} $ $ \textcircled{791} $ $ \textcircled{792} $ $ \textcircled{793} $ $ \textcircled{794} $ $ \textcircled{795} $ $ \textcircled{796} $ $ \textcircled{797} $ $ \textcircled{798} $ $ \textcircled{799} $ $ \textcircled{800} $ $ \textcircled{801} $ $ \textcircled{802} $ $ \textcircled{803} $ $ \textcircled{804} $ $ \textcircled{805} $ $ \textcircled{806} $ $ \textcircled{807} $ $ \textcircled{808} $ $ \textcircled{809} $ $ \textcircled{810} $ $ \textcircled{811} $ $ \textcircled{812} $ $ \textcircled{813} $ $ \textcircled{814} $ $ \textcircled{815} $ $ \textcircled{816} $ $ \textcircled{817} $ $ \textcircled{818} $ $ \textcircled{819} $ $ \textcircled{820} $ $ \textcircled{821} $ $ \textcircled{822} $ $ \textcircled{823} $ $ \textcircled{824} $ $ \textcircled{825} $ $ \textcircled{826} $ $ \textcircled{827} $ $ \textcircled{828} $ $ \textcircled{829} $ $ \textcircled{830} $ $ \textcircled{831} $ $ \textcircled{832} $ $ \textcircled{833} $ $ \textcircled{834} $ $ \textcircled{835} $ $ \textcircled{836} $ $ \textcircled{837} $ $ \textcircled{838} $ $ \textcircled{839} $ $ \textcircled{840} $ $ \textcircled{841} $ $ \textcircled{842} $ $ \textcircled{843} $ $ \textcircled{844} $ $ \textcircled{845} $ $ \textcircled{846} $ $ \textcircled{847} $ $ \textcircled{848} $ $ \textcircled{849} $ $ \textcircled{850} $ $ \textcircled{851} $ $ \textcircled{852} $ $ \textcircled{853} $ $ \textcircled{854} $ $ \textcircled{855} $ $ \textcircled{856} $ $ \textcircled{857} $ $ \textcircled{858} $ $ \textcircled{859} $ $ \textcircled{860} $ $ \textcircled{861} $ $ \textcircled{862} $ $ \textcircled{863} $ $ \textcircled{864} $ $ \textcircled{865} $ $ \textcircled{866} $ $ \textcircled{867} $ $ \textcircled{868} $ $ \textcircled{869} $ $ \textcircled{870} $ $ \textcircled{871} $ $ \textcircled{872} $ $ \textcircled{873} $ $ \textcircled{874} $ $ \textcircled{875} $ $ \textcircled{876} $ $ \textcircled{877} $ $ \textcircled{878} $ $ \textcircled{879} $ $ \textcircled{880} $ $ \textcircled{881} $ $ \textcircled{882} $ $ \textcircled{883} $ $ \textcircled{884} $ $ \textcircled{885} $ $ \textcircled{886} $ $ \textcircled{887} $ $ \textcircled{888} $ $ \textcircled{889} $ $ \textcircled{890} $ $ \textcircled{891} $ $ \textcircled{892} $ $ \textcircled{893} $ $ \textcircled{894} $ $ \textcircled{895} $ $ \textcircled{896} $ $ \textcircled{897} $ $ \textcircled{898} $ $ \textcircled{899} $ $ \textcircled{900} $ $ \textcircled{901} $ $ \textcircled{902} $ $ \textcircled{903} $ $ \textcircled{904} $ $ \textcircled{905} $ $ \textcircled{906} $ $ \textcircled{907} $ $ \textcircled{908} $ $ \textcircled{909} $ $ \textcircled{910} $ $ \textcircled{911} $ $ \textcircled{912} $ $ \textcircled{913} $ $ \textcircled{914} $ $ \textcircled{915} $ $ \textcircled{916} $ $ \textcircled{917} $ $ \textcircled{918} $ $ \textcircled{919} $ $ \textcircled{920} $ $ \textcircled{921} $ $ \textcircled{922} $ $ \textcircled{923} $ $ \textcircled{924} $ $ \textcircled{925} $ $ \textcircled{926} $ $ \textcircled{927} $ $ \textcircled{928} $ $ \textcircled{929} $ $ \textcircled{930} $ $ \textcircled{931} $ $ \textcircled{932} $ $ \textcircled{933} $ $ \textcircled{934} $ $ \textcircled{935} $ $ \textcircled{936} $ $ \textcircled{937} $ $ \textcircled{938} $ $ \textcircled{939} $ $ \textcircled{940} $ $ \textcircled{941} $ $ \textcircled{942} $ $ \textcircled{943} $ $ \textcircled{944} $ $ \textcircled{945} $ $ \textcircled{946} $ $ \textcircled{947} $ $ \textcircled{948} $ $ \textcircled{949} $ $ \textcircled{950} $ $ \textcircled{951} $ $ \textcircled{952} $ $ \textcircled{953} $ $ \textcircled{954} $ $ \textcircled{955} $ $ \textcircled{956} $ $ \textcircled{957} $ $ \textcircled{958} $ $ \textcircled{959} $ $ \textcircled{960} $ $ \textcircled{961} $ $ \textcircled{962} $ $ \textcircled{963} $ $ \textcircled{964} $ $ \textcircled{965} $ $ \textcircled{966} $ $ \textcircled{967} $ $ \textcircled{968} $ $ \textcircled{969} $ $ \textcircled{970} $ $ \textcircled{971} $ $ \textcircled{972} $ $ \textcircled{973} $ $ \textcircled{974} $ $ \textcircled{975} $ $ \textcircled{976} $ $ \textcircled{977} $ $ \textcircled{978} $ $ \textcircled{980} $ $ \textcircled{981} $ $ \textcircled{982} $ $ \textcircled{983} $ $ \textcircled{984} $ $ \textcircled{985} $ $ \textcircled{986} $ $ \textcircled{987} $ $ \textcircled{988} $ $ \textcircled{989} $ $ \textcircled{990} $ $ \textcircled{991} $ $ \textcircled{992} $ $ \textcircled{993} $ $ \textcircled{994} $ $ \textcircled{995} $ $ \textcircled{996} $ $ \textcircled{997} $ $ \textcircled{998} $ $ \textcircled{999} $ $ \textcircled{900} $ $ \textcircled{901} $ $ \textcircled{902} $ $ \textcircled{903} $ $ \textcircled{904} $ $ \textcircled{905} $ $ \textcircled{906} $ $ \textcircled{907} $ $ \textcircled{908} $ $ \textcircled{909} $ $ \textcircled{910} $ $ \textcircled{911} $ $ \textcircled{912} $ $ \textcircled{913} $ $ \textcircled{914} $ $ \textcircled{915} $ $ \textcircled{916} $ $ \textcircled{917} $ $ \textcircled{918} $ $ \textcircled{919} $ $ \textcircled{920} $ $ \textcircled{921} $ $ \textcircled{922} $ $ \textcircled{923} $ $ \textcircled{924} $ $ \textcircled{925} $ $ \textcircled{926} $ $ \textcircled{927} $ $ \textcircled{928} $ $ \textcircled{929} $ $ \textcircled{930} $ $ \textcircled{931} $ $ \textcircled{932} $ $ \textcircled{933} $ $ \textcircled{934} $
A Portrait by
The Only PERFECT Christmas Gift
VI 3-1171
924 Vermont
Jay Bowl
KANSAS UNION
Open Bowling
Take advantage of this opportunity to enjoy Bowling, Billiards and Ping Pong
8 a.m. to 11 a.m. Daily
1 p.m. to 11 p.m. Sunday
the shoe
that fits
like a sock!
a built-in stretch
- Leather that stretches - Soft and Flexible - Cushioned Insole
- Wedge rubber sole for support - In your favorite colors
Sockaroo®
Sockaroo by CROSBY SQUARE
Sockaroo®
by CROSBY SQUARE
REDMAN'S SHOES
815 MASS.
REDMAN'S SHOES
815 MASS.
Page 4 University Daily Kansan
Student Judges Stop Trying Own Cases
By R. Dennis Bowers
An agreement between the student court justices to free their own comrades of traffic fines as compensation for time spent on the bench. is at an end.
David Mills, chief justice of the court, estimated that such an agreement had been in effect for "the last eight or nine years," but that he had "called a halt to the practice because he could not find any justification for it."
The story of this long-entrenched tradition of student court personnel automatically judging their own cases "nolie pros" (no prosecution) came out after a strange network of ironies and coincidences were found upon examination of police files and court documents.
It was established that:
- Justices of the student court have been appealing and passing their own traffic fines without bringing them up in court. The fines are judged "nolle pro" when they come up in court. This means that the offense was "obviously justifiable" in the justices' eyes and should not be tried.
- These same justices are sometimes sitting in on their own cases. They "continue" their own cases until they can sit on the bench (the court judges rotate, three sitting on each court session) and then do away with their ticket and fine. These fines sometimes reach figures amounting to $60.
- The justices, possibly eight or nine years ago, began an "unwritten agreement" that justices could have one free noelle pros (ticket) per year as compensation for sitting on the student court."
- This setup was halted only this fall when Chief Justice David Mills decided that "the rule is not justifiable and we will not continue it."
THE SITUATION WAS REvealed through a study of both student court records and campus police files after a law student quipped one day, "Tickets are just a big joke in the law school. They never have to pay them."
An investigation into the last three months of court sessions revealed that Dan Dreiling, Junction City third year law student and a student court justice this fall, had appealed a ticket for $16 and then continued his case for two sessions until it fell on the same night that he sat as a justice. Nov. 6.
Mills said last night, "Dreiling wanted to avail himself of that agreement (to automatically nolle pres his ticket) and I told him no, that the ruling was not in effect anymore.
"THE FIRST TWO TIMES Dreiling continued his appeal he was figuring on using his free nolle pros. Then he dropped the appeal since he didn't have any case at all . . . he didn't have a chance."
Asked when the agreement among the chief justices went into effect, Mills said, "I don't know just how far back but it was in effect when we came on the court last year. I imagine it has gone back eight or nine years but that is just hearsay"
Upon noticing that all of the justices cases which were appalled were nolle pressed, an inquiry was made at campus police headquarters to open the files of the court appeals.
Poise Chief Joe Skillman would not release the court records of the appeals because of ASC bill #4, section 5C which reads, "The student court shall keep a permanent record accessible to any member of the student body, but not for publication" unless expressed permission from the ASC is gained.
JERRY DICKSON, Newton senior and student body president, released the records for investigation.
The records showed the following court justices had tickets nolle pressed during last semester. Four of the seven fines which were nolle pressed were $16 tickets, the highest prized ticket.
Joel Sterret, Dec. 19 ($4)
Joel Sterret, Dec. 19 ($4)
Dan Dreiling, Feb. 27 ($4)
J. Richard Smith, March 3 ($16)
Charles Wetzel, May 1 ($8)
Dan Dreiling, May 15 ($16)
Robert Luce, May 15, $16)
Charles Wetzel, June 26 ($16)
The noille prossed cases had the following effect on the justices trafa-
tice finer:
Dan Dreiling, fined $30, paid $10
Robert Luce. $30. $4
Charles Wetzler, $30, $6
J. Richard Smith, $62, $48
All of these cases may be entirely legal. However, no member of the student court officiating body who appealed a fine was tried last semester. All were nolle prosessed.
Last semester's tickets amount to a total loss of $78 for the state of Kansas.
If, as has been estimated, the court justices have been practicing under their "agreement" for nine years, the total amount lost to court justices would amount to $1,404.
PAUL E. WILSON, professor of law, said last night after being informed of the situation, "I think that if the student court is to call itself a court or to purport to carry out the functions of the court, then it must function like a court."
Prof. Wilson continued, "If the facts you have are correct, it certainly arouses suspicion. The student court is an administrative tribunal; the rules are not spelled out in a set law and I assume the procedures could deviate some from regular court procedures.
PROF. WILSON SAID this morning that as far as he can find out, there is no faculty sponsor of the student court. He said "The court is not connected to the School of Law except that the Dean (James Logan) appoints the court justices."
James K. Logan, dean of the School of Law, said today that he knew nothing about the practice. "I can assure you that if there were such a practice I would stop it. I would be incensed to find out that it was going on now and David Mills assures me that no such practice now exists.
Commenting on the fact that court records prove Charles Wetzler sat as a justice on his own case on May 1, Prot. Wilson said, "It is certainly not for a justice to sit on his own case."
LOGAN, EXPLAINING the nolle pros decision in regular judicial courts, said, "If it got into the wrong hands it could be used very disreputedly."
He said that in a nolle pro塞 case, the prosecutor decides not to prosecute the defendant and therefore the court finds him innocent without trial. Therefore, Logan said, "the prosecutor would be the guy you should investigate."
It is highly possible that not all the court justice's cases which were nolle prossed took advantage of the Two such appeals were made by Drreling.
Logan said that the appeals of the court justices should either be tried by another body or by "at least the other (student court) justices."
"On the other hand, if the court does do a service, it must act within certain limits of fairness and decency."
300 Airmen Face Trial For Guatemala Revolt
Ambassador Carlos Urrutia Aparicio, Guatemalan representative to the OAS, was said to have advised a special OAS committee studying Communist subversion that such information would be available "within a few days."
Defense Minister Enrique Peralta Azurdia said the men being held for trial include officers, non-commissioned officers and specialists.
Initially, Dreiling said his car was stolen twice and it was moved to an illegal parking place where he received his tickets.
GUATEMALA CITY — (UPI) About 300 officers and men of the air force face trial in connection with Sunday's abortive revolt at the airbase here, it was announced last night.
Guatemala is also reported to be planning to present the Organization of American States (OAS) with evidence it claims would link the Cuban government to Sunday's brief revolt against President Miguel Ydi-goras Fuentes.
Peralta said 11 persons were wounded in the uprising, during which the Guatemalan "White House" and an army barrack were attacked by rebel planes.
FOLLOWING ARE his appeals:
Feb. 12, Zone U—“I parked my car
near Pi Phi house and left my keys
in car. Upon returning someone had
moved my car into Zone U and I
received a ticket for having no permit.”
(The three colonels described as the chief leaders of the uprising escaped by air to nearby El Salvador with a captain, presumably the pilot of the getaway plane.)
This casualty figure apparently referred only to soldier-victims of the rebellion. It had previously been reported that two civilians were killed and scores wounded, including the wife of a U.S. embassy official.
KU SPORTS
on
7:30 a.m. Daily Sports Shorts
DIAL KLWN 1320
5:00 Today ___ Jayhawk Locker Room
May 15, unknown location — "I left my car parked on off campus residence. My car was borrowed without my permission and a no permit ticket was issued. I had no knowledge of where car was parked and did not authorize its use."
5:20 ___ Tom Hedrick Sports
Charles Wetzler, May 1—Stouffer Place—"I came home from the hill at 1 a.m. Our parking lot in front of Stouffer was full. I parked in yellow area in front of island. Considering the time I parked and the fact that the lot was full, it seemed like the reasonable thing to do."
ANOTHER APPEAL which was nolle pressed is:
A law student who did not wish to be identified said, "Most of their reasons will be equitable because they know the reasons to give."
Former Ambassador Will Discuss Cuba
The former Cuban ambassador to Great Britain, who was forced to defect after condemning the Castro regime, will speak on campus Jan. 23.
Serrie Rojas will discuss the Cuban crisis at an open lecture in the Fraser Theater. His appearance is being sponsored by the Current Events Committee of the All Student Council.
Senor Rojas' arrest was ordered after he declared he would not serve under a communist government. During the Batista dictatorship, he was involved in the acquisition of armament supplies for Castro forces.
An economist by profession,
Senor Rojas is presently working
on confidential diplomatic matters
in Washington.
College students sometimes mature during their four-year stay. More often, they become confused and overwhelmed.-R. G. Descord.
TRADING POST
70412 Mass. Ph.VI 3-2394
Located 1 door South of K.P. & L.
in basement.
Youth bed complete ... $29.05
Wooden office swivel chair ... $ 4.00
Child's roll top maple desk
and swivel chair $24.50
5 pc. dinette set ... $29.95
Metal wardrobe ... $14.00
French Provincial wing
back chair ... $24.50
Filing cabinet ... $19.05
G. E. electric dryer ... $89.95
Room divider ... $ 7.00
3. drawer chest ... ;
Baby, bed with mattress ... $16.50
2. drawer chest $10.00
Portable T.V. ... $69.95
21" Console T.V. $19.00
Console model record player ... $42.50
Console mother receive pae of 1024b
AM table model radio ... $ 8.00
AM table model radio $ 8.00
Metal kitchen cabinet $13.50
We invite you to come in and look around. Remember a few steps down gives you a big step up in savings.
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results!
AT A LOSS?
★
LET US HELP YOU WITH YOUR CHRISTMAS NEEDS
Cosmetics and Perfume for the girls
Shaving Needs for the men on your Christmas list
Come in and look. We have all kinds of clever, budget priced gift items. COME HERE FIRST!
ROUND CORNER DRUGS
801 MASS. VI 3-0200
MOMMY'S BOSS
YOU'RE WRONG, YOU KNOW. WE'RE JUST HURRYING DOWN TO
EARL'S PIZZA PALACE
729 MASS.
Deliveries VI 3-0753
Thursday. Nov. 29,1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Accidents, Pranks Keep KU Cops Busy
By Philip Magers
Someone is handcuffed to Jimmy Green. Two students are locked in the Gangrene.
A man is sitting in the Chi Omega fountain.
Joseph Skillman, KU police chief, chuckled as he discussed some of the unusual pranks students have played in the last 10 years.
"Until several years ago we always locked the Campanile at night," Skillman said. "One cold night we got a call that two students were missing."
The worried callers said the students had been playing "hide and seek" around the Campanile and thought they might be locked inside it.
Skillman said, "We made a fast trip over there, and sure enough, we had locked the students in the memorial.
"We later discovered," he said, "that they had hidden in the janitor's closet and the policeman who locked the doors did not see them."
Often, unusual incidents are not accidents, but pranks, the chief said.
"We once found a student handcuffed to the statue of Jimmy Green, in front of Green Hall," he said.
The police freed the student with a hacksaw and took him to the office to remove the handcuffs.
One night a few years ago the police escorted a barefooted, wet fraternity pledge to his home. The student had been introduced to Potter Lake and was walking home in his wet clothes with only an army blanket.
Unusual incidents sometimes happen to the police.
Skillman said one of his men was removing the flag on Fraser Hall when he spotted several boys ready to give Jimmy Green a new paint job.
What could the policeman do?
He blew his traffic whistle and the painters fled, leaving their paint cans and brushes at the foot of the statue.
Although some of the assignments are funny, said Skillman, some of a more serious nature.
"A few winters ago, we were warning students to stay off Potter Lake until it was declared safe for skating," Skillman explained.
One student who could not swim disregarded our warnings, skated on the pond, and fell through the ice into 17 feet of cold water.
A patrolman was in the area, however. He threw a rope to the boy and rescued him.
Rupen to Discuss Outer Mongolia
Robert A. Rupen of the University of North Carolina will speak on "Inside Outer Mongolia" Monday night as part of a three-day visit here.
Prof. Rupen, associated professor of political science at NCU, is considered an expert on Mongolian af fairs.
His speech Monday will be given at 8 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
At 10 a.m. Tuesday, Prof. Rupen will attend a reception for Thomas Brimelow of the British Embassy in Washington.
Following a talk by Brimelow at the reception, Prof. Rupen will participate in a discussion with classes in Soviet and Chinese affairs and in the Slavic and Soviet Area Studies program.
Other meetings scheduled during Prof. Rupen's visit are:
Tuesday — noon, a political science department luncheon; 3:30 p.m., a lecture on "Economic Development of Outer Mongolia," in 405 Summerfield.
Wednesday — 10:30 a.m., a lecture, "Intra-Soviet Boc Relations as They Affect Outer Mongolia," Strong Annex D; 12:30, a luncheon sponsored by the Committee on East Asian Studies in the Kansas Union.
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
Daniels Jewelry
For
Fine Watch Repair
And
Quality Gifts
Lowest Prices
We Accept All Credit
Cards
914 Mass. St.
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
VATICAN CITY — (UPI) Pope John XXIII is suffering from a stomach disorder that has caused "rather strong anemia," the Vatican announced today.
Pope Confined to Bed
An official communique on the condition of the 81-year-old Pope, who was confined to his bed for the third day, said:
"SINCE LAST TUESDAY, on the advice of doctors, it became necessary to interrupt the series of audiences because of the accentuated symptoms of gastric troubles for which the Holy Father had been undergoing appropriate medical and dietetic treatment, and which caused rather strong anemia."
Anemia is a condition in which the blood is deficient in red cells, hemoglobin, or both. It is characterized by a lack of vitality. Gastric troubles are those relating to the stomach.
The communique was issued after a report by high Vatican sources that the Pope had spent
a "very tranquil" night and was "much better" this morning.
"EVERYTHING LEADS to hope that as a result of treatment arranged and underway, the August Pontiff may very soon resume the (collateral)" the
meetings (audiences)," the Communique said.
The Communique, which was not signed, was read to newsmen by the head of the Vatican press office. Dr. Luciano Casimirri.
It was the first clear description of the Pontiff's ailment since he had become ill. At first it was said he was suffering from a cold.
Later Casimirri said it was influenza.
In still later reports there were no indications as to just what was wrong.
There had been a number of reports that Pope John was suffering from a recurrence of prostate gland trouble, an ailment which has given him difficulty for at least a year. But the Communi-ique made no mention of this.
CRC Check Finds No Discrimination
There is no racial discrimination at three local amusement centers, members of the Civil Rights Council (CRC) were told last night.
A special CRC committee gave the report and indicated that some spot checks would be made at future dates.
The CRC also pledged five dollars to help James Meredith further his education at Ole Miss.
The CRC also set plans to screen
Over $125 has been collected by the Lawrence League for the Practice of Democracy. The figure includes the amount pledged by the CRC.
a 25-minute film dealing with freedom rides — a discussion airing the pros and cons of such rides will follow.
Eugene Tourner, a civil rights leader who visited the campus earlier this month, will return to KU to give the positive side.
Tourner works in the Midwest area for the Congress On Racial Equality (CORE). Sharon Fincomb, Olathe sophomore who is in charge of final arrangements, has not yet selected a representative for the opposing side.
The film is to be shown December 13.
Birds on a Branch
BIRD TV-RADIO
VI 3-8855
TV-
RADIO
908 Mass.
- Quality Parts
- Guaranteed
- Expert Service
S. U.A.
Print Sale and Exhibition
South Lounge of Student Union THRU MONTH OF DECEMBER
WORKS BY
Prints, Lithographs, Etchings Color and Black and White
Rouault Picasso Matisse
Manet Renoir Corof
Haas
Priced from $3.50 to $80.00
M
A
Open Every Evening
S
Safeway
O
Key Rexall Drugs
T. G. & Y.
ACME Laundry & Cleaners
Western Auto
Speed-Wash
Malls Barber Shop
Ronnie's Beauty Salon
Little Banquet
Count Down House
Peggy's Gifts & Cards
Elms
Sinclair
Service
Maupintour Travel
Kief's Record & Hi-Fi
Shop Evenings
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Nov. 29, 1962
KU Coeds Borrow Plaid Kilts from Scotchmen
The Scottish kilt, a short plaited garment with a fringed edge running along the side, came down from the highlands and across the sea to become fashion again on this hill.
Today the kilt, often ornamental with an oversize safety pin, is KU's latest fashion bad, but it can trace its history to one of the most ancient of all costumes.
KU women can even trace the color of their kilt to a particular Scottish family. The Rob Roy clan of Scotland wears a red and black check plaid, while the MacMillan
Speakers Bureau Formed by Statewide
Statewide Speakers Bureau, an arm of Statewide Activities, has been formed to promote the University of Kansas throughout the state.
Steve Stazel, Denver, Colo., senior and Statewide Activities president, said the Speakers Bureau will send representatives to civic clubs, high schools and other interested groups.
"These students will be the backbone of KU student public relations," commented Stazel. "Our main goal will be to inform Kansas high school students and their parents of cultural, educational, vocational and other opportunities available at KU."
Statewide Activities will furnish speakers with material for their talks.
clan wears a pink, yellow, and white plaid. The Eliot clan wears the bluest tartan and the MacArthur clan wears the greenest of all the tartans.
The Black Watch plaid that Francis L. Fredrichs, Mission freshman, models in the picture at the left, is a dark blue, green and black pattern. This plaid has no clan significance. It is entirely military. The Black Watch plaid dates to 1725 when an English general was sent to Scotland to pacify the highlanders and ordered that all of his companies should adopt a uniform tartan.
The forerunner of the kilt was the middle ages Celtic skirt called a lenn. It reached a little below the knees. Slaves and kings distinguished among themselves by the number of colors in their lennes. The slave had clothes of one color while the king had clothes combining six different colors.
Special Examinations Slated for December
Dec. 8—Navy College Aptitude tests, 303 Bailey.
Special examinations to be held on campus during the month of December will include:
Fraternities Announce Fall Pinnings
Dec. 1—College Entrance Examination Board tests, Big Eight room, Kansas Union.
Dec. 8- National Security Agency examination, Pine Room, Kansas Union.
Fred Green, Prairie Village senior Kappa Sigma, to Jane Windbigler Olathe junior, Chi Omega.
***
Fred Kennedy, Leawood junior,
Phi Gamma Delta, to Lesley Hagood,
Prairie Village junior, Gamma Phi
Beta.
***
Additional information can be obtained at the Guidance Bureau, 116 Bailey.
William Gradinger, Shawnee Mission sophomore, Sigma Ma, to Mary Moberly, Excelsior Springs, Mo. sophomore, Hashinger Hall.
***
Stephen Hagen, Great Bend junior, Phi Kappa Sigma, to Doris Lehman, Kansas State University, Kappa Delta.
** **
***
Robert Witham, Kansas City junior, Phi Kappa Sigma, to Martha Ludwig, College of St. Theresa, Kansas City, Mo.
William Bliss, Kansas City, Mo. junior, Phi Kappa Tau, to Judy Barneck, Salina junior.
Carruth-O'Leary Dorm Elects First Semester Officers
Carruth-O'Leary Hall has elected dormitory officers.
The new officers are:
Donald McEowen, Harrisonville, Mo., senior, president; Michael Miller, Kansas City, Mo., senior, secretary; Larry Brown, Hershey, Pa., senior; treasurer; Larry DMeare, Kansas City, Mo., junior, and Joe Isom, Kansas City, Mo., junior, social co-chairmen.
Business Honorary Elects New Members
Seven new members have been elected to Beta Gamma Sigma, national honor society in the field of business administration.
Election to Beta Gamma Sigma is the highest scholastic honor a student in the field of business administration can attain.
The new senior members include:
Karen Caylor, Lawrence; Gary Nu-
Delman, Lawrence; Edward Roberts,
Bonner Springs; Carolyn Toews,
Inman; John Walker, Mayetta.
Spring '62 graduates who were also elected include: Robert Childress, Lawrence; Cleve Miller, Lawrence and Howard Parker, Kansas City.
Beta Gamma Sigma organized to reward scholarship and accomplishment in the area of business studies, will celebrate its 50th anniversary in 1963. The society has 86 chapters at colleges and universities in the United States.
To be eligible for election to Beta Gamma Sigma, a candidate must rank in the upper 10 per cent of his graduating class. If he is a junior, he must rank in the upper 4 per cent. Master's candidate's must rank in the upper 20 per cent, and faculty members elected to Beta Gamma Sigma must complete three years of teaching at the institution electing them before they are eligible.
Some water stains on furniture can be removed by placing a white blotter over the stain and passing over the stain with an electric iron turned to medium heat.
Soap and water will keep plastic flowers and greens in garden-fresh condition.
BOWLING is FUN!
Try It This Weekend at
Hillcrest Bowl
9th & Iowa
32 AUTOMATIC LANES
Tau Beta Pi Initiates 17 Members
Gary Agin, Kansas City, Mo., senior; Frank Breen, Cincinnati, Ohio; senior; Donald Burrell, Lawrence senior; Myron Calhoun, Milton, Fla., senior; Gary Floss, St. Joseph, Mo., senior; Carl Hamann, Shawnee junior; David Headley, Auburn, Cal., senior; Hans Heynaun, Fort Collins, Colo.; senior; Charles James, Mayetta senior; Akos Kovacs, Novi Sad, Yugoslavia, senior; Harvey Metzler, Independence senior.
Tau Beta Pi, national engineering honor society, recently initiated 17 men. The new initiates include:
Donald Metzler, professor of engineering mechanics presented Honor Freshman Roger T. Baker, Highland, Cal., and Honor Sophomore Delbert D. Franz, Walton, with engraved slide rules. The honor student awards are presented annually by Tau Beta Pi to the top engineering students in the freshman and sophomore class.
Kovacs received the award for the best pledge essay at the banquet following the initiation.
KU Angel Flight Pledges 21 Women
Paul Nichols, Savannah, Mo., senior; Everett Prewitt, Kansas City, Mo., junior; David Streeter, Lawrence senior; Wiwho Tjokronegoroi; Djarkaτia, Indonesia, junior; James Warner, Lawrence senior, and James Wolfe, Garden City senior.
Angel Flight, an honorary society formed to promote interest in the U.S. Air Force, recently pledged the following women:
Carol Anderson, Leawood sophomore; Cynthia Ann Childers, Merriam junior; Sandra Coffman, Pittsburg sophomore; Nancy Davis, Leawood sophomore; Johanna De Groot, Wichita sophomore.
Janet Epperson, Redlands, California., sophomore; Judith Fraser, Larned junior; Leslie Freeze, Overland Park junior; Linda Houston, Wichita sophomore; Mary Hughes, Des Moines, Iowa, sophomore; Yvonne Jackson, Kansas City junior.
Mary Kline, Wichita sophomore; Carolyn Kunz, Greenville, S. C., sophomore; Patricia Lee, Independence, Mo., junior; Sandra Lessenend, Topeka sophomore; Maureen Maloney, Hutchinson junior; Cappy Mays, Wichita junior.
Ann Sheldon, Independence, Kan,
sophomore; Kay Wills, Augusta
sophomore; Marcilee Wilson, Little-
ton, Colo., junior, and Maralyn
Wyles, Carlisle, Penn, sophomore.
The sweater dress is a fashion star this winter. Two piece suits and casual one-piece dresses are the popular designs. Neckline interest centers on cowls, V's and turtle designs.
Senior Class Party Planned for Eldridge
A Senior class party will be held in the Crystal Room of the Hotel Eldridge Saturday night from 9-midnight.
The Fireflies, a local dance band,
will provide the entertainment.
Soft drinks will be available at
cost, and snacks will be served.
The admission price is $1, or a
Senior ID card.
The Special Events Committee, which is planning the party, is attempting to attract more class members by presenting a different type of function.
Pink and yellow are voted the mid-winter colors most likely to succeed. Both colors are very effective with gray. Bright red, navy and light blue are also popular colors.
GLASS
GLASS
AUTO GLASS
TABLE TOPS
Sudden Service
AUTO GLASS
East End of 9th Street
VI 3-4416
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!
ON LP RECORDS
"The First Family"
BELL'S
VI 3-2644
925 MASS.
You Are KU's PR $ ^{*} $ Man
If you want to spread KU's fame
If you have had speaking experience
If you apply for the Statewide Activities Speakers Bureau
- Public Relations
Applications are available through your house president; the Alumni Office, 127 Strong.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
Steve Stazel—VI 3-1263
Tom Hamill—VI 3-7370
Chuck Squire-VI 3-7102
Patsy Kendell—VI 3-5660
Deadline — December 3
Thursday. Nov. 29, 1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Ole Miss Guilty Of Interference
DALLAS — (UPI) — The University of Mississippi was under close and continued observation today by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools for allowing political interference in Negro James Meredith's attempt to register as a student.
The association did not strip Ole Miss of accreditation yesterday as it could have. It did, however, find the school guilty of political interference when Gov. Ross Barnett took over last September as registrar to keep Meredith from registering.
The association, which has 388 college and university members in 11 southern states decided to suspend sentence. Six other Mississippi schools were covered in the order because they are state-supported. They are Mississippi State, the University of South Mississippi, Delta State, Jackson State, Alcorn A&M and Mississippi State College for Women.
MEREDITH WAS finally registered after U.S. marshals and troops were brought in and two persons were killed in a campus riot.
The association said it is watching conditions at Ole Miss and "failure of the administration and faculty to maintain, through normal student discipline, a climate conducive to intellectual pursuits . . . will be considered cause for immediate and rigorous re-examination of the accredited status of the institution."
IT IS STILL deeply concerned over the possibility of new riots and violence at Ole Miss, the association said.
Chancellor John D. Williams of the University of Mississippi said the school was "deeply appreciative" of the expression of understanding and support.
The association accepted the assurances of Barnett and the Board of Trustees of State Institutions of Higher Learning that there is no interference now. However, it warned that re-submission to political interference, any legislative punitive action or riots may bring quick loss of accreditation.
Discussion to Cover Architecture Here
Kansas City architect Ted Seligson will lead a public panel discussion on KU campus architecture at 8 p.m. Tuesday, December 4. in the Forum Room of the Union.
The discussion will be supplemented with slides. Professors Eugene George and Curtis Besinger of the architecture department will assist Seligson.
Official Bulletin
Organic Chemistry Colloquium, 4:00 p.m., 233 Malott, Douglas Neckers; "Mechanisms of Perester Decompositions."
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
Mathematics Staff Seminar, 3:30 p.m.
Boston: A Formulation of Logs,
Boston: A Formulation of Logs,
TODAY
Mulim Society, 7.00 p.m., Parlor C.
Shelby, James E., James E. Seaver,
Mulim Alah, sliding
Der Deutsche Verein, 5:00 Dennsterstag,
den 29. November, Student Union, Robert
Hiller, Hitler, Hiller, Klavier; und Walter Hakey, Cello, werden
Brahms und von Weber spielen.
Catholic Masses, 7:00 a.m. 11:40 a.m.
Saint Stephen Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford
Rd.
TOMORROW
International Club, after the foreign movie at Hoch, Jayhawk Room, Union, Ping Pong Tournament, Dancing and Refreshments.
High School Seniors To Take Test Here
About 30 high school seniors will be on campus Saturday taking the College Board Entrance Examination.
The College Board Entrance Exam is the required admissions test for many colleges, so most will be taking the exam for entrance requirements. However, the person now attending a university which does not require the exam and wishes to transfer schools may be requested to take the exam.
KU is the regional testing center for the Northeast Kansas area. The testing period will last from 8:30 a.m. to 5:45 p.m. in the Big Eight Room at the Kansas Union.
Neither KU nor any other Kansas university requires the exam, although a number of them make use of the scores if they are available.
Jimmy Green Gets Fewer Paint Jobs
KU students have outgrown vandalism.
Joseph Skillman, campus police chief, said yesterday that in the 15 years he has been at KU vandalism has been decreasing steadily.
"I think the decrease is because the students are becoming more sophisticated," he said. "The nightly painting of Jimmy Green is a thing of the past."
Vitalis
v9.
CORONAVIRUS TREATMENT
FOR COPD, CHRONIC PULMONARY,
AND LABIAL EFFECTS
The only real trouble we have had this year has been with the traffic control booths and traffic signs, Skillman said.
On several occasions windows have been broken in the booths, but this is mainly because they are new, he said.
We have had several reports from the sheriff's office on stolen traffic signs, which seem to be being used for room decorations, he added
一
LET VITALIS® KEEP YOUR HAIR NEAT ALL DAY WITHOUT GREASE! Keep the oil in the can. In your hair, use Vitalis with V-7$, the greaseless grooming discovery. Fights embarrassing dandruff, prevents dryness—keeps your hair neat all day without grease.
Albert Schweitzer, the well-known musician and missionary, is not a Christian, a minister said here last night.
Schweitzer Termed Unchristian by Minister
MAYNARD STROTHMANN, director of Westminster Center, said that even as a theological student, Schweitzer was not satisfied with the Christian beliefs and later formulated his own philosophy.
The Rev. Mr. Strothmann discussed the philosophy of Albert Schweitzer at a study group on "Great Men of the 20th Century."
Schweitzer bases his philosophy on the will to live, or reverence for life. The Rev. Mr. Strothmann said that it was an egotistic kind of philosophy.
"SCHWEITZER BELIEVES that this egotistic base must be extended to the fullest limit, then the will to live becomes the will to sacrifice as well." the speaker said.
"Schweitzer rejected traditional Christianity and traditional rationalism in formulating his philosophy. The problem as Schweitzer saw it was for man to have the ability to think and act freely in an ethical world.
"SCHWEITZER SEES all creation as made up of wills to live. He believes that somehow these 'wills to live' experience wholeness together, and this makes life," the Rev. Mr. Strothmann continued.
"So Schweitzer based ethical action on sense experience in order to face honestly the terrible order of the want and meaning in life. He based ethical action on the world as it is," the Rev. Mr. Strothmann said.
The speaker said that the missionary believes that the human species is not to be considered superior to other life species. This sentiment gives rise to three kinds of unethical actions, according to Schweitzer's beliefs.
"One group is actions that are unnecessary. This includes purposely stepping on insects or carelessly plucking a flower.
Another action is destroying a life for self preservation, the Rev, Mr. Strothmann said. He explained that although the action was for self preservation, it did not absolve a person from the action.
The third unethical action, the minister went on, was to maintain other kinds of existences, this not freeing a person either.
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
State Farm Insurance
Paul E. Hodgson
Local Agent
Off. Ph. VI 3-5666 530 W 23rd.
Res. Ph. VI 3-5984 Lawrence, Kan.
JOE'S BAKERY
Open 24 Hours
Night Deliveries
412 W. 9th VI3-4720
BALDWIN ART THEATER
"Lust of Life"
Immortal Story of the Life of VINCENT VAN GOGH
Nov. 28, 29 — 7:30 p.m.
GEM THEATER - BALDWIN, KANS.
819 MASS.
ARENSBERG'S
VI 3-3470
Month End Clearance Of Women's Shoes
LOAFERS AND DRESS FLATS
$4.90 $5.90 $6.90 Reg. $6.95 to $10.95
Penobscot — Connie — Coach & Four — Joyce
DRESS PUMPS
High or Mid Heels
$9.90 to $14.90
Reg. $12.95 to $18.95
Jacqueline, Accent, Joyce, Johansen, Vitality
All Sales Final — Entire Stock Not Included
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Thursday. Nov. 29. 1962
Old Quarterback Still Rabid KU Fan
By Rose Ellen Osborne
The dean of University of Kansas football captains, Dr. Bert Kennedy, has not scored a touchdown during the 20th century.
But he is still an ardent KU booster, one of the most enthusiastic armchair quarterbacks in the state.
Each Saturday afternoon during football season, the snowy-haired, 86-year-old Lawrence dentist can be found sitting on the Kansas sidelines outyelling the cheerleaders, or hunched over a radio in his office and concentrating on every play.
STILL A QUARTERBACK at heart, Kennedy likes to mull over KU plays while he shapes the mold for a set of false teeth.
Varsity player, captain, coach and pro football organizer—the Irishman has viewed football from every side of the bench.
"Maybe it's time we changed the rules," he says. "The game is out of balance. The rules favor the offense against the defense."
Squaring his broad shoulders and leaning back in his chair, Kennedy recalled that when he began playing football the players wore knitted caps instead of helmets.
"The only protection those first fellows had was to let their hair grow long. Uniforms were scarce. My mother either had to make me a football suit or to sew up my ripped clothes every night."
AS A YOUTH Kennedy used to watch the games played on the Lawrence baseball field at 13th and Massachusetts.
"The fancy would come all decked out in their glad rags riding on the top of tallyhos and hacks drawn by fine horses.
"I remember the day a group of students were teasing Ephriam Miller, Dean of the College, because he wasn't wearing the crimson colors.
"I carry the KU colors every day," Miller retorted stroking his red beard.
"ONE OF THE big problems of those very earliest teams was finding officials to administer the game," he said, chuckling, as he recalled Professor William Herbert Carruth's decision in an early Baker game to give the touchdown and the game to Baker because it was "the only fair thing to do. They were the visitors."
Kennedy began playing for KU in 1895 and was captain of the Jayhawkers in 1897.
"Those were the days when it was a sin not to beat Missouri, and Kansas boys were good Bible-carrying Christians.
"We old timers hated to tie," he remembered, adjusting his spectacles. "In the Nebraska game in 1906 the boys played until dark and the officials deliberated even longer. We didn't know KU won until 10 o'clock."
That was the year Kennedy was
FRIDAY FLICKS
Shows at 7 and 9:30
FRASER THEATER
Peter Sandra John
USTINOV·DEE·GAVIN
The rollicking Stage success that rocked Broadway and theatres across the Nation!
Romanoff and Juliet
co-starring AKIM TAMIROFF TECHNICOLOR
THE SCOTCH-IRISHMAN, who claims he is no relation to "that other Kennedy in the White House," later transferred to the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia and played in the Harvard-Princeton league.
Reporting sports and college news for six morning newspapers in Philadelphia, he organized the city's first professional football team and introduced the Kennedy tackle.
the coach of an undefeated KU grid squad.
The football philosopher maintains that the game just came naturally for him.
"My mother had eight children—all born in a log cabin. Just before I was born we moved into a stone house so I was denied the privilege of becoming President," he ioked.
35c admission — tickets for both shows on sale at Union on Friday till 6 p.m. and then at the door.
IN 1903, he was graduated from dentistry school and returned to Kansas.
His eyes twinkled good naturelly beneath his spectacles as he recalled how Washburn insisted that the athletic director become a faculty member.
His degree was in dentistry, but his heart was in football, so he took a job as athletic director and coach at Washburn University in Topeka
"I felt that the faculty was for those Phi Beta Kappa persons. But Mother always wanted me to be a teacher.
"As long as men like to measure their strength with each other, there will be football."
"But when I showed her the Washburn catalog with my picture in the faculty section all she said was 'Do you call that teaching school?'
DISDAINFUL OF football's recent tendencies toward monetary profit, Kennedy said he advocates a physical fitness program for the entire college.
As he spoke, he forgot the starchy white dental jacket and the false teeth mounting. He was young again. It was 1897, and the crowds were yelling for a quarterback named Bert Kennedy.
Nolen Ellison would figure as a key man on any collegiate basketball team in the country, but his role in the Kansas Jayhawks' basketball plans this season will be quantitatively less than last year.
By Terry Murphy
It is important to note the modifier, "quantitatively," because if the Javhawkers are to climb from the Big Eight cellar spot they held last season, the Kansas City, Kan., senior figures to be the hub of any resurgence.
Last year, the 6-1 former all-state performer from Kansas City's Wyan-lotte High School averaged 18.1 points a game during the 25-game Hawker schedule.
The presence of seven sophomores on the Jayhawker roster will add needed depth at every position.
WHERE ELLISON will be "cut down" from his performance of last year is in playing time. He logged every minute in last year's games except for two minutes and some seconds.
But whenever the game is in doubt, Ellison will be in the thick of the battle. He does much more than score points — he directs the offense and coaches Dick Harp and Ted Owens rate him as one of the top defensive players on the Hawker quintet.
Load Lightened on KU Backcourt Ace
His last year's performance earned
KSU Recommends New Weaver Pact
Reappointment of Kansas State football coach Doug Weaver for a three-year term will be recommended to the state board of regents in December, James A. McKain, K-State president, announced yesterday.
The three-year contract would begin Jan. 1, 1963. Reappointment of the assistant football coaches at Kansas State will also be recommended.
Weaver's Wildcats have won three and lost 27 since he took over as head coach at Kansas State in 1960. K-State lost its last eight games last year and all 10 this fall for an 18-game streak.
The Wildcats have lost all 21 of their conference games since Wenver took over. This season they dropped a close 6-0 decision to Colorado at Boulder.
Eliminating
Eliminating
"GUESS WORK"
is the job of the
Independent
Insurance Agent
as well as the Chemist
BREWING SYSTEMS
Just as the chemist eliminated guesswork through careful analysis and research, the Independent Local Insurance Agent is an expert at eliminating guesswork through an adequate insurance program designed to fit your budget. We will be happy to analyze all of the hazards to which you are exposed and recommend the insurance coverage needed for proper protection and peace of mind.
Our advice costs you nothing.
CHARLETON INSURANCE
You are never obligated to buy.
INSURANCE BUILDING
VI 3-5454
him All-Big Eight guard honors, and if the Jayhawkers are to figure in the conference title race this season, he might rate All-American honors.
"WEVE GOT better height and bench strength," Ellison said in regard to the team's chances for a successful season. "The squad has better spirit and everyone is looking forward to the conference race. We'll definitely be improved."
While at Wyandotte High, Ellison got into the habit of winning — he played on three state championship teams.
And the presence of 6-7 center George Unseld will take much of the offensive pressures of the guards that they felt last season when Wayne Hightower's departure left the Hawker offense without a consistent front-line punch.
Following his graduation this June, Nolen plans to teach social studies and hopes to coach basketball for a year or two before he fulfills his military obligation.
And the return of forwards Al Correll (who is not eligible until second semester begins) and Jim
Dumas along with Ellison has given KU mentor Harp a remote boost to the KU title hopes this season.
"We'll be improved this season." coach Harp said during early-season practice sessions. "Just how much improved depends a lot on their sophomores."
Kansas opens its basketball season Friday at Allen Field House when the Jayhawkers tangle with the Montana State Grizzlies.
JIM'S CAFE
OPEN
24 hrs. a day
BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY
838 Mass.
FROSTY 22
FROSTY ??
JERRY'S
GRAND
OPENING
Phillips
66
December 1, 1962
F R E
"The Mostest In SERVICE"
PHILLIPS Tires and Batteries
Complete Lubrication and Carton Pepsi with Gas purchase
25th & Iowa, Next to Chuck Wagon
F
ths FREE MAN
LOOK FOR
THE GOLDEN CREST
FREEMAN Hand-Sewn
"Bunny Blacks"
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 genius of these heels are the heel rubber. Right! A1 B=B 12 & 14; C= 7; I- 12 & 13; 14; D= 6; 12 & 13 & 14; E= 6½-12.
Black or Antique Brown, $14.95
Royal College Shop
837 MASS.
VI 3-4255
Thursday, Nov. 20, 1962 University Daily Kansan Page 9
Machinists Prefer To 'Slug It Out'
BURBANK, Calif. — (UPI) — Injunction proceedings aimed at halting a strike by the Machinists Union against Lockheed Aircraft Corp. forged ahead today with union and company representatives in disagreement over President Kennedy's activation of the Taft-Hartley law machinery.
TOM McNETT, president of IAM District 27, said, "If there had to be government interference, we would have much preferred seizure."
"WE WOULD NOT welcome a Taft-Hartley injunction," continued McNett. "We are in good shape for a long haul, but we do not anticipate a long strike. The products produced by this organization are what we call the bottest things on the beach."
A spokesman for the International Association of Machinists said yesterday following the announcement that the President would invoke the Taft-Hartley law, "We would have much preferred to slug it out with the company without the government's interference."
However, Courtlandt S. Gross, chairman of the board of Lockheed, said, "We feel the President has acted in the best interest of all concerned. We hope this means we can arrive at an agreement."
McNett, obviously displeased with the initiation of injunction proceedings, said, "In this case the strike was provoked by the company and the union had no other course.
"When the injunction is invoked we will make every effort to obtain the type of contract that we sought in our prolonged negotiations, and if unable to obtain it, we will again strike!"
Kennedy acted to invoke the Taft-Hartley Act yesterday—the first day of the strike—saying continuance of the walkout "would imperil the national health and safety."
WHITE HOUSE Press Secretary Pierre Salinger said the President acted under a finding that the strike "affects a substantial part of the ballistic missile, space vehicle and military aircraft industry."
The President named a special board to study the strike.
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
Bill Haynes $ ^{*} $ says...
Stands to reason that a life Insurance policy designed expressly for college men—and sold only to college men—gives you the most benefits for your money when you consider that college men are preferred insurance risks. Call me and I'll fill you In on THE BENEFACTOR, College Life's famous policy, exclusively for college men.
*BILL HAYNES
VI 3-9394
representing
THE COLLEGE LIFE
INSURANCE COMPANY
OF AMERICA
... the only Company selling
exclusively to College Men
Labor Secretary W. Willard Wirtz, in Denver, Colo., said he had "no present plans for taking part in the proceedings," but added, "I hope very much that union picketing at Vandenberg and Canaveral can be called off while the board of inquiry is holding its hearings."
Under Taft-Hartley law provisions, the President is empowered to halt the strike for an 80-day "cooling-off" period if such action is proved to be warranted.
WHITE HOUSE records showed it was the fifth time the President has set in motion the Taft-Hartley machinery in labor disputes affecting the national welfare.
Pickets continued their generally orderly demonstrations at Lockheed facilities at Cape Canaveral, Vandenberg, Burbank, Sunnyvale, Palmdale, Rye Canyon, Van Nuys, Santa Cruz, and Kaena Point in Hawaii.
SATURDAY, DEC. 1
Kansas Basketball Home Opener
KU vs. MONTANA
ALLEN FIELDHOUSE — TIP-OFF TIME: 7:35 P.M.
★
The 1962-63 Jayhawkers will battle the grizzles of Montana in this big basketball home opener. Be sure to make your plans now to attend and remember student I.D.'s are good for all home games.
SEE YOU SATURDAY AT ALLEN FIELDHOUSE
★
William Shakespeare at once England's most famous and most prolific author, has frequently been a figure of great controversy contiervy. It has been said that he Shakespeare himself wrote little little, if any of the work atted attributed to him.
Francis Bacon is often often
I QUIT!!! © XXX I'm going to the Bookstore to rent a typewriter it's cheap, and they have erasable bond paper and "Touch and So" coudion tape. Either way this paper will be readable & the proof will never know how many mistakes I've made.
Lew going to make it a point to tell the fellas about their new used typewriters two Xmas is coming this year, let
KANSAS UNION BOOK STORE
Page 10 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Nov. 29, 1962
Photo Bureau Path Is Complete Maze
By Steve Clark
The KU Photo and Graphic Arts bureau, a University Extension division, is involuntarily offering a labyrinth for its patrons while the Watson Library addition is being built.
If a student wishes to use the bureau facilities he follows a series of arrows. "He can't miss it," reports Ed Julian, director of the bureau.
The bureau will be without a front entrance during the construction since the area between Watson and Fraser is fenced for working and safety purposes.
IF A STUDENT WISHES to find the bureau, he must follow a series of arrows into the bowels of the library. "He can't miss it," reports Ed Julian, director of the bureau.
To find the bureau, one enters the library at the front door then takes either right or left stairs down to the undergraduate library level. That's the easy part. And that's all that can be explained.
From this point, follow the arrows and good luck. It is important not to become discouraged. But it's a discouraging job inching past musty bookshelves looking for arrows that become smaller and smaller.
BUT ONCE ONE arrives, he finds himself in one of the most interesting departments at KU.
From their home in the dungeons of Watson Library, photo bureau employees handle all photography, art work, layout and design of many of the University's publications.
The modernistic design in dark blue on the University's new catalog is a Photo Bureau product. The smaller booklets on each of the schools were also designed there.
The Bureau is constantly taking pictures of KU and its activities. Bureau services are also offered to outside groups visiting the campus.
THE BUREAU IS also a valuable aid to students. Many graduate students use the Bureau to reduce charts and graphs and to lay out their theses. Art students often have reproductions made of paintings they have done or are studying.
With the stress on visual teaching aids in modern instruction, the bureau prepares slides for many faculty members to supplement their lectures.
The Bureau this fall prepared an exhibit, "Higher Education for a Better Tomorrow," which was displayed at the Hutchinson State Fair.
The photo bureau's purpose is to serve students. It is available and willing, if one can find it.
Heavy Conference Faces KU IFC Men
Several busy days lie ahead to KU's four delegates to the National Inter-Fraternity Conference being held through Sunday in Pittsburgh, Pa.
While attending the meeting, Big Eight delegates will meet to plan the Big Eight IFC conference to be held in the spring at Oklahoma State. Last year, KU hosted the conference
The delegates Jim Carr, Carthage, Mo., senior; David Cain, Prairie Village junior; David Stinson, Lawrence junior, and Steve Stotts, Prairie Village junior, yesterday boarded a plane for the conference.
The purpose of the meeting is to discuss common problems and goals which fraternity systems on different campuses face. Ideas on fraternity functions such as rush week and Greek week will be exchanged.
The four will compile the ideas expressed and consider possibilities of initiating them in the KU system.
Muslim Architecture Talk Set
Muslim architecture will be discussed and illustrated with color slides by James E. Seaver, professor of history and director of the Western Civilization program at 7 tonight in Parlor C of the Kansas Union.
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
Rothwell to Cover British Poet's Work
Kenneth Rothwell, assistant professor of English, will present readings from British poet John Betjeman in his discussion of "Works of the Modern Poet" at the Poetry Hour at 4:30 today in the Kansas Union music room.
FAST FINISHED Laundry Service
Prof. Rothwell said that the Anglican church and Victorian architecture were the two main themes which dominate most of Betjeman's poetry.
RISK'S
613 Vermont
613 Vermont
LONDON — (UPI) — Sir Winston Churchill's 88th birthday rolls around tomorrow and the venerable statesman's family and friends are delighted at the opportunity of stressing his age.
Winnie Still Tough at 88
"Happy 88th birthday," they will say — and hope the hint sinks in.
For the old man is feeling so well at the moment that he tends to forget his years.
"FRANKLY." said a friend today, "we are afraid he may over extend himself. He has got to be reminded of his great age and a birthday is a fine and natural time for doing just that. We wouldn't dare do it at any other time."
Sir Winston is clumping around his town house in Hyde Park Gate on a cane these days fretting because the doctors do not think him quite ready for a journey to the sun of the French Riviera.
His continuing recovery from a broken thigh bone suffered in a fall in Monte Carlo last June is remarkable, but Sir Winston is convinced the leg will be completely normal if he can only bask in the sunshine for a few hours a day — a forlorn hope in the cold rain and mists of an English winter.
"He is keeping the pressure on," said the friend, "so I suppose they won't be able to hold him here much after the first of the year."
SIR WINSTON is making one important change in routine this year as a result of the leg injury. He will not attend the annual sing-song of his public school, Harrow-on-the-Hill, thus breaking a tradition extending back 21 years into the worst days of the war.
These are emotional occasions with the boys of the school, in starched white-collars and black mess jackets, singing to Sir Winston the songs he himself sang when he was a student nearly 75 years ago.
But the old statesman cannot yet maneuver on his own the long walk and the steps from the road
GRANADA
NOW SHOWING!
PLEASE! SEE IT FROM THE VERY START! AT 7:00 AND 9:10
Frank Sinatra
Laurence Harvey
Janet Leigh
The
Manchurian
Candidate
RELEASED THUR / UNITED ARTISTS
VARSITY ART Attractions
The Manchurian Candidate
RELEASE THIRD / UNITED ARTISTS
into the ancient auditorium of the school and apparently he does not want the boys to see him carried or wheeled to the dias.
---
The 88th birthday celebration will be a simple affair at the town house with only family and a few close friends present.
1
Now Showing!
Limited Engagement
"Words Are Completely Insufficient To Express The True Quality And Extent Of Eloquence Got Into This Picture!"
THERE MAY BE a surprise guest — the youngest member of the Churchill clan, Sir Winston's first great grand-child, Mark Dixon. He will be only two weeks old but Sir Winston is anxious to see him. Mark is the grandson of Diana Churchill and her former husband, commonwealth and colonial minister Duncan Sandusk.
BOSLEY CROWTHER, NEW TORK TIMES
Rita Tushingham
Winner Best Performance Award
Cannes Film Festival 1962
Murray Melvin
Winner Best Performance Award
Cannes Film Festival 1982
Winner of 4 British Academy Awards
Performances 7 and 9
Adm. $1.00
Sir Winston spends his time reading, playing beizque (a card game) with friends and lunching and dining with a few old cronies. He no longer writes or paints but he pays close attention to his many business affairs, including Paramount Pictures' effort to screen his early life under the title: "Heart of the Lion."
a taste OF honey
Sir Winston packed so much living into his first 25 years, the period covered by the proposed film, that Paramount is having trouble squeezing it into two and a half hours. Before his election to parliament as a national hero in 1900 he covered and fought in several campaigns as the highest paid war correspondent of his time, took part in the last cavalry charge in British military history at Omdurman — he is the last surviving officer — and made a spectacular escape from the Boers in the war with South Africa.
Produced and directed by TONY RICHARDSON
A Comprehensive Distributing Inc.
Adults Only!
Friday and Saturday
FOUR GREAT HITS
1st
BIG TOP THRILLS!
"THE CLOWN
AND THE KID"
2nd
SEVEN WAYS FROM SUNDOWN
A UNIVERSAL-
INTERNATIONAL PICTURE
in Eastman COYM
Audio MURPHY Dargis SULLMAN
3rd
NO MAN COULD FORGET HER...
NO WOMAN FONGIVE HERE!
M.G.M.
THE LOLLOBRIODA
AUTHORITY
FRANCIOSA
EXECUTIVE
BORGNINE
LUISA PATTEN
GO NAKED IN THE WORLD
4th
Sapphire
IN EASTMAN COLOR
SHOW STARTS AT 7:00
SUNSET
DRIVE IN THEATRE ... West on Highway 40
SEVEN WAYS FROM SUNDOWN
A UNIVERSAL
INTERNATIONAL PICTURE
in Eastern COVER
Audio MURPHY Bacch SULMON
NO MAN COULD FORGET HER...
NINA WORN FORGIVE HERE!
M.G.M. PRODUCTIONS
LOLLOBRIGIDA
ANTIQUE MUSEUM
FRANCOSA
BURGUNDY
BORGNINE
JUDIA PATTERN
AUTHORIZED BY
GO NAKED IN THE WORLD
Chronicle Books
HER!
THE BEST IN BOOKS
GO NAKED IN THE WORLD
COMING SOON FROM BROOKLYN BOOKSTORE
Sapphire IN EASTMAN COLOR
DRIVE IN THEATRE . . . West on Highway 40
THE GREATEST THRILL CLASSIC OF ALL TIME! "THE PHANTOM OF THE OPERA" Eastman COLOR
OF
A HAMMER-FILM PRODUCTION - A UNIVERSAL-INTERNATIONAL RELEASE
NEXT
- ATTRACTION -
VARSITY
THEATRE . . . . . Telephones VIVIMS 3-1065
@
HOLLYWOOD PREVIEW ENGAGEMENT
HOLLYWOOD PREVIEW ENGAGEMENT
DON'T SAY YOU CAN'T STAND THE SUSPENSE!
You MUST!
OR FOREVER AFTER WISH YOU HAD!
SILVER LINK
Sister, sister, oh so fair, why is there blood all over your hair?
"WHAT EVER HAPPENED To BABYJANE?"
For
ment
and
920 1
3200
Bette Davis and Joan Crawford
One
STARTS
A 2
pus
burn
Full
mont
5 p.
WB Warner Bros.
- SATURDAY •
GRANADA
1310 ready
gentle
2-roo
ment
5:30
2 be carpchoice Phor
Vacarary bath week
Why on t 1245 lent and ment
Free
TREATRE . . . . . Telophone YIKING 3-5788
Thursday, Nov. 29, 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.
FOR RENT
For rent, a five room furnished apartment. First floor. Private bath, entrance furniture. Second floor. Furniture. 920 N.H. $75 per month. Phone 820 320 after 5 p.m. or I $3-8501. 12-6
A 5 room furnished apartment with
stove, refrigerator, private bath and
entrance. Off street parking. 9138³ Mass.
room. Bathroom. VI-3-3200 12-65
pm. or VI-3-8501 12-6
For rent are 1 and 2 bedroom furnished apartments. 12-6
Hemphill st, VI 3-3802
Furnished apartment with 2 large terraces plus electricity. Near Kidnapped Phone v1 2-60.
2 bedroom home furnished for men students. Utilities paid. Phone VI 3-5566.
Furnished or unfurnished units, singles
Inc. 1912 West 25th. Phone VI 2-3416.
A 2 bedroom house $ \frac{1}{2} $ block from campus. Fully carpeted, screened porch, wood burning fireplace, fully air conditioned. Full basement with a large lot. $ 100 a month. If interested call VI 2-2202 after 5 p.m. 11-30
Large furnished apartment with private bath and entrance. Newly furnished and decorated 1 block from campus. Phone VI 2-3350 or VI 3-2263. 11-30
1310 Kentucky, 3 furnished apartments ready by Dec. 1. Employed or graduate gentlemen preferred. Utilities paid. One 2-room apartment and two 1-room apartments. May be seen between 10 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. only. 12-4
3 room apartment, private bath. I block
your door. You can pay. Come and see. 1142 Indiana. **tf**
For boys. I room with refrigerator in
house. Upstairs $25 and lower $30.
Phone VI 3-9001 11-30
3 room furnished apartment on 25th St.
Room 1: private bath, patio
Call Si V 3-8160. 11-30
A 3 bedroom house for a family or graduate students. Includes a kitchen, half, and reception party room. Relocation room with potbelly stove. Would furnish if necessary. Phone VI 2-1982.
2 bedroom home, fireplace, dining room,
carpeting, electric stove, basement.
A choice location adjacent to South KU.
Phone VI 3-3293. 11-29
Vacancies for young men in contemporary home with swimming pool, shower bath, private entrance, 5 evening meals weekly. $65 a month. Call M.II 3-9635, tf
Furnished or unfurnished units, singles
Installed by Inc. 1912 West 25th, Phone VI 2-3416.
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.
Wanted: student to do delivery work from 4 to 11 p.m. For complete details contact Tom Dixon at Dixon's Drive In at 2500 M, 6th or phone VI 3-7446, 12-4
HELP WANTED
Married Woman — age 20 to 30 for cashier and fountain check-out. Steady evening work for the remainder of the school year. No experience necessary. Contact Tom Dixon — Dixon's Drive-in. 2500 W. 6th St. Phone VI 3-7446. 11-30
MISCELLANEOUS
FOR SALE
Free kittens. Phone VI 2-3284.
1951 Plymouth with heater and radio.
2006 new tires and battery. Phone 12-
194.
Typing paper $81 \times 12$ 10 lb stock $8.15$
paper Brown Reality, Room 17291
$7591$ ft²
1956 Bulk with new tires in excellent condition. Hardtop $655 or make offer.
'52 Mercury 2-door hardtop with stick shift and overdrive. Contact Mike Williams at 945 Emery Rd. or phone VI 3-7922.
11-3"
RCA stereo console — two years old Eico multiplex FM tuner, new. Component hi-fi system by Garrard, Heath, p.m.电谣voice. Call VI 3-7340 12-43
Triumph-TR4; 1962 model. White-red interior and fully equipped. $2450. W. R.Wycoff, 5622 Russell; Mission, Kansas. Or phone HE 2-5840. 12-4
Used guitars, drums, and all instruments.
Wide selection. Richardson Music Co.
18 E. 9th. VI 2-0021. Lessons for all instruments.
11-29
Ladies' coats: one blue wool chinchilla
coat or two black wool chinchilla
$15. Like new. Phone VI 3-7473. 12-4
Wedding set, Emerald cut diamond 6.5 points, 4 baguettes totalling 40 points. References applies to Kansan Business Office, Ext. 376. In Kansa. City phone HE 2-0467. 12-4
German Shepherd AKC, 1 year old. obedient school, long-worth bloodline. Mail replies to Kansan Business Office at HE-376. In Kansas City phone HE-2 04677. 12-4
PROF. SNARF vs. L.M.O.C. 4th book of
Bibler cartoons just published. $1. P.O.
Box 1533, Monterey, Calif. Merry Xmas.
11=30
Brand New: Anscoset 35mm camera & case, $64; Anscso Memo 8mm projector, $52; Kodak Brownie movie camera & lites. $20. Call II 2-0609. Ask about other buys in cameras, films, and photofinishing. 11-29
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop in town! West-Pet phone VI.52.308 Modern self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days.
Stereo or hi-fi diamond needles for most makes. Half price during November. Don't wait, buy them now at Pettengill-Davis, 723 Mass. tf
All kinds of house plants. Potted
included philodendron to be used for
room dividers and in picture windows.
Phone VI 3-4207. tf
TV shopping? Magnavox 24" automatic TV has a 3 year picture tube warranty. You can get it from just $149.90. See the magnificent Magnavox at Pettengil-Davis, 723 Mass
Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.00 per call. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. 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
TYPING PAPER BARGAINS: Pink
typing paper — 85c per ream. Yellow
math pads, only 25c. Scratch pads, 35c
Laptop pad, 15c. Laptop cover. Massachusetts, open all day Saturday.
TYPING
Experienced typist does term papers, thesis, manuscripts and dissertations on electric typewriter. Special symbols and signs. Prompt an equal rateables. Mrs. Robert Cook at 2000 Rhode Island. Phone VI 3-7485. tf
Typling, Spanish, French, and German.
Call Amy Summers at VI 2-0276. 12-4
Typist experienced in theses and term papers. Prompt service, reasonable rates, electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Howard Mhlinger at VI 3-4409. tt
Will do neat and accurate typing in my home. Experienced in themes, theses, and term papers. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Adcock, VI 2-1795. tf
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will use type theses, term papers, reports. Electric typewriter. Reasonable rate. Eldowney, 2521 Alabama. Ph. VI 8-5858.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, etc. Neat, accurate service with an elec-
tric computer. Send resume to: Ct Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8379.
English major and former secretary will type themes and theses on electric typewriter. For neat and accurate work call Mrs. Melis and Jones, VI 3-5867. tf
Typing — reasonable rates, neat and ac-
culturally appropriate.
Mrs. Bodin, 825 Greece Terr.
Fast accurate typing. Secretary for 5%
fast accurate typing. Vienna Bridge, VI 3-528
at 703 Lawrence Ave.
EXPERIENCED TYPEIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tf
manuscripts, theses, and term papers
also dissertations typed on wide carriage
paper with a single-column experience in education and sciences
wrs. Suzanne Gilbert. VI 2-1546. t
Efficient typist. Would like typing in her
own letters. Call arityme at VI 3-2651.
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast accurate, neat work. Reasonable rates Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff VI 2-1749 tl
Experienced secretary with electric type-
er equipment, and phone Nancy Cuney in at V-3 0824, if
required.
experienced typist. 7 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Barlow, Barlow. 204 Yale Rd, VI. 648; 648.
RASCAL COLUMN
I don't have an umbrella. Will the person who found a plaid, cloth topcoat J. C. Penney type, please call VI 2-2760 any time. 11-30
Lost: Reddish brown collie pun 5 months
Moving red hairarness. Reward
V 2-16-81
11-25
Having a Party?
Ice Cold 6-pacs of all kinds
Crushed Ice
PARTY SUPPLIES
LAWRENCE ICE CO.
6th & Vt., VI 3-0350
★ COMPLETE ONE STOP SERVICE
DELCO AND AUTOLITE BATTERIES
★ TIRES - DUNLOP, GOODRICH, U.S. ROYAL
Products-People-Personality
GUNS: LAWRENCE FIREARMS CO.
special this week MI903 (not A3) made
upgrade. This package appears un-
Type C stock. Only $77.50 Handguns
rebued. 1026 Ohio. 11-20
JERRY'S CONOCO
BUSINESS SERVICES
STUDENT OWNED AND OPERATED
9th and Indiana
Jerry Specials
Baby sitting in my home. 1/2 block from camp
campground. 1/4 block for second
Reference: Phone 1-855-327-6000
RENT a new electric portable, sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. *t*
GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I study notes.
Completely revised and extremely comprehensive.
$4. For free delivery call VI 3-8246.
tt
VI 3-7322
DRESS MAKING and alterations For-
sale. CALL VI.52-5263, Ola Sniff
19391 9349; Mail CV I.52-5263.
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center. 1218
Conn. Personal service—sectionalized
birds, climbers, chameleons, turtles
on pigs etc., plus complete pets.
pet supplies. **tf**
LOST
LARRY CRUM suggests all kinds of Pancakes. T-Bone steak only 89c. We are open 24 hours a day. "K"-Pancake Grill and Sundrives. 14th and Mass. tf
TYPEWRITERS — Sales, service, rental
electrics, computer electronics,
electrics. Royal, Olympia, Smith Corona
Olivetti and Remington portables Bond
Typewriter, 7th Typewriter, 7th Mass.
Phone VI 3-3644.
Black purse on West stairs outside under-
Lorrie Powers, Lewis Hall, VI 2-1340
BEFORE YOU OPEN A PERSONAL CHECKING ACCOUNT
HAS TO OFFER YOU
No minimum balance... no charge for deposits.. checks personalized free.. and they cost much less than money orders.
SEE WHAT ThriftiCheck®
Open your account soon at
9th & Kentucky, VI 3-7474
DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results!
PENNESCO
A TIME SAVER AND AN EXCEPTIONAL VALUE! THE COMPLETE PLAYBOY-Packaged by
After Six BY RUDOFKER
The slim, trim Playboy Tuxedo, comfortable softpleated shirt, vest or cummerbund and tie set, and the finishing touch of elegant studs and links, all in one distinctive package. Everything you need for the smartest formal except the girl.
Playboy Tuxedo ... 49.95
Formal Shirt ... 5.95
Cummerbund Set ... 3.95
Studs & Links ... 3.95
63. 80
Town Shop
DOWNTOWN
University
Shop
ON THE HILL
Page 12 University Daily Kansan Thursday, Nov. 29, 1962
Negro Must Improve Image With Ambition
There is no more lethargy among Negroes than among any other segment of the population, a Ph.D. candidate in political science said last night.
But Harry Bailey added, the Negro will be "called upon to be more inventive, more creative," if he is to overcome the problems of segregation.
"The Negro desperately needs a new image," Bally told the KU-Y race relations committee.
Bailey said the race relations meetings often serve "as aspirin tablets for guilt feelings. The people can come to the meeting and go home thinking they have done something about the problems of segregation," he said.
Bailey said whites, if they are really interested, can help the Negro by:
- Forming committees to go to merchants and "urge, cajole and persuade" merchants to hire Negroes;
- Go to school boards and urge them to hire Negro teachers, even in all-white schools.
- They can deluge newspapers with protest letters against using race tags in stories.
"I know of six rape cases in the last year. Three were committed by Negroes, three by whites. But in the newspapers, the stories read "man rapes," or "Negro rapes."
In the eyes of the public, he said all of these cases will be remembered as committed by Negroes.
Bailey said he did not think Adam Clayton Powell's election to the U.S. House of Representatives from New York represented any inroad.
"Ninety, per cent of that district is Negro," he said.
But he said the election of a Negro as attorney general in Massachusetts was a real inroad.
"In Massachusetts only about two per cent of the electorate is Negro," he said.
Bailey defined desegregation and integration.
"Deselegation is public matter,' he said. "Examples are schools, restaurants, and motels. It is here that the greatest advances must be made."
"Integration is a private matter," Eailey said. Examples are interracial marriages and entertaining in homes.
Bailey took a swipe at people who refuse to join private groups that segregate.
"That won't do any good," he
said. "The only way advances can be made is for whites who are concerned to join these groups and try to change them from within."
Bailey said he favors sit-ins and any other type of demonstration that would "prick the conscience" of the public.
But once the mass conscience is pricked, he said, the Negroes must not flood the breech with stereotyped persons.
"Persons who defy the stereotype should make the contact," he said. "Those who fit the stereotype will only reinforce the bias."
In order to help bridge some of the gaps, Bailey suggested that Negro students study the sciences and other critical skills in college. In this way, he thought, Negroes will be able to break down more of the barriers than if the Negro studies the humanities.
He thought Negro students should make a conscious effort to win whatever awards are available in college, particularly those awards which make study abroad possible.
"The Negro should make every effort to get out of the provincial areas in which they grow up." Bailey said.
All this would help improve the Negro image, he said.
"It is one thing." Bailey said, "to give favors to 'Uncle Tom,' and quite another to grant recognition to his son with a college degree."
Adenauer-
(Continued from page 1)
Another objector was the present floor leader, former foreign minister Heinrich von Brentano. He refused to consider a switch to justice minister. To complete the blocking action, CDU housing minister Paul Luecke rejected Adenauer's attempts to name him defense minister.
THE CDU MOVE to have Adenauer name Erhard his heir apparent was made in an attempt to ease the crisis. Erhard, who engineered West Germany's postwar recovery, has wide backing, including that of the FDP. Erhard already is vice-chancellor.
CDU officials who asked to remain unidentified said the party wants Erhard named as the next chancellor.
CDU parliamentary whip Bruno Heck said Adenauer should form a new cabinet which can remain unchanged until the 1965 elections, regardless of whether the chancellor retires.
UNDER CANOPY
out of the weather
THAT'S WHERE WE SERVICE YOUR CAR
Nothing but the best for our customers
FRITZ CO.
8th & N. H.
VI 3-4321
Downtown—Near
Everything
CITIES SERVICE
CITIES SERVICE
Open Thursday Evening 'til 8:30
membership cards at the first of the semester. Aylward said he had received 150 cards recently in a second shipment from the Collegiate Council.
CITIES SERVICE
FRITZ CO.
8th & N. H.
VI 3-4321
Downtown—Near
Everything
CITIES SERVICE
CITIES SERVICE
"The delay was caused because the Collegiate Council didn't print enough the first time." Aylward said. "Anyone who wants to sell them can come and get them."
Each card has a stub, which must be returned to the treasurer with $1, he explained, as an improvement from last year.
CITIES SERVICE
When asked if there had been any YD meetings this year, Aylward answered, "That depends on what you call a meeting."
Young Demo Presidency Dispute—
"BEYOND THIS. I did not go. I was not asked to determine the validity of either officers or delegates." he stated.
Ayland felt that the improper conduct concerned not only the election of convention delegates, but also the election of KU YD officers.
(Continued from page 1)
"The people who were eligible to vote for one were eligible to vote for the other," he said.
CONVENTION DELEGATES elected on March 28 were recognized by both the Collegiate Council and the state YD organization. Aylward said.
Clamor for the office of president of the KU YD's developed because the candidates favored different candidates for the state Democratic gubernatorial nomination.
Bennington and Gary Conklin, third year law student from Hutchinson and election chairman at the March 14 election, supported George Hart.
"They (Bennington and Conklin) had planned for Hart supporters to take control of the Collegiate Council in hopes that the Council could get in control of the Young Democrat convention," Aylward said.
COMMENTING ON the scarcity of
ENTER THE L'M GRAND PRIX 30
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 longer-aged, extra-cured leaf than even in some unfiltered cigarettes. And L&M's filter is the modern filter—all white, inside and outside—so only pure white touches your lips. L&M's the filter cigarette for people who really like to smoke.
Disciplinary Woes Vex KU Leaders
Social and disciplinary problems are getting out of hand at KU.
Social and disciplinary problems are getting out of hand at KU. Student leaders were told this yesterday at a special meeting of the Deans' Advisory Council, called to discuss the increase of campus drinking, theft and vandalism.
Jerry Dickson, Newton senior and student body president, said there is a feeling within the administration that social events are becoming unmanagable.
Dickson said later he wanted house leaders to discuss these problems openly, with the assumption they would in turn start discussions within their own living groups.
William Schaefer, Shawnee Mission senior, said the administration has received several letters from Kansas people criticizing excessive drinking and irresponsible behavior.
GEORGE HAHM, Scotch Plains, N.J., senior, added that there has been an increase over last year in practical pranks and damage to the campus and Lawrence.
The student leaders cited barn parties and apartment parties as activities which they feel foster disciplinary problems.
Richard Keller, Bartlesville senior and All Student Council social
See related story on page 6.
chairman, said 70 barn parties have been registered with the social committee this year.
Friday, Nov. 30, 1962
"Contrary to last year, however, there has been very few registration of woodsies," he added.
SCHAEFER SAID he did not think it was a question of passing moral judgment on barn parties as to whether they were "good or bad."
Several women students expressed concern about a few freshmen women who return intoxicated to their dormitories after harm parties.
"The freshman is unable to sensibly evaluate things like drinking," one student leader pointed out.
He indicated that perhaps because of this "image," the freshman class had 450 less students this year than last year.
STUDENT LEADERS AGREED there should be more positive leadership within the living groups.
"If we don't do something about this problem, the administration will step in," a residence hall president said.
He cited an example within his own hall, where six residents were placed on disciplinary probation.
Larry Borcherding, Kansas City, Mo., senior and Delta Chi president, suggested an educational approach
"THE WEEK BEFORE two large barn parties, we held house and executive meetings to inform members what it would mean to us if there were any problems," he said.
(Continued on page 12)
Weather
It will be fair and partly cloudy today, tonight and Saturday with fog late tonight and early Saturday morning. The high today and Saturday will be near 60, the low tonight in the middle 30s.
Bv Joanne Prim
YD Confusion Fogs Presidency
Things are really confused now. The president of the KU Young Democrats has said that the president of the KU Young Democrats is guilty of the same election irregularities with which the president of the KU Young Democrats has been charged.
Barry Bennington, Chenev senior, said last night that Pete Aylward, Ellsworth senior, also was implicated in the improper issuance of YD membership cards before the disputed Young Democrat election of March 14.
BENNINGTON AND some officers of the club have said it may be necessary for members to vote again to settle the issue.
Bennington was elected president at that time, but Aylward contends that he was elected president of the KU YD's at a special meeting March 28.
"I am not saying that I should be recognized as president, but Pete shouldn't," Bennington said last night.
"There should be a new election shortly to get this whole mess straightened up," he said.
An "arbitration" was held March 23 to determine if there had been improper conduct March 14 in connection with the issuance of credentials to vote for the state YD convention delegates.
CHARLES OLDFATHER, professor of law, was asked by Dan Hopson, Jr., associate professor of law and faculty adviser for the Young Democrats, to be the arbitrator.
Since Prof. Oldfather found irregularities, Prof. Hopson refused to approve the delegates elected to attend the state YD convention.
(Continued on page 12)
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Daily hansan
Student Speaker Raps Apathy
"I admit many of the world's events will not
A Parsons junior last night urged KU students to form opinions and stand for something.
Alan Gribben, the student, won the 38th annual Campus Problems speaking contest with his speech. "Indifference Incorporated."
"WHEN WE CAME to the University," Gribben said, "we accepted an unwritten obligation, a code of responsibility. As we are educated, we are simultaneously becoming influential.
"The one word should not be confused with the other," he said.
"Apathy likes company. On our campus, it has many stockholders.
Gribben distinguished between apathy and security.
"This process carries with it the obligation that the educated must stand for something.
"I panic when I see indifference on this campus."
Gribben urged KU students to speak out on issues such as integration, nuclear testing and juvenile delinquency.
"SECURITY COMES WITH the peace of mind you have when you have made your position clear on ethical, moral, political and social questions of the day."
60th Year, No. 51
A. C. R.
With a jaunty, almost jovial expression on his face, Lowell Lee Andrews, a condemned killer of three, is shown here en route to Leavenworth County District Court in November, 1961.
be decided on Jayhawk Boulevard," he said. "Thanks to our geography, the conflicts of integration do not spill blood around the statue of Jimmy Green."
Lowell Lee Andrews Meets Death on Gallows
"I, too, have graduated from high school into this veritable wonderland of fraternities, sororities, Cwens, AWS, campus elections and senior sweatshirts," he said.
Gribben added that the local Junior Jaycees have never hampered KU with a replica of the Berlin wall across campus.
"I HAVE EVEN BECOME ADJUSTED to the sight of gunny-sacked freshman dollies dancing absurdly atop our information booth about SUA Carnival time," he said.
"But KU cannot afford apathy. It remains for us to contribute strong impressions on our society. Sometimes, we will be wrong, but, we, at least, stand for something."
Analee Burns, Aurora, Colo., sophomore, placed second in the contest with her speech, "Western Civ—What Now?" James Fox, Lawrence senior, who spoke on the "Position of the Independent Student at KU" was third in the all-student competition.
"WHEN ALL OPINIONS are vigorously expressed, this builds strong and healthy civilizations. But the first step is for us to have opinions."
By Byron Klapper
EDITOR'S NOTE: Byron Klapper, Leavenworth sophomore, was one of several newsmen who were at the Kansas State Penitentiary between midnight and 1:45 a.m. today during the execution of Lowell Lee Andrews.
Lowell Lee Andrews was indifferent when he died this morning. At least he acted like it.
Ever since his conviction in December 1959 for murder of his father, mother and sister, Andrews was indifferent.
He was the same today as he died quickly and quietly on the Kansas Penitentiary gallows.
CLAD IN PRISON DENIMS, handcuffs, and a leather harness around his back and chest, the former KU sophomore made his last march from the death house, around the prison baseball field, and
See related stories on pages three and eight.
into a warehouse where the gallows stood ready. Flanked by guards and two clergymen, the condemned 22-year-old inhaled the fresh night air during his brief walk under a clear, dark sky.
The group, preceded by Deputy Warden Kenneth Harton, entered the large, unheated room as about 19 guards, newsmen, and witnesses watched. They halted in front of the wooden gallows. Warden Sherman Crouse read aloud the execution order and then asked Andrews if he had any last words.
"No, I don't believe so," came the answer.
"YOU HAVE NO last requests?" the warden said.
A slight smile crossed Andrews' lips, a hesitation, and then a final "No."
Andrews was escorted up the 13 steps onto the black trap door. The gallows stood below a naked lightbulb. Beneath the trap door a two-foot hole had been hollowed out of the concrete and lined with sawdust.
Andrews' feet were quickly bound with a strand of leather. The Rev. James Post, Protestant chaplain, removed Andrews' horn-rimmed glasses and a black face mask was slipped over his head.
With military precision the noose was tightened behind Andrews' left ear and at 12:21 a.m. the trap door was sprung.
THEN WITH a "thud" it appeared to be all over.
Dr. Robert Moore, prison physician, made five examinations of Andrews' heart with his stethoscope. At 12:39 a.m. he was pronounced dead.
Andrews was permitted to invite three witnesses but had waived that privilege. There were no members of his family present. Outside the warehouse, an ambulance waited to take the body to a Leavenworth funeral home where it would be claimed by unidentified relatives.
The penitentiary was dark and quiet as the witnesses filed out of the storage room toward the prison's main gate. A few inmates could be seen watching the procession from behind their barred windows in the cell blocks above.
ABOUT SEVEN HOURS EARLIER, Andrews sat in his death row cell eating his last meal: two fried chickens, french fried potatoes, ketchup, lettuce chunks, cokes and vanilla ice cream with strawberries. He smoked several cigars.
After the meal he was visited by Rev. Post, and was joined at about 10:30 p.m. by Father Dennis Sculley, Catholic prison chaplain. Both clergymen remained with the condemned man until the execution.
Andrews' execution, only the 29th in over a century in Kansas, ended a four-year battle in court which took his case twice to the U.S. Supreme Court, twice to the Kansas supreme court, once to a U.S. circuit judge, twice to U.S. district judges, twice to Gov. Anderson and once to a state district court.
Andrews was a pudgy 18-year-old zoology student here on Thanksgiving, 1958, when he killed his parents, Mr. and Mrs. William L. Andrews, and 20-year-old sister Jennie Marie who was also home from college for the holidays.
HE DROVE BACK to Lawrence, took in a movie and later returned to "discover" the ransacked home and the bodies of his family.
Shortly afterward the family minister coaxed the youth into confessing the killings, which he said he committed to gain an inheritance consisting of the 250-acre family farm and a savings account of $1,600.
In appeal after appeal Andrews' attorneys charged that the preacher's part in gaining the confession was coercion, and that Andrews was actually insane at the time of the killings and at the time he confessed.
But a three-man sanity commission judged the youth was legally sane at the time of the killings, and every court which granted a hearing rejected the contentions.
The file of the State of Kansas vs. Lowell Lee Andrews is closed.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Friday, Nov. 30. 1962
'Fordism' Goes Amuck
Drat you, Henry Ford!
You and your blasted assembly-line process have worked a pox on American society.
Oh, I'm certain that you didn't intend to subvert the spirit of individualism, but your idea of interchangeable parts has gone berserk.
SO LONG AS your theory of sameness was confined to mechanical parts which make machines more practical to operate, and lowers the price so the common man can afford to buy them, it served our beloved land quite well.
But I tell you it has run amuck; this interchangeability-of-parts theory has smitten the great god Individualism a fatal blow.
This sameness, this lethal leveling process, has permeated our entire society with a devastation equal to the plague of the Middle Ages.
You and your theory have despoiled the fair democratic experiment. Just consider my case, for the sake of illustration.
I WAS BORN in a production-line maternity ward, taken home from the hospital wrapped in a mass-produced diaper, and transported in an assembly-line Ford.
I'll not bore you with details of a stifling childhood where I was surrounded by look-alike elements in a look-alike neighborhood. (I shudder at the recollection of block after block of identical houses, all of them surrounded by the same crabgrass—not to mention standard streets with standard curbings and lamp posts.)
I guess I became truly embittered when I left the stultifying confines of my neighborhood and
headed for the great mount of education which borders the cultural wasteland where I suffered my youth.
AS I EAGERLY contemplated the climb up the holy mount of knowledge, my standard-sized heart was filled with poignancy—I just knew it was atop the mount that I would forge myself into a hale and hardy Individualist.
But alas and alack, I found my old plight worsened, my expectations gored. Yes, Henry Ford, your production-line theory sullied even the hallowed ground of intellectual searching. To wit:
I have had to register my production model car (a Chevrolet; one sweet taste of revenge against the Great Despoiler), and was given a number. Because of your theory, Henry Ford, I am not a living, palpitating human being in the eyes of the university, but just plain old number 37494.
THE REMAINDER of my oppressive surroundings at the University are legend: living in standard dormitories, eating institutionalized food off identical plates, attending look-alike lectures in look-alike rooms stuck in look-alike buildings. Finally, the supreme insult to Individuality I will receive a standard sheepskin.
So Henry Ford, if I wind up as the standardized, frustrated "Man in the Gray Flannel Suit" a paper-shuffling clod on the 40th floor of a giant corporation—it will be your fault. The die has been cast—the oppressive forces of conformity are too strong.
—Terry Murphy
More Praise For Hospital Editor:
At Watkins Memorial Hospital, Dr. Samy Afify (Daily Kansan letter, Nov. 27) was known to me only as the Egyptian at the other end of the hall, who received half the International Club during visiting hours. Until you published his letter, I knew only of his existence, as Watkins seems to be one of the few institutions on this campus that is not co-educational. I did not even know that Dr. Afify and I both shared the same doctor, Dr. McClure, who must have been kept pretty busy between the two of us during these past three weeks.
AS FAR AS the nurses, the technicians, the nurses aides, and Dr. McClure are concerned. I can only reiterate Dr. Aiffy's praise—praise that has long been due to Watkins Memorial Hospital. Students at KU
...Letters...
should be grateful that they have so well-equipped and well-staffed a hospital while many universities have infirmaries that are converted barracks or rejected, tumble-down private houses. Those students who have indulged in rather one-sided criticism of the clinic, which actually represents only a fraction of what Watkins does, would be the first to whimper if there were no first aid available around the clock and if they had to face the expenses and inconveniences of going to a public hospital.
Never before have I been treated so well in an ordinary hospital and been given at the same time such liberty. Can you imagine, in an ordinary hospital, being asked whether you would like your bed made? Usually the attitude is, "We are going to make your bed or else." The nurses are efficient and at the same time interesting to talk
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
PO BOX 4238 MONTEREY CAIRE
to, certainly quite the opposite of the crass type that one can run into. One of the nurses even did some laundry for me. No professional snobbery at Watkins, and my thanks go to both the nurses and nurses aides who sat through so many drawn-out meals with me —drawn-out partly because we had so much to discuss in comparing England, Canada, Germany, Norway, and the United States.
DR. McCLURE is to be thanked for his patience, his readiness to cope with new situations all hours of the day and night, and for his numerous visits during the day, many of which were not professionally necessary but went a long way to dispelling one's doubts and building up again one's shaken confidence. Last but certainly not least, he is to be thanked for taking a rather bedraggled foreign student into his family at Thanksgiving. Thanksgiving spent with such a wonderful American family probably did more for my recovery than all the drugs that flowed from the pharmacy into my room in the hospital.
*NOTICE TH SUDDEN BURST OF ENERGY SHOWN BY YOUR BOYS AS THEY PASS BY TH* *INSPIRING CHEER FROM TH COACH'S BEEF?*
To conclude, at Watkins Memorial Hospital one receives outstanding professional treatment and kind personal attention. My stay there has raised the United States and the American people considerably in my estimation.
Silke Engledow Teaching Assistant, Dept. of German
Not being very eloquent. I will put my question simply. Why can't the KU police department find an officer to direct the traffic on Jayhawk Boulevard after the 4:20 whistle blows?
Traffic Officer Needed
Editor:
There is something friendly to me about a policeman directing traffic. If I am on foot, I know, at least, that I won't get run over. If I'm driving or riding in a car on Sunflower trying to cross or get onto Jayhawk, I know I have a chance to do it without bashing in a fender. And if I'm in a car on Jayhawk, I know that it is not likely that someone will smash into me trying to get onto Jayhawk Boulevard.
On a couple of occasions I have seen an officer at the intersection. Why can't there be one there every day?
Carolyn Hunnicutt Sabetha senior
It Looks This Way
Key to Success on Test: Write Simple Sentences
See the two United Press International reporters? They are undergraduates in the KU School of Journalism. They took the English proficiency examination.
They flunked it.
I told them what to do. They didn't listen. They will next time.
THE EXAM is all right in principle. We can't have KU grads dropping ungrammatical memos into suggestion boxes. That reflects on the University.
But the two UPI writers flunked the test. Something is wrong. One guy works at UPI 40 hours a week. The other took a leave of absence for school after working there this summer.
Why did they flunk? Maybe they misspelled. Maybe they comma-spliced. Maybe they misplaced modifiers. Maybe they mistakenly thought the exam was a pud.
Another person and I gave them the secret English pro exam advice. Don't write anything but simple sentences. That's the advice. Don't use commas. Don't use semi-colons or colons. Avoid compound, complex and compound-complex sentences. Use only the noun-verb-object form. You can't go wrong.
I PASSED THE EXAM the first time.I wrote six, seven,eight nine and ten-word sentences—just like that one. I passed.
That is not the point. The test supposedly measures written English proficiency. The UPI men are proficient in English. They are professional writers. The journalism professors think so. So does United Press International. UPI maintains standards of proficiency. Those standards might be as high as KU's.
The William Allen White School of Journalism maintains standards too. Those standards might not be as high as KU's.
Those standards might not be as high as Don't say that to journalism professors, though. They get mean.
THOSE UPI WRITERS flunked the English proficiency examination.
T.
tion.
Maybe they'll improve.
They learned their lessons.
They'll write simple sentences.
Bill slugged Bert. Tom slugged Tim.
Write simple sentences. Don't forget a dictionary.
That'll get it.
—Scott Parne
the took world
THE USE AND MISUSE OF LANGUAGE, edited by S. I. Hayakawa (Fawcett Premier, 75 cents).
The essays are both informative and entertaining. One writer considers how differences in comprehension cause discussions to go astray. Another shows why we have so much trouble getting along with other peoples of the world, when we have so much trouble understanding each other. Another considers what happens in the process of news reporting, and it is an essay that should be read by the many many critics of the press.
Here is a valuable assembling of articles from ETC: "A Review of General Semantics," and the many persons who have received enlightenment from Hayakawa will be cheered to see the volume.
Some of the better articles treat the world of violence in which we live and the fantasies surrounding and created by popular songs. And Hayakawa includes his essays about motor cars and sexual fantasies and the sad story of the Edsel, when motivational research collided head on with realities.—CMP
* *
THE SAVAGE LAND, by Ann Ahlswede (Ballantine original, 50 cents) a novel of the West, about a young man's search for a purpose in life.
Daily Hansen
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Telephone VIking 3-2700
Extension 714, news office
Extension 376, business office
Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press.
Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St, New York
22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription
rates: $3 a semester or $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
Scott Payne ... Managing Editor
Richard Bonctt, Dennis Farney, Zeke Wigglesworth, and Bill Mullins, Assistant Managing Editors; Mike Miller, City Editor; Ben Marshall, Sports Editor; Margaret Cathcart, Society Editor.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Clayton Keller and Bill Sheldon Co-Editorial Editors
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Charles Martinache ... Business Manager
Charles Martinache...Business Manager
Jack Cannon. Advertising Manager; Doug Farmer. Circulation Manager;
Gene Spalding, National Advertising Manager; Bill Woodburn, Classi-
fied Advertising Manager; Dan Meek, Promotion Manager.
Friday, Nov. 30, 1962
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Andrews Condemned by 119-Year-Old Rule
By Bernard Henrie
For former KU student Lowell Lee Andrews, a discussion of the M'Naughten Rule which sent him to the gallows — rather than to a mental institution — comes too late.
The 119-year-old M'Naughton Rule is used in Kansas to establish criminal responsibility. A criminal is adjudged sane, and therefore responsible for his criminal act, if it can be established that he knew what he was doing at the time of the act. In other words, if he knew the difference between right and wrong he is legally sane.
THE "RIGHT AND WRONG" test grew from the 1843 trial of Daniel M'Naughten in England. M'Naughten had attempted to assassinate the Prime Minister, but he killed the Minister's private secretary instead. When M'Naughten was acquitted, the judges involved were called before the House of Lords to explain their conduct. Their answers to a series of questions became known as the M'Naughten Rules.
mager
mager;
lassi-
Judge Biggs, in the Currens' case, traced the "right and wrong" concept to a much earlier date in English history. He found a law book printed in 1620 which outlined, in essence, the MNaughten Rule. Included in the book was a chapter which described the means of detecting witches and wizards by witchmarks, and telling how their familiars might be uncovered.
Mr. Justice Cardoza said of the M'Naughten test in an address before the New York Academy of Medicine in 1928:
"EVERYONE CONCEDES that the present definition of insanity has little relation to the truths of mental life. . . If insanity is not to be a defense, let us say so frankly and even brutally, but let us not mock ourselves with a definition that palts with realism."
Richard C. Allen, professor of law at Washburn University, along with fellow Washburn law professor James Ahrens, took the Andrews case on appeal.
Allen, writing in December, 1961, said:
"I (am) seeking to raise certain . . . questions with regard to the case, including that of the propriety of applying this ancient
test (the M'Naughten test); one which was originally designed, and through the years has been applied, to permit the imposition of criminal punishment — including execution — for the 'offense' of being mentally ill."
AND LOWELL LEE ANDREWs was mentally ill. In essence, the finding of the doctors who examined him over a period of several months was that Andrews was, at the time of the examination and at the time of his criminal act, suffering from a severe mental and emotional disturbance denominated "schizophrenic reaction," and that the tragedy perpetrated by Andrews was the direct result of this condition.
At the time of the trial, the jury was not permitted to be informed that if Andrews were acquitted by reason of insanity, he would not go free but would go to the State Hospital at Larned.
Instead, the jury was informed
that if they found him guilty of first degree murder, they could fix the penalty at death or life imprisonment. The jury decided that Andrews was sane, inasmuch as he knew right from wrong at the time of the crime. The jury's verdict was that Andrews should be hanged.
PROF. ALLEN+
"That the 'right and wrong' test does not offer a fair standard for making the difficult decisions with which juries are charged is a view which has been shared for at least the last hundred years by responsible and informed doctors, lawyers and behavioral and social scientists."
Sheldon Glueck, sociologist and professor of law at Harvard Law School:
"Under the old M'Naughten's case law . . . persons who are truly ill in mind must be stigmatized and punished as responsible criminals. They often know right
Worth Repeating
"To develop the student's ability to deal with ideas, it is desirable to acquaint him with a variety of views on the same subject. Lectures and reading for his courses provide him with a part of this material. Visiting lecturers who present divergent views add more...
"Administrations past and present have encouraged this clash of ideas as an essential part of higher education. By doing so, they have incurred the criticism of those who feel that the university should merely teach the students the "correct" opinions: to wit, the critics'. To yield to such pressures would be to abandon the essential function of a university in a democratic society.
—J. D. A. Ogilvy, Professor of English, University of Colorado
FROSTY ??
JERRY'S Phillips 66 GRAND OPENING
from wrong, but so do most inmates of hospitals for the mentally ill. . ."
BUT WHAT OF the defenders of the M-Naughten philosophy? The Kansas Supreme Court said in its opinion:
December 1, 1962
Complete Lubrication and Carton Pepsi with Gas purchase
"The Mostest In SERVICE"
PHILLIPS Tires and Batteries
25th & Iowa, Next to Chuck Wagon
out blame-worthiness," as Prof. Allen writes. In addition, it seems clear that the M'Naughten Rule is kept for reasons of tradition — a tradition which has, in the light of post-Freudian psychology and Twentieth Century enlightenment, been shown bankrupt.
Mr. Justice Holmes:
IT'S
BACK
BIG BAND
JAZZ
Admission FREE
8:00 P.M.
SUNDAY, DEC. 2 ★ STUDENT UNION BALLROOM
"It is revolting to have no better reason for a rule of law than that it was laid down in the time of Henry IV."
"The law recognizes no form of insanity, although the mental faculties may be disordered or deranged, which will furnish one immunity from punishment for an act declared by the law to be criminal, so long as the person committing the act bad the capacity to know what he was doing and the power to know that his act was wrong. . .."
JAZZ
S. U.A. JAZZ FORUM
The Court's position is not envious. It elects to perpetuate a standard which "admittedly imposes criminal punishment with-
SPONSORED BY
We Rent Most Anything
ANDERSON RENTAL
812 N. H.
Artcarved
COLLEGE
ADVISORY
PANEL
FOR BRAVE MEN ONLY
Every year a stout band of brave young men march off to the jeweler to buy the engagement ring-unaided. We at Artcarved, makers of the world's most treasured rings for over a hundred years, salute them.
More to the point, we help them. Here's how.
IN STYLES. Styles in engagement rings change over the years. To keep you abreast of the best, Artcarved quizzes College Queens (like the one above) from all over the country. You'll find their choices at your Artcarved jeweler.
IN VALUE. Unless you're majoring in diamonds, your chances of discerning the true value of any particular diamond are small indeed. To safeguard your investment, Artcarved gives you a written guarantee of your diamond's true value, a guarantee that is respected and recognized by leading jewelers everywhere, and backed by a 110-year reputation for quality.
So, go on and buy the ring yourself. She'll love you for it—especially when it's an Artcarved.
Artcarved
Artcarved
DIAMOND AND WEDDING RINGS
Two of the lovely designs chosen by America's College Queens. From $100.
Midnight Star
Midnight Star
Evening Star
Evening Star
MARKS JEWELERS
817 Mass.
Lawrence, Kansas
MEMBER
AGS
AMERICAN GEM SOCIETY
Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday, Nov. 30, 1962
Broadcasts Cease As Telstar Falters
MURRAY HILL, N.J. - (UPI) Live trans-Atlantic television has ceased, for the time being.
After 47 broadcasts between America and Europe, five of them in color, the Telstar communications satellite in orbit around the earth has developed difficulties.
Although the command circuit stopped working in the satellite's 1)242nd orbit last Friday, telemetry reports on 112 different experiments continue.
A SPOKESMAN at Bell Telephone laboratories here, reported Telstar "won't take orders to turn its communications receiver and transmitter on and off." The satellite, sent aloft last July, was developed by Bell and is the first private ownership experiment in space.
In addition to receiving and sending signals, Telstar is designed to report on conditions in space. The telemetry transmitter reports to ground receiving stations on the amount of radiation in space, the
condition of the satellite, temperature readings, and the effects or radiation on satellite solar cells and transistors.
TELEMETRY SENDING will be discontinued two years after Telstar's launching so the transmitter's frequency may be used for other space experiments. This is standard procedure in satellite operation.
Prior to launching, Bell engineers did not agree on how long the command circuit would operate. Predictions are based on probabilities and space explorations are continually attempting to discover these probabilities.
Before it ceased operation, the broad band receiver completed 250 technical transmission tests in addition to the television broadcasts seen by millions in two continents. Over 400 demonstrations of multi-channel telephony, telegraphy, and telephoto facsimile communication were given.
Trombonists John Hill will conduct a group of musicians from the surrounding area Sunday in a free jazz concert.
SUA Jazz Concert To Be Held Sunday
The concert will be presented at 8 p.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom. It will feature C. L. Snodgrass, Jack Zimmerman, and Karl Tribble.
Musical arrangements will be taken from a collection by Neal Hafti and Bill Holman. The concert is co-sponsored by the SUA Jazz Forum and Musician's Local 512.
Professor Hall Named To Parks Committee
E. Raymond Hall, Summerfield distinguished professor of zoology and director of the KU Museum of Natural History, has been named to an 11-member committee to advise the United States Secretary of the Interior on the National Parks Service.
Appointment to the committee was made by the National Research Council for the National Academy of Sciences, upon the request of Secretary of the Interior Stewart L. Udall.
Press Suppression Enrages Germans
By Phil Newsom
UPF Foreign News Analyst LONDON — (UPI) — Neither international nor internal pressures are new to "Der Alte." West Germany's aging Chancellor Konrad Adenaauer.
In four visits to Germany since 1958, this correspondent never has seen the West German republic torn by such a wave of national emotionalism.
For more than a year, members of his own party, the Christian Democrats, and his coalition partners, the Free Democrats, had been demanding he set a date for his retirement and to name his successor.
This was the "Spiegel Case."
BUT IT IS SAFE to say that not even the shrewd Adenauer anticipated the latest storm that almost blew his government out of office, nor the direction from which it would come.
Der Spiegel is a national news magazine whose hard-hitting columns frequently have irked both Adenauer and his controversial defense minister, Franz Josef Strauss. The attitude of "let the chips fall where they may" has at various times led the magazine to be critical of both East and West. Law suits against the magazine had been brought by both Adenaauer and Strauss, unsuccessfully.
BEFORE HIS OWN part in the midnight arrests of Der Spiegel's editors became known, Strauss made no attempt to hide his pleasure that charges of suspicion of treason against them appeared likely to bring the publication to heel.
Then came the reaction.
German readers made no attempt to prejudge the case of treason. But they objected strenuously to the midnight knock-on-the-door manner in which the arrests were carried out.
Hamburg newspapers with no special reason to love Der Spiegel offered the magazine use of their printing presses and office space.
Berlin editors, with the memory of Hitler's controlled press in their minds, joined the attack.
1962-1963 KANSAS UNIVERSITY BASKETBALL SQUAD
KANSAS
32
KANSAS
42
KANSAS
50
KANSAS
55
KANSAS
3
KANSAS
31
KANSAS
20
KANSAS
2
FRONT ROW (L to R)—Al Correll, Lawrence, Kerry Bolton, Overland Park, Dave Schichtle, Coffeyville, Jim Dumas, Topeka, Richard Rugles, La Grange, Ill., Nolen Ellison, Kansas City.
SECOND ROW (L to R)—Jay Roberts, Des Moines, Iowa, Dave Brill, Lewis, George Unseld, Louisville, Ky., Jim Gough, Cha-
nute, Buddy Vance, Seminole, Okla., John Matt, Minneapolis, Love, Sparks, Arkansas City.
BACK ROW (L to R) — Carl Deane, Mgr., Lawrence, Lee Flachsbarth, Atchison, Dick Harp, Head Coach, Harry Gibson, K.C., Kans., Ted Owens, Asst. Coach, Pete Townsend, Topeka, Dean Nesmith, Trainer, Charles Redfield, Mgr., Setauket, N.Y.
SEE THE 1962-63 JAYHAWKERS IN ACTION WHEN
★
★ KU vs. MONTANA
★
ALLEN FIELDHOUSE ★ TIP-OFF TIME: 7:35 P.M.
Coach Harp's seventh edition will return nine lettermen from last year, including guard Nolen Ellison, who placed 4th in Conference scoring in 1961-62 with a 17.6 average and an 18.1 average overall. 6'7" Sophamore George Unseld is expected to supply the much needed size and scoring ability at the center post. The total picture is tremendously encouraging this year as an outstanding sophomore crop will give KU added depth and all-important size.
★ ID CARDS WILL ADMIT STUDENTS TO ALL HOME GAMES ★
Freshman intersquad scrimmage starting at 6 p.m.
Page 5
Muslim Club Takes 'Tour' Of Mosques
By Rose Ellen Osborne
James Seaver, professor of history and director of the Western Civilization program, illustrated with slides his remarks on "Early Muslim Architecture."
A KU professor took Muslim Club members on a pictorial tour of Islamic mosques last night.
THE SPEECH COVERED a span of more than 500 years, from about 650 A.D. to 1200 A.D. Prof. Seaver actually, later pointed out to this reporter, Muslims measure time in terms of B. H. and A. H.—before Hegira and after Hegira, the flight of Mohammed to Medina from persecution in Mecca.
Club members saw the Dome of the Rockmosque in Jerusalem which Prof. Seaver described as "the first great monument of Muslim architecture that has been left to us."
"The mosque was supposedly built on the rock on which Mohammed stood when he made his journey to heaven," he said. "It is one of the most beautiful shrines in the world."
"THE FIRST MOSQUES WERE tents or divided churches where the Muslims worshipped in one half and the Christians used the other half of the church," he said.
He said the mosque was built about 696 A. H. Prior to this period the Muslims had little architectural ambitions.
Prof. Seaver spoke of the mihrab, a niche-like doorway, but without a door, which was recessed in the wall. It was built for Mohammed to stand in during prayer after someone tried to assassinate him.
He told of the center where the Muslim worshipper washes his hands to cleanse before prayer and he showed pictures of the zujadah, the outside court or visiting place in the Muslim mosque.
Then with the aid of the slides, Prof. Seaver whisked his audience from the Great Mosque of Cordova in Spain—where a Gothic chapel was inserted in the mosque by monks in the 15th century—to Iran and the Shrine of Fatima, dedicated to Mohammed's daughter.
PROF. SEAVER ACQUIRED his extensive collection of slides in 1953-54 when he took a leave of absence to study in Rome on a Fulbright scholarship. At this time he visited North Africa, Egypt, Persia and other nearby areas.
Prof. Seaver said he welcomed the opportunity to speak to the club. "The Muslim Club is representative of one of the world's greatest religions. It is something we have needed for a long time," he said.
Ski Club Plans Colorado Trip
Perhaps due to Kansas' recent balmy weather, winter enthusiasts are planning a ski trip—in Colorado
The KU Ski Club has made arrangements for four days of skiing during semester vacation in the Loveland area west of Denver.
THIS SKI TRIP is the first of two the ski club plans for the year, the next trip scheduled for spring vacation.
Mike Cory, Wichita senior and chairman of the Ski Club, says that the trip is open to anyone who either skis or who wants to learn The club provides the services of ski instructors on the slopes.
The skiers will leave here after the last final on Saturday and will arrive at the slopes Sunday. They will return Wednesday evening and arrive back on campus Thursday.
Cory estimated the minimum cost of the trip to students will be $65.
Literary Critic To Talk Here
Author and literary critic Glenway Wescott will lecture on impressions and influences of recent novelists at 4:30 Wednesday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Wescott's talk, "Memories of the Twenties," will include remembrances of Ford Madox Ford, Cunningham Graham, Ernest Hemingway, Gertrude Stein and James Joyce, and some thoughts on fiction writing.
Wescott's works include "Images of Truth." "The Apple of the Eye," "The Grandmothers," "Goodbye Wisconsin," "The Babes Bed," "Fear and Trembling," "A Calander of Saints for Unbelievers," "The Pilgrim Hawk," "Apartment in Athens," and a book of poems entitled "Natives of the Rock."
He is past president and chairman of the department of literature of the National Institute of Arts and Letters, and he has served on its council and its grants committee for literature.
A past member of the Author's Guild Council, and a member of the Author's League of America, Wescott has lived on a farm in Rosemont, N.J., for the past few years.
This includes transportation, food and lodging, insurance, tow tickets, ski instructors and rental of ski equipment.
THE STUDENT MUST pay $57 of this amount before the end of the semester, Cory said. A $10 deposit is due before Christmas vacation and the balance is due soon after.
The ski club will meet at 7 p.m.
Thursday for people to sign up for the trip. Students may pay the $10 deposit then or later in the KU-Y office in the Kansas Union.
The skiers will stay at the Arapahoe Lodge in the Arapahoe Basin ski area for three ahone. On Wednesday the group will ski at the Loveland Basin.
The KU Concert Choir will present the first of its two annual concerts at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in the University Theatre. The University String Quartet will present a program of chamber music at 8 pm. Wednesday in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Two Treats Coming For KU Music Lovers
Located 1 door South of K.P. & L.
in basement.
TRADING POST
704 1/2 Mass. Ph.VL3-2394
Youth bed complete ... $29.95
Both programs are open to the public without charge.
Wooden office swivel chair ... $ 4.00
Child's roll top maple desk
and swivel chair $24.50
Seventy Kansas high school boys will arrive at KU Saturday afternoon for a weekend of entertainment, courtesy of the men in the five KU men's scholarship halls.
University Daily Kansan
Scholarship Halls To Hold Weekend
5 pc. dinetect set $29.95
Metal weldroche $14.00
the seniors will tour the campus, attend a 5:15 p.m. banquet Saturday where Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will speak, watch the KU basketball team in action, and return to the halls for what will likely be long bull sessions.
The idea behind the weekend is to acquaint some of the top high school seniors in the state with the KU scholarship hall system, the only one of its kind in the nation.
The Concerti Choir's program will range from the classics of Vittoria and Bach to the contemporary Francis Poulenc. The String Quartet will play the Beethoven Quartet, Op. 16 No. 6, the Barber Quartet, Op. 11, and the Dvorak Quartet, Op. 96.
Sunday will feature dinner at the halls, with faculty members and University officials as special guests. Discussions will again follow the dinner. High school men were invited to visit the KU scholarship halls for the first time last year.
French Provincial wing
back chair ... $24.50
Metal wardrobe ... $14.00
After visiting the halls, the seniors may apply for scholarship hall awards next year. Winners of the awards will be announced next summer.
Traffic Deaths Up At Night
$24.5
Filling cabinet ... $19.95
G.E. electric dryer ... $89.95
3 drawer chest ... $10.00
Room divider ... $ 7.00
Baby bed with mattress ... $16.50
21" Console T.V. ... $19.00
Portable T.V. ... $69.95
Console model record player ... $42.50
AM table model radio ... $ 8.00
Metal kitchen cabinet ... $13.50
CHICAGO — (UPI) — Three out five traffic fatalities occur at night, although only 30 per cent of driving is done during darkness, according to the Chicago Motor Club.
We invite you to come in and look around. Remember a few steps down gives you a big step up in savings.
U.S. Might Ringed Cuba During Crisis
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Spearheaded by a six-division invasion force, a massive military buildup of 200,000 soldiers, sailors, and airmen was deployed in a ring around Cuba during the crisis over the Russian missiles, the Pentagon has disclosed.
The Air Force's Strategic Air Command had ordered a "massive airborne alert" for its B52 intercontinental bombers and kept its remaining force on a 15-minute ground alert. A 20,000-man combat crew manned the bombers, backed by 126,000 support personnel.
The Marines had the equivalent of another division—part of it hastily moved into the Guantanamo naval base, the rest afloat in the seas off Cuba.
The Army and the Air Force set up advance headquarters at Homestead Air Force base near Miami, the Pentagon said. A "peninsula base command" was established at Opa-Locka Air Force Base, Fla., to support all army troops in the area.
Operating in the Atlantic-Caribbean waters was a huge naval fleet 183 ships and 85,000 men, including eight aircraft carriers with more than 25,000 men aboard.
STANDING OFF Guantanamo to support the Marines if needed was the nuclear-powered aircraft carrier Enterprise and the super carrier Independence, each with 100 planes aboard.
Raising the curtain on one of the most secret military mobilizations in history, the Pentagon told how the southeastern United States and the sea around Cuba was turned into an armed camp.
THE ARMY, is was disclosed, had a force of more than 100,000 men and was prepared to call up reserve units if an invasion of Cuba was ordered.
The swift, massive military buildup began soon after two SAC U2 reconnaissance planes collected conclusive proof of the existence of Soviet missile bases. This was on Oct.14, eight days before President Kennedy told the nation of the mobilization and ordered the quarantine of Cuba.
ONCE THE RUSSIAN missiles were discovered, the Pentagon said American missiles from as far away as the Pacific Northwest were rushed to the southeastern United States.
Navy planes alone flew more than 30 sorties over Cuba, the Pentagon said, and the Air Force Tactical Air Command deployed a force of 1,000 planes and about 5,000 men in the southeastern United States.
The Air Force said it flew more than 2,000 fighter sorties while keeping a 24-hour alert off the Florida coast.
Film Title Dilemma
HOLLYWOOD — (UFI) — “Three Way Match” is the new title for Universal's comedy previously titled "Three on a Match."
Kirk Douglas, Mitzi Gaynor and Gig Young are starred in the color film being produced by Robert Arthur and directed by Michael Gordon.
Daniels Jewelry
For
Fine Watch Repair
And
Quality Gifts
Lowest Prices
We Accept All Credit
Cards
914 Mass. St.
*
Shop by Phone!
Call VI 3-6111
CREATIVE HOUSE DECORATIONS
BOUGHS . .
ROPING . .
MISTLETOE . .
HOLLY . .
LARGE SELECTION OF DOOR PIECES
VI 3-6111 OWENS 15th & N.Y.
FLOWER SHOP & GREENHOUSE
Send Flowers by Wire Anywhere in the Free World.
(1)
FLORAL
CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Nov. 30, 1962
Barn Party Boom Object Of Concern
The current bumper crop of KU barn parties may be getting out of hand.
That was the consensus of opinion at a Dean's Advisory Council meeting held yesterday. Present were the presidents of KU's organized living groups.
- Are giving the University a bad "image."
- The frequent barn parties, the group decided
- Are wearing out KU women.
More than 70 of the parties have been held so far this year—and more are scheduled to come, Richard Keeler, Bartlesville, Okla., senior and chairman of the All Student Council social committee, told the group.
He added that several Lawrence residents owning barns are busily readyving them for still more parties to be held this winter.
Some of the student leaders at the meeting said the parties are giving the University a bad name, and remarked that University officials look upon them with disfavor.
THEY REPORTED THAT letters of protest have been received by University officials from parents of high school seniors who attended the parties while visiting the campus, and from alumni members protesting excessive drinking at the parties.
members professing executive office. Ruth James, Kansas City, Mo., senior and vice-president of the Panhellenic Council, and Sherri Dobbins, Lawrence senior and president of Delta Gamma, brought up another point.
KU women are getting tired of the parties, they said. They reported that some women have attended as many as two barn parties a week during this semester.
ALTERNATIVES TO THE PARTIES were suggested during the meeting. One was that informal parties with the dress being school attire be substituted for the more informal barn parties.
"The mode of dress affects a girl's behavior," one sorority president said.
Another alternative, formals, was suggested. Dave Gough, Chanute senior, opposed this, saying that many men must rent tuxedoes at expensive rental fees.
He also explained that Lawrence is limited in establishments that offer entertainment. There are only three establishments where dancing is permitted and in each the area is limited.
Another form of entertainment, journeying to Kansas City, was deemed too expensive for the tab-bearing male. In the end, the council arrived at no specific solution to the problem.
The presidents did decide, however, to notify students of the severity of excessive drinking and to encourage the individual houses to hold different types of parties.
This must be done, the group decided, or the administration will step in, and in such case the penalties could be serious.
Goldwater Backs J.F.K. Tough Policy
JACKSON, Miss. — (UPI) — Sen.
Barry M. Goldwater, R-Ariz., said
last night he hopes President Kennedy
will not heed the advice of
"those weaklings around him" and
back down from his firm foreign
policy.
policy.
Now that Kennedy is "finally on the right track," said Goldwater, "I hope he will not slip with the errors that marked the first two years of his administration.
Goldwater told around 1,400 persons attending a $100-a-plate, Republican fund-raising dinner that the GOP is making tremendous gains in the South because of the "invasion of states rights by the New Deal, Fair Deal and New Frontier."
But he did not base his plea for a two-party system in Dixie on segregation. He said new Republican strength in the South could be attributed to the states' rights issue and not the integration controversy. At another point, he said the nation's survival transcends "any sectional issue."
Fraternity Jewelry
Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals
Balfour
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER
Eskiloo
Eskiloo FLEECE LINED BOOTS For Rain or Snow
Cavalier with turn down fur cuff. Black or Ivory. N & M widths. Sizes to 10. $12.95
Architecture to be Debated
IMPRISONED LOVE—Members of Tau Sigma, honorary dance fraternity, rehearse for a dance drama, "Bird and Song or the Tragedy of Imprisoned Love," to be presented at 8 p.m. Dec. 11, 12 at Central Junior High School. Dancers are Benny Crawford, Wichita senior; Mary Messenheimer, Minneapolis, Minn., freshman; Ron Seney, Kansas City freshman; and Dee Wooldridge, Des Moines, Iowa, senior.
KU students will have the chance to hear two professors of architecture and a Kansas City architect discuss "campus architecture in general and KU architecture in particular" at the Humanities Forum at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Kansas Union Forum Room.
McCoy's
THE MIRAMALS
Eugene George, professor of architecture and new chairman of the department; Curtis Besinger, associate professor of architecture, and Ted Seligson, of Kansas City, will compose the panel. Prof. George and Mr. Seligson have prepared special pictures for the discussion
813 Mass.
VI 3-2091
Prof. George, who studied at Harvard, came to KU this year from the University of Texas. He had his own architectural office in Austin, Texas, in addition to his classes.
Prof. Besinger, who teaches architectural theory and design, worked with Frank Lloyd Wright for 16 years. He is consultant for "House Beautiful" magazine in addition to his classes.
Mr. Seligson recently completed a tour of campuses in the Northeast-particularly Harvard, Yale and MLT—where he studied the latest developments in campus architecture.
Anti-Castro Cuban Will Talk at KU
The former Cuban ambassador to Great Britain who was forced to defect after condemning the Castro regime will speak here January 23.
Serrie Rojas is being sponsored by the Current Events Committee of the All Student Council. The public is invited to the talk, which will begin at 7:30 p.m. in Fraser Theater.
Rojas' arrest was ordered after he declared he would not serve under a Communist government.
An economist by profession, Rojas is presently working on confidential matters in Washington.
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
GAS - TOONS
NEXT STOP
"I left the switch on so you could find it."
You'll get a kick out of our eagerness to give GOOD SERVICE
LEONARD'S
STANDARD SERVICE
Telephone VI 3-9830
706 W. 9th
FREE TICKETS
to
Varsity Theater
at
ALLEN'S Drive-In
Get free tickets to Saturday night Owl Show with $1.00 purchase at ALLEN'S Drive-In. Tickets good for Saturday night, Dec. 8, only. Feature starts at 11:00 p.m.
ALLEN'S Drive-In
1404 W 23rd
Friday. Nov. 30. 1962
University Daily Kansan
Page 7
JFK-Mikoyan Talks Fruitless
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — President Kennedy's long conference with Soviet Deputy Premier Anastas I. Mikoyan failed to lessen the lingering differences over Cuba and pointed up the possibility of new East-West dissension in Southeast Asia.
Mikoyan was meeting today at lunch with Secretary of State Dean Rusk but officials said they did not expect this talk to alter matters materially.
THE WHITE HOUSE announced that Kennedy and Mikoyan, in a 31/2 hour session last evening, agreed Soviet and American negotiators in New York should continue their efforts to tie up loose ends of the Oct. 28 agreement on removal of Red missiles and bombers from Cuba.
U. S. officials added that the White House session failed to make any progress on any disputed points, including the major question of how and when Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev is going to make good on his promise to permit United Nations inspectors to check Cuban bases to make certain all offensive weapons have been removed.
Officials said the danger of new disorders in Southeast Asia came up in discussing Laos. The President was understood to have pointed out that a considerable number of Communist North Vietnamese troops remain in Northern Laos despite the Soviet pledge to see that they were removed under the international agreement to "neutralize" the kingdom.
U. S. OFFICIALS said the President and his aides also were disturbed by the continued refusal of pro-Communist Pathet Lao elements to cooperate in forming the coalition government agreed on at the Geneva conference last summer.
It was understood Kennedy warned Mikoyan that continued refusal of the pro-Communist Pathet Lao to open up their territory and participate in the coalition government agreed on last summer at Geneva was jeopardizing the peace.
Christmas
Gifts
for
her
Partial Listing:
Partial Listing:
Sweaters ... $3.95 to 17.95
Blouses ... $4.95 to 9.95
Skirts ... $6.95 to 17.95
Jewelry ... $1.00 to 3.00 plus tax
Hosiery ... $1.15 to 1.35
Dusters ... $10.95 to 12.95
Many other gifts
Kirsten's Hillcrest Shopping Center OPEN EVENINGS
Last Chance Given To Sign for NY Bus
Students bound for New York during the Christmas vacation will have their last chance today to save $20 on the trip.
SUA is offering a chartered bus which will leave Lawrence on Dec. 19 for the New York area. Students may travel via this bus for $40 instead of the usual $80.
Interested students should contact Tonto Mays at VI3-4811 before Friday.
Stewardesses Have Bottle Problems
NEW YORK — (UPI) — Three pretty stewardesses simultaneously smashed champagne bottles against a pillar yesterday to christen the $10 million passenger terminal at Idlewild Airport shared by Braniff International Airways, Northwest Orient Airlines and Northeast Airlines.
Northeast stewardess Helen Stillman got a slight glass cut on her hand, Branift stewardess Sheila Dixon got champagne all over her face and 10-gallon hat and Northwest stewardess Bette Budd got her kimono costume bathed in bubbly champagne.
Full Schedule Outlined For Leadership Day
About 125 high school senior girls are arriving on campus today, but they'll be so busy that there will be no time for fraternizing with the KU male.
The Associated Women Students (AWS) High School Leadership Day committee has a full schedule of entertainment speeches, panels, and tours planned for them.
HIGH SCHOOL Leadership Day is designed to acquaint outstanding senior girls with the importance of a college education and the desirability of coming to KU. Representatives come from Kansas and eastern Missouri.
Activities start this evening with a program of entertainment, including a fashion show; the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority Student Union Activities (SUA) skit, "McGoat at Ku"; the Alpha Phi sorority small ensemble; folk songs, and a dramatic reading.
THE SCHEDULE for Saturday:
9:00 a.m.—Registration.
9:30—Keynote speech by James
10:00 Coffee break
Gunn, administrative assistant to the chancellor.
10:46 COURT JEAN
10:15—Talk, "The Varied Roles of the KU Woman," by Miss Emily Taylor, dean of women.
10:30 Talk on AWS by Marilyn J. Mueller, Houston, Tex., senior and president of AWS.
10:45—PANEL. "Opportunities Unlimited." by Mortar Board members (senior women's honorary) and moderated by Dean Taylor.
2:15-Discussion groups on "Cues for Campus Living," led by members of Mortar Board and AWS Senate.
12:15 p.m.—Luncheon at Gertrude Sellards Pearson.
1:30-Tour conducted by Cwens (sophomore women's honorary) of Alpha Chi Omega sorority, Watkins Scholarship Hall, Danforth Chapel, and Watson Library.
3:05 Concluding remarks by Sharon Menasco, Wichita sophomore and chairman of High School Leadership Day.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Davonorth, Chapel
SUNDAY
International Club, after the foreign movie at Hoch, Jayhawk Room, Union Eldg., Ping Pong Tournament, Dancing and Refreshments.
Catholic Masses, 8:00 a.m., St. Lawrence, Chapel 213; Fresher Road; 8:00 a.m., Fraser Auditorium; Lutheran Student Association, 5:00 a.m., Woodwardwood Room; D.A. Jackson, Religious
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
JIM'S CAFE
838 Mass.
OPEN 24 hrs. a day
BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY
THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES SALUTE: ROY MOORE
Roy Moore (B.B.A., 1958) is responsible for 51,000 telephone customers served from Southwestern Bell's San Antonio office. To efficiently keep tabs on the nearly $700,000 monthly billing, Roy has a staff of 24 people including four supervisors.
A lot of responsibility, but Roy showed he could handle it right from his first assignment as a Staff Assistant in
the Houston Sales Department. From there, he progressed to Commercial Assistant, and then to Group Manager for ten exchanges around Cuero, Texas.
Roy Moore and other young men like him in Bell Telephone Companies throughout the country help bring the finest communications service in the world to the homes and businesses of a growing America.
MILITARY PROTECTION & HELP SYSTEMS
MILITARY PROTECTION & HELP SYSTEMS
BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES
TELEPHONE MAN-OF-THE-MONTH
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Nov. 30, 1962
Andrews Case Triggers Insanity Rule Debate
Conviction of Lowell Lee Andrews for the November 1958 slaying of his family has provided a springboard from which psychiatrists and lawyers have attacked the state's doctrine of criminal insanity.
The M'Naughten Rule for determining the mental condition of an accused person was first challenged in Leavenworth County District Court by Dr. Joseph Satten, director of the division of law and psychiatry at the Menninger Foundation.
THE PSYCHIATRIST testified on behalf of the condemned KU sophomore, who was seeking a new trial in a bid to avoid the hangman.
In most states the test of criminal responsibility is based on the M-Naughten Rule, formulated in England in 1843. The rule states that in order to establish a defense of insanity it must be shown that the accused was suffering a defect of reason from a mental disease so that he knew neither the nature and quality of the act he was doing nor that it was wrong.
Dr. Satten testified that the rule requires a "black or white" answer concerning an accused person's sanity when most cases consist of various shades of grey. He argued that the rule placed emphasis on only one element of mental illness—the concept of knowing.
"The rule poses specific difficulties to myself and other psychiatrists in
Pope Improving; Worry Continues In Vatican Circles
VATICAN CITY —(UPI)— Pope John XXIII's health is "definitely but slowly improving" although he apparently tired himself yesterday by getting out of bed for several hours, high Vatican sources said today.
The sources said the 81-year-old Pope, who is suffering from anemia and a stomach disorder, spent "a rather good night."
"However, he apparently tired himself yesterday when he got out of bed for three hours without doctors' orders," they said. "Today, he is confined to bed and did not watch television.
"HIS HOLINESS is expected to remain in bed all day. His condition is definitely but slowly improving."
The Pope had been expected to watch the closed-circuit telecast of today's Ecumenical Council in session in St. Peter's Basilica.
Dr. Antonio Gasbarrini, the 80-year-old papal physician, spent a half hour at the Pope's bedside today. He was accompanied by Dr. Pictro Mazzoni, who substitutes for Gasbarrini when he is out of town.
Vatican sources said the doctors reported the Pope is "reacting well" to the medicines they are administering. They said he had a cup of tea with milk early today and some soup and meat at mid-morning.
VATICAN CIRCLES, normally hesitant to discuss a pontiff's health, indicated worry over the possibility that the Pope's gastric trouble—believed to be an ulcer—and anemia might develop complications.
Medical circles pointed out that any illness may be serious for a man in his 82nd year.
There still was speculation that the Pope eventually may have to undergo surgery, either for the reported ulcer or for a prostate condition which is said to have been troubling him for some time.
The Vatican has denied all reports of impending surgery, but Dr. Pietro Valdomi, Italy's leading surgeon, was among the medical men who visited the Pope yesterday.
ORDER
Personalized
Greeting Cards
criminal cases," Dr. Satten charged. The witness, one of the examining psychiatrists, testified that Andrews was suffering a "schizophrenic reaction" in which his mind was distorted in the way he visualized the world.
criminal cases." Dr. Satten charged.
BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass.
"The killing of his parents and sister was a product of the disease, and an outgrowth of his perverted feelings and thinking. It probably would not have occurred otherwise," Satten continued.
Nevertheless, the Wyandotte County jury was convinced Andrews knew the difference between right and wrong and returned a verdict of guilty.
James Ahrens and Richard C. Allen, attorneys for Andrews, argued in the Leavenworth court that in the light of new advances in psychiatry the M'Naughten Rule is inadequate. They maintained that many patients in the state's mental hospitals can distinguish right from wrong.
The District of Columbia in 1954 rejected the right-wrong test as obsolete. In its place the Durham Rule was adopted which says, in essence, that an accused person is not criminally responsible if his unlawful act was the product of a mental disease or defect. This rule, authorities note, gives the psychiatrist freedom to speak in a psychiatric frame of reference rather than a legal one.
Morgan Scholar To Teach 'Beowulf
A noted scholar of early English literature will be the Rose Morgan visiting professor for the 1963 spring semester.
He is Prof. C. L. Wrenn, since 1946 the Rawlinson and Bosworth Professor of Anglo-Saxon at Oxford University in England.
The Rose Morgan chair, filled by a distinguished scholar from abroad, was created through a bequest to KU of her home adjoining the campus by the late Rose Morgan, emerita professor of English. It provides a rent free residence for the visiting scholar and his family.
At KU Professor Wrenn will teach "Beowulf," a graduate seminar in middle English textual criticism, and an undergraduate honors seminar.
Chinese Begin Early Pull-Out
NEW DELHI — (UPI) — Communist Chinese troops appeared to be pulling out of some areas along the Indian border today hours before their scheduled withdrawal.
But sources close to Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru's office cautioned that it was still too early to tell if the movement out of the North East Frontier Agency (NAFA) region was only a token move or the real thing.
Information from government sources confirmed earlier military reports that fewer and fewer Red Chinese troops were visible in front of the Indian positions.
Even as these developments occurred, India asked Red China for still another "clarification" of its withdrawal plans scheduled to go into effect at 9:30 p.m. (11 a.m. EST).
"A fresh note seeking more precise information was handed to the Chinese charge d'affaires this afternoon," a foreign ministry spokesman said.
In another development, the defense ministry confirmed that Lt. Gen. S. H. F. J. Manekshaw has been named commander of India's NEFA and Eastern forces. He replaces Lt. Gen. B. M. Kaul, named by Nehru and ousted Defense Minister V. K. Krishna Menon in October to clear the invading Chinese forces out of the NEFA.
The new move came in the wake of Anglo-American efforts to persuade India and Pakistan to try to patch up their bitter traditional quarrels, including rival claims to Kashmir, so that they could combine to present a solid defense of the entire Indian-Pakistan subcontinent against the common enemy of Communist aggression.
Same Crime, New Fine
BUFFALO, N. Y. — (UPI) —Don't believe it when they tell you inflation has sent all prices soaring. The police department reports at least one version of traffic tickets is $3 cheaper now than 86 years ago.
The original Board of Trustees of Erie County passed in 1876 as one of its first acts an ordinance warning drivers that the fine for parking a "horse, team, vehicle or conveyance" on the circular carriageway in front of county hall "is $5 for each and every offense."
The traffic tag for the same offense today costs $2.
Senior Party! SATURDAY, DEC.1
at ELDRIDGE HOTEL BOTH BALLROOMS
Popcorn, Peanuts, etc. FREE
Cokes, 7-Up Dry Soda Will Be Available
SWING BAND FROM 9-12
Dress Will Be School Clothes
FREE WITH YOUR SENIOR I.D.
$1 WITHOUT I.D.
FRIDAY FLICKS
Shows at 7 and 9:30
FRASER THEATER
PETER USTINOV
SANDRA DEE
JOHN GAVIN
Romanoff
and Juliet
THE ROMANTIC DITHER OF THE DECADE!
PETER USTINOV
SANDRA DEE
JOHN GAVIN
Romanoff and Juliet
TECHNICOLOR
CO-STARRING AKIM TAMIROFF
35c admission — tickets for both shows on sale at Union Friday until 6 p.m. and then at the door.
TECHNICOLOR
CO.STARRING AKIM TAMIROFF
Read and Use Kansan Classifieds
---
FLATS! ALL KINDS
★ School flats
$\star$ Pointy toes or stacks for that Christmas dress
★ Moccasins and loafers
★ Bunny slippers and gift flats
$2.87 and $3.87
Open Daily, 9 to 9 Sunday Noon to 5
Harvey's DISCOUNT SHOES 1302 W. 23rd St.
Friday. Nov. 30,1962 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Montana Here Tomorrow
15
Dave Schichtle
KANU To Carry All KU Broadcasts
KANU is, at present, the only station in the state that will carry the entire Javhawker schedule.
Tom Hedrick, in his third year as "Voice of the Jayhawks," and Monte Johnson, will do the play-by-play action and color from courtside.
All 25 games of the 1962-63 University of Kansas basketball season will be broadcast over KANU-FM (91.5), the official University station.
Hedrick also originates an NCAA Tournament Network for Kansas radio stations, and broadcasts the action of the National Junior College Tournament in Hutchinson.
Johnson, a former KU basketball star of the Wilt Chamberlain era, is public relations director for the KU athletic department.
FOR THE PAST two years, Hudrick has been named the state's "sportscaster of the year," an award given annually by the National Association of Sportscasters and Sportswriters of Salisbury, N.C. The Association's selection is based on the votes of radio and newspapermen across Kansas.
KUOK, the Kansas University student-operated radio station, will carry all KU basketball games except those played on Saturday nights.
At present, radio station KSAL in Salina is carrying at least 15 of the KU basketball games. Stations KWBB in Wichita, KWBW and KWHK in Hutchinson, KGGF in Coffeyville, and VKGB in Great Bend, will carry at least 10 of the KU Sports Network broadcasts.
Hedrick, in the near future, hopes to add at least one Kansas City station to the network, and also KWNS in Pratt, KSOB in Liberal, KIUL in Garden City, KGNO in Dodge City, KAYS in Hays, and KVOE in Emporia.
Navy Builds Spirit The Hard Way
NEW YORK — (UPI)—The Navy Middies added a new wrinkle today in the psychological warfare they employ annually for their football game against Army.
The men of Annapolis paid $3,500 for a full-page advertisement in the sports section of this morning's New York Times proclaiming, "GO-O-O-NO NAVY—BEAT ARMY!"
"Sponsored by the Brigade of Midshipmen—U.S. Naval Academy—no government or appropriated money is used for this advertisement."
At the foot of the huge ad was a note in small print reading:
Midshipman W. D. Davidson, the chairman of the Naval Academy's Brigade Activities Committee, said the cost of the ad is being defrayed by voluntary donations from midshipmen and alumni.
State Farm Insurance
Paul E. Hodgson Local Agent
Off. Ph. VI 3-5666 530 W 23d2.
Res. Ph. III 3-5994 Lawrence, Kau.
K U $ ^{ \star} $ Hasn't Lost Opener Since '53
It's been a long time since the University of Kansas Jayhawkers have lost an opening game of their basketball schedule.
By Ben Marshall
Nine years have elapsed since Tulane turned the opening-night trick back in 1953, beating Forrest C. "Phog" Allen's crew, 69-65, at New Orleans.
Since then, the Jayhawkers have whipped Northwestern five times, and Louisiana State, Rice, and Arkansas once each.
Two new faces will be in the KU starting lineup when the Hawkers take the floor against the Grizzlies, 6-7 sophomore center George Unseld, from Louisville, Ky., and rookie guard Dave Schichtle (pronounced $ \mathrm{S H E E S H} - \mathrm{t u l} $), 6-2, from Coffeyville.
Other starters on the '62-'63 Hawker quintet will be senior guard Nolen Ellison of Kansas City, who was the team's second best scorer with an 18.1 average last season, 6-2 senior forward Jim Dumas, from Topeka, and 6-3 junior forward Harry Gibson, of Kansas City.
Dumas, who started at forward last season, was tried at guard earlier this year. But failure of other personnel to fill the forward spot opposite Gibson—and the steady improvement of Schichtle at guard—pressed Dumas back to front line duty.
WITH THIS starting lineup, however, coach Harp still has the same problem that he had last year with a club that won seven, lost 18, and tied for the Big Eight cellar with Missouri—a lack of height under the backboards.
The front line of Unseld, Dumas, and Gibson, averages only 6'4" in height, which could hurt the Hawkers' rebounding chances and control of the backboards against teams which are bigger at the three front line positions.
Harp is set on his starting lineup for the Montana State contest, but he is still trying to meet the height problems by working taller reserves into the lineup more often. The Kansas mentor has recently been using these three systems of rotation:
STUDENTS
- Buddy Vance, 6-6 reserve center, at forward, with Unseld at the pivot.
- John Matt, a 6-6 two-year lettered center at the pivot with Unseld at forward.
- A combination of Vance and Unseld or Unseld and Jim Gough, 6-8 sophomore forward, in a two-man shuttle between center and forward.
COACH RON NORD'S veteran starters are 6-7 center Steve Lowry, who averaged 15.1 points a game last season and was the team's leading rebounder, junior guard Tim Aldrich, who hit for an even 12-point average, and senior guard Ray Lucien.
The Grizzlies return three of five starters from last year's squad which had a 10-14 overall record and tied for fourth place in the Skyline Conference with Brigham Young at 5-9.
The two newcomers to the starting MSU five, both lettermen, are 6-4 forwards Harold Fullerton and Keith Law.
Nord, in his first year as Grizzly mentor, was a former assistant coach at Wisconsin. He succeeds Frosty Cox, former Colorado coach and one-time KU football and basketball star.
See us for complete formal outfitting.
We invite comparisons in our prices.
Edmiston's
GETTING READY FOR THE BIG DANCE?
Grease Jobs . . $1.00
COACH DICK HARP'S charges put this eight-game winning streak on the line tomorrow night in Allen Field House as they open the 1962-63 season against the Montana State University Grizzlies. Tipoff time is 7:30.
Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing
Crushed Ice
Brake Adi. . . . 98c
Having a Party?
7 a.m.-11 p.m.
845 MASS. — VI 3-5533
Crushed Ice
Ice Cold 6-pacs
of all kinds
PARTY SUPPLIES
PAGE CREIGHTON
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd
LAWRENCE ICE CO.
6th & Vt., VI 3-0350
KU SPORTS
on
DIAL
KLWN
1320
7:30 a.m. Daily Sports Shorts
5:00 Today In the Enemy Camp
5:20 Tom Hedrick Sports
JAMES JONES
George Unseld
Back to Old System; Single All-Star Game
Major league baseball player representatives agreed today to return to the old system of one All-Star game a season.
The announcement followed the conclusion of minor league meetings in Rochester, N.Y., where the American Association went out of business after having operated continuously for 61 years.
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
FREE
PROSPECTUSBOOKLET tells how to acquire shares of
Accumulative United Fund through
UNITED PERIODIC INVESTMENT PLANS
These plans (up to $100,000 in multiples of $2.50) enable you to invest a minimum of $125 to start, and $25 periodically, in more than 100 American corporations. You invest in United States Funds diversified, managed mutual fund seeking possible long-term growth of capital.
For free copy of the Prospectus-Booklet and other information mail this ad today or call
Waddell & Reed, Inc.
National distributor—Represented locally by
MRS. FREDRICK MOREAU
1942 Louisiana VI 3-4588
Name ...
Address ...
Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Nov. 30, 1962
English Scholar Defends A 'Villain,' George III
By Phillip Magers
King George III, often pictured as a villain in American history textbooks, was defended here last night by an English scholar.
J. Steven Watson, fellow and tutor at Christ Church College of Oxford, England, spoke at a University Lecture "In Defense of George III."
HE DEFENDED THE 18th century king, who ruled America before 1776, against three charges.
Watson said George III is often charged with being too much of a monarch and smothering the English constitution.
Actually, he said, the majority of the House of Commons at that time opposed interference of the king, and by means of "Parliamentary Sovereignty" made the king only a symbol of unity.
The "country gentleman" that ruled Parliament at that time wanted to control the country. They refused to cooperate with George and therefore very few bills were passed, Watson said.
ANOTHER CHARGE often leveled at the king, is that he was personally responsible for the loss of America, Watson said.
However, he said, the main reason for the loss of the colonies was that they were simply too far away for good communications.
The Americans opposing the king were impractical, anarchists and also independent, Watson said. They would not submit to some taxes imposed by an economically poor England, trying to rule from 3,000 miles away.
Watson admitted he could not completely refute the third charge: that George III was stupid and unfit for the crown.
AS A CHILD the king was backward and slow to learn, Watson said, and he had a deep-seated inferiority complex because of his backwardness. This lead to "insanity" in his later years.
The Greatest
THRILL CLASSIC
of All Time!
BENEATH HIS MASK...
the Grotesque Face of
Horror Unimaginable!
INSIDE HIS HEART...
the Desperate Desire
for Beauty and Love!
"The
PHANTOM
OF THE
OPERA"
Eastman COLOR
STARRING
HERBERT LOM • HEATHER SEARS
ALSO STARRING
THORLEY WALTERS • MICHAEL GOUGH
SCREENPLAY BY
DIRECTED BY
JOHN ELDER • TERENCE FISHER • ANTHONY HINDS
A HAMMER FILM PRODUCTION • A UNIVERSAL INTERNATIONAL RELEASE
MUCKINSON & FERRARI
STARTS SUNDAY
CONTINOUS SHOWINGS
VARSITY
SUNDAY FROM 2:30
THEATRE...Telephone VIKING 3-1065
Bolivian Violinist To Perform Here Monday
A 21-year-old Bolivian violinist who began his career at the age of eight, will be the second attraction in the 1962-63 KU Concert Course season.
Jaime Laredo will perform at 1 p.m. Monday in the University Theatre.
LAREDO BEGAN his career at eight with a full recital in Sacramento, Calif. In 1959, at 18, he won the Queen Elizabeth of Belgium Music competition.
New York, Philadelphia, the Hollywood Bowl, and the Berkshire and Ravina Festivals.
When he made his first recording, he was named the best performing artist of the year by the Institute of Recording Arts and Sciences.
He has played with orchestras in Spokane, Philadelphia, Akron, Cleveland, Washington and Dallas. His recital debuts have been in
HIS NATIVE COUNTRY has issued a stamp in his honor.
tickets by presenting their KU-ID's at the Murphy Hall ticket office.
A Doughnut in Space
His program here will include the music of Tartini, Mozart, Schumann, Barok and Wieniawski.
CLEVELAND — (UPI) A unique entry in space exploration is an inflatable space station. It is proposed that the doughnut-shaped vehicle, designed and built by Goodyear Aircraft Corp., be packaged into a container, shot into space and inflated to form an orbiting space station. Men would live and work inside the station, entering and leaving through a canister-shaped hub.
Students may obtain reserve seat
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
HONORED as the picture to inaugurate the
HOLLYWOOD PREVIEW ENGAGEMENT
ahead of its normal release date
Diabolical!
Sister, sister,
oh so fair,
why is there blood
all over your hair?
PLEASE DON'T
REVEAL THE
ENDING TO
ANYONE!
LET OTHERS FIND OUT
FOR THEMSELVES HOW
DIABOLICAL
A MOVIE CAN BE!
"WHAT EVER
HAPPENED TO
BABY JANE?"
SEVEN ARTS PRESENTS AN ASSOCIATES AND ALDRICH PRODUCTION STARRING
Bette Davis and Joan Crawford
Things you should know about this motion picture before buying a ticket:
1. You are urged to see it from the beginning.
2. Be prepared for the macabre and the terrifying.
3. We ask your pledge to keep the shocking climax a secret.
4. When the tension begins to build, please try not to scream.
Produced and Directed by ROBERT ALDRICH Screen Play by LUKAS HELLER Music by FRANK DEVOL Based on the novel by HENRY FARRELL Released by WARNER BROS.
---
STARTS TOMORROW!
● MATINEE SATURDAY AT 2:00 ● EVENINGS AT 7:00 & 9:20
● CONTINUOUS SHOWINGS SUNDAY FROM 2:30 P.M. ●
HURRY! ENDS TONITE!
"THE MANCHURIAN CANDIDATE"
SHOWS AT 7:00 & 9:10
[
GRANADA
THEATRE ... Telephone VIKING 3-5788
-Classified Ads-
FOR SALE
20 acres on highway 7 miles out. Good
property for sale. Phone 31-7083
1951 Plymouth with heater and radio.
1952 new tires and battery. Phone 12-
6194.
Typing paper $12 \times 1$ x 11 20 lb stock $1.50
9729 \times 3$ m² Brown Reality, Room 12-
7294 \times 3$ m²
1956 Buick with new tires in excellent condition. Buick $65 or make VI. CV 3-7025. 12-4
'52 Mercury 2-door hardtop with stick shift and overdrive. Contact Mike Williams at 945 Emery Rd. or phone VI 3-7922.
RCA stereo console -- two years old.
Eico multitplex FM tuner new
hi-fi system 8 to 164kHz Health
and Eclectic Call. CYI 3-7549 after 5
p.m.
Triumph TR4, 1962 model. White-red interior and fully equipped. $2450. W. R.Wycoff, $622 Russell; Mission, Kansas. or phone HE 2-5840. 12-4
black coat. Princess style, size 13. Eas-
tle dress. Size 314. Phone 12. Receive
before 5 p.m. 11-30
Ladies' costs: one blue wool clinchips
815. Like new. Phone VI 3-7473. 12-4
Wedding set, Emerald cut diamond 6.5 points, 4 baguettes totaling 40 points. Receives replies to Kansan Business Office. Ext. 376 In Kansas City phone HE 2-0467. 12-4
German Shepherd AKC, 1 year old. obedient school, long-worth bloodline. Call or mail repellent to Kansan Business Office at ext. 376. In Kansas City phone 12-43.
PROF. SNARF vs. L.M.O.C. 4th book of Bibler cartoons just published. S. P.O.
Box 1533, Monterey, Calif. Merry Xmass.
11-30
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most compliant in the bestwet-Pet phone VI-529-800 Modem mobile-service. Open 8 to 6:30 pm week days.
Stereo or hi-fi diamond needles for most makes. Half price during November. Don't wait, buy them now at Pettengill-Davis, 723 Mass. tf
All kinds of house plants. Potted .
Including hilodendron to be used for
room dividers and in picture windows
Phone VI S-4207. ti
Used guitars, drums and all instruments.
Wide selection. Richardson Music Co.
18 E. 9th. VI 2-0021. Lessons for all instruments.
11-30
TV shopping? Magnavox 24" automatic TV has a 3 year picture tube warranty, and the magnavox 24" automatic TV from just $149.90. See the magnificent Magnavox at Pettengil-Davis, 723 Mass.
Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.00 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. ff
TYPING PAPER BARGAINS: Pink typing paper 85c per sheet. Yellow paper 85c per sheet. Per pound. The Lawrence Outlook. 1005 Massachusetts, open all day. Twitter. 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.
FOR RENT
3 room apartment with bath, stove and refrigerator. $60. Bills paid. 4 room apartment $70 a month. 2 bedroom house run-trip unfurnished for $65. Plumbing 3-7038. 12-6
For rent. First floor. Private bath, entrance
apartment. 3200 N.H. $75 per month. Phone VI-
2200 after 5 p.m. or VI-3851. 12-6
A 5 room furnished apartment with stove, refrigerator, private bath and en-
sorage, front barking, $1831 after $55 per month on month IV. 3-2500 after 5 p.m. or VI. 3-8501. 12-6
For rent, one and two bedroom furnished
apartments. To rent, VI 3-3992. 12-6
Hemphill.
Furnished apartment with 3 large rooms
Electricity. Electricity. Near 12-
phone 1. V1-60244.
2 b bedroom house furnished for man students
b university house purchased for 3-55K
Phone No. 89147630
Furnished or unfurnished units, singles
Inc. 1912 West 25th. Phone VI 2-3416.
A 2 bedroom house $ \frac{1}{2} $ block from campus. Fully carpeted, screened porch, wood burning fireplace, fully air conditioned. Full basement with a large lot. $ 100 a month. If interested call VI 2-2202 after 5 p.m. 11-30
Large furnished apartment with private bath and entrance. Newly furnished and decorated. 1 block from campus. Phone VI 2-3350 or VI 3-2263. 11-30
3 room apartment, private bath. 1 block
to pool. 2 blocks from home paid.
Come and see. 1142 Indiana. tf
RASCAL COLUMN
1 don't have an umbrella. Will the person who found a plaid, cloth topcoat.
J. C. Penney type, please call VI 2-2760, any time.
11-30
For boys, 1 room with refrigerator in
room upstairs $25 a month
Phone VI 3-8201 11-30
3 room furnished apartment on 25th St. private bath, private bathroom, Call VI 3-8100. 11-30
Vacancies for young men in contemporary home with swimming pool, shower bath, private entrance, 5 evening meals weekly. $65 a month. Call VI 3-96355, tfr
Furnished or unfurnished units, singles
Inc. 4912 West 25th. Phone VI 2-3416.
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.
FURNISHED OFFICE SPACE is now available by the day, week or month. Awareness Service The Secretarial & Awareness Services. Call VI 5-0920 or see them at 10211h Mass.
12-3
Experienced typist does term papers, mesis, manuscripts and dissertations on electric typewriter. Special symbols and signs. Prompt answer reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook at 2000 Rhode Island. Phone VI 3-7485. tf
TYPING
M-W-F-tt
Nyping, Spanish, French, and German;
All Amy Summers at VI 2-0276. 12-4
Will do neat and accurate typing in my home. Experienced in themes, theses, and term papers. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Adcock, VI 2-1795. tf
Typist experienced in theses and term papers. Prompt service, reasonable rates, electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Howard Mhlenger at VI 3-4409. tf
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type the sheets, term papers, resumes and other written materials rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney. 2521 Alabama. Ph. VI 3-8580
English major and former secretary will type themes and theses on electric type-writer. For neat and accurate work call Mrs. Mells sand Jones, VI 3-5267. tt
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, these and other materials for an electric typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8739.
Fast accurate typing. Secretary for 5%
first accurate typing. Robertson, IJ 3-52-
at 703 Lawrence Ave.
Typing — reasonable rates, meat and ac-
cacia. Miodin, 825 Grewer Terri VI • 3-138
Miodin, Bodin, 825 Grewer Terri VI
Manuscripts, theses, and term papers
Also dissertations typed on wide carriage
keys. Supports 55 keys.
Experience in education and science
Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. VI 2-1546.
Efficient typist. Would like typing in her home. Special attention to term reports, thesis, letters. Call anytime at VI 3-2651.
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast accurate, neat work. Reasonable rates Familier with legal terms. Marsha Goff VI 2-1749. tt
Experienced typist. 7 years experience in theses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mar, Barlow. 204 Yale Rd., VI. 1648.
Experienced secretary with electric typesetting
and electronic typesetting, et al.
Phone Nancy Cain at VI 3-0824
Wanted: student to do delivery work from 4 to 11 p.m. For complete details contact Tom Dixon at Dixon's Drive In at 2500 w. 6th or phone VI 3-744-12-6
MILLKEN'S S.O.S. — always first quality typing on IBM machines, equipped with carbon ribbons. Open 24 hours a day. 1021½ Massachusetts. VI 3-5920.
Married Woman - age 20 to 30 for
evening work. Married woman or
evening work for the remainder of the
school year. No experience necessary.
Graduate degree required. 2500 W. 6th St. Phone VI 3-7446. 11-30
HELP WANTED
Black purse on West stairs outside under-
deck. Ticket to Louis Powers, Lewis Haui VI 2-16-84
M-W-F-tf
LOST
MISCELLANEOUS
See Us
Free kittens. Phone VI 2-3234. 11-30
TYPEWRITERS
NEW AND USED
Sales-Rentals-Service
Blonde Cocker Spaniel, 6 months old. Has collar and tags. Owner is small boy. Call VI 3-8209
LOST:
University Daily Kansan
LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER
Before You Buy
after 5.
REWARD
12-6
PATRONIZE YOUR
VI 3-3644
735 Mass.
- ADVERTISERS -
Rita Tushingham
Winner Best Performance Award
Cannes Film Festival 1962
Murray Melvin
Winner Best Performance Award
Cannes Film Festival 1962
Winner of 4 British Academy Awards
Baby sitting in my home. 1/2 block from child.
Reference. Phone VI 3-2263.
RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. tsew.com
GENERAL PSYCHOLOGY I study notes.
Completely revised and extremely com-
prehensive. $4. For free delivery call
VI 3-8246. tf
GUNS: LAWRENCE FIREARMS CO.
special this week M1903 (not A3) made
Type A stock. Aircraft Appears under
Type C stock. Only $75.40. Handarms
reblued. 1026 Ohio. 11-30
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
more details, call Ola Smith 03291
93951 Mass. Call VI3-5263.
Friday. Nov. 30, 1962
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center. 1218
Comm. Personal service - sectionalized
birds, hamsters, chameleons, turtles,
pups and pets, etc., plus complete lists.
pet supplies. **tf**
BUSINESS SERVICES
ANOTHER OF THE
VARSITY ART Attractions
"Words Are Completely Insufficient To Express The True Quality And Extent Of Eloquence Got Into This Picture!"
BOSLEY GROWTHER. NEW YORK TIMES
a taste of honey
Produced and directed by TONY RICHARDSON
A Commercial Distributor, Inc. Release
TONIGHT and SAT.
At 7 and 9
Page 11
Mat. Sat. 2 p.m.
LARRY CRUM suggests all kinds of Pancakes. T-Bone steak only 9c. We are open 24 hours a day. "K"-Pancake Griff and Sundries. 14th and Mass. tt
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
- STUDENT TYPING & THESES
CUSTOM DEVELOPER INDIVIDUAL
MILLIKEN'S 'S.O.S.' Open 24 hours
3 mi. Suspended in ice 7 am.-12
3 mi. Suspended in ice 8 am.
10212 Massachusetts Ph. VI 3-5920 M-W-F1F
CATING & THERMO-FAX COPYING
• COMPLETE SECRETARIAL & AN-
SWERING SERVICE, Office Space
Available.
-1-
-2-
Big Top Thrills "THE CLOWN AND THE KID"
TONITE and SATURDAY FOUR BIG SHOWS!
Audio Murphy in "SEVEN WAYS FROM SUNDOWN"
-3-
Gina Lollobrigida "GO NAKED IN THE WORLD"
4 —
"SAPPHIRE"
Show Starts at 7:00
"Go Naked in the World'
and
"Seven Ways From
Sundown"
- Sunday -
Sunset
DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 40
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results!
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.
Royal College Shop
"Bunny Blocks"
Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Nov. 30, 1962
YD Confusion -
(Continued from page 1)
"At the hearing," Bennington said last night, "Pete Aylward was not the only one to show proof of irregularities.
"We had depositions (written testimony) from witnesses who said that Pete had been seen handing out membership cards outside the election room that night.
"THE OPPOSITION says a number of girls from Corbin were not allowed to vote. About four appeared at the hearing and said that they had never been members of the KU Young Democrats.
"They said they had signed an indication of wishing to join," Bennington said.
"By his actions," Bennington said, "Pete lost any right to make any claims about us. He is guilty of the things he accuses us of doing."
"Pete Ayllward says the legality of his election is as questionable as ours," Bennington continued. "Since Prof. Oldfather himself said he did not determine the validity of the election, I am surprised that he would admit there was any legality at all."
Bennington said that Aylward and most of his supporters left in the middle of the March 14 meeting, after the results of the election of officers had been announced but before the convention delegates were elected.
"THERE IS NO legitimate reason whatsoever to claim Pete Aylward was elected at a special meeting," Bennington said.
Aylward maintains that a special meeting was called after 28 YD's had signed a petition requesting a meeting.
"Elections can't be held at special meetings. This is prohibited by the Constitution, dating back to a policy set in 1961." Bennington said.
"This meeting would have had to be presided over by the president-elect, myself, or by Verne Gauby, the retiring president, who was theoretically still in office.
"Neither of us was present.
"According to the bylaws, the membership must be notified of the election by postcard a specified length of time before the election. I received no notification," Bennington said.
"THE MARCH 28 MEETING was merely a rump session. In effect, the meeting was not legitimate."
Bennington said this is what happened at the March 14 meeting!
"Each member's name was put on a membership list. Identification and membership cards were checked and then compared with the names on the list of eligible voters.
"After the meeting began, each person's name was read off and he came forward to pick up his ballot. The elections commissioner asked if some present who had not been allowed to vote thought they should have been. There was one girl from Corbin who had not been allowed to vote. After we checked her credentials again, she was permitted to vote.
"Everyone there who should have voted. did vote. I think." he said.
"John Sullivan, a Lawrence resident, who was president of the state Young Democrats at the time, was present and said it was one of the best-conducted elections he had ever seen and it was one of the best turn-outs.
Bennington said he wanted to re-emphasize that Aylward was not recognized as president of the KU YD's except by the Collegiate Council.
"So far, we have no proof of this —only his word.
"According to my knowledge of
Television is no wasteland; it is peopleled by very real human beings of sub-average intelligence.
the state constitution, there is no mention of their having the authority to make judgments during a controversy over the election of officers." Bennington said.
-Fred Crampton
"Before the March 14 election, he was campaigning for the president of the Collegiate Council of Young Democrats.
"Aylward did not act in good faith. He went into the office simply to benefit himself and his family.
"One of the points of his campaign was that he intended to become president of the KU Young Democrats. As president of the College Council, he hoped to establish booster clubs across the state for his father."
His father, Paul Aylward of Ellsworth, was defeated in his candidacy for the U.S. Senate.
"However, Aylward was not elected president of the Collegiate Council. He is now the vice president of that group.
JOE'S BAKERY
Open 24 Hours
Night Deliveries
412 W. 9th VI3-4720
"Apparently the only type of election he can win is when his fraternity brothers are voting. Anyone on campus could run against him and beat him.
"He was interested only in furthering his own case and his family cause. Since his father lost the U.S. Senate race, his motivation is lost.
Bennington said there is "adequate proof" that no meetings have been held this fall.
"They were not meetings because the members were not notified by post cards," he said.
Colorado Regents Enforcing Anti-Discrimination Deadline
Greek houses at the University of Colorado can no longer discriminate on the basis of race, color, or religion.
The CU board of regents set a six year deadline—which came due this semester—for all Greek houses to get rid of their clauses or get off the campus.
One house, Phi Delta Theta, removed its clause during the summer and the Colorado regents granted the fraternity a two year deadline extension when it was learned that a constitutional change requires two-years to take effect.
The Colorado regents, in granting the time extension, said that because the local Phi Delt chapter had demonstrated the proper attitude in seeking the removal of the clause the
house would not be penalized for technically failing to meet the deadline.
Arthur Kendall, dean of students at Colorado, said in a telephone interview that he had letters on file from both the national and local Greek organizations which affirm compliance to the order banning discriminatory clauses.
The letter reads:
"This is to certify that - - - chapter of - - - fraternity or sorority is not required by its constitution, rituals, or government to deny membership to any person because of race, color, or religion."
Dean Kendall said that the letter must be signed by the chapter president and by the president of the national organization.
Disciplinary -
(Continued from page 1)
The best way to cope with the disciplinary problem is to tell the students "the administration says you absolutely must not drink," one fraternity man suggested.
"We cut down on excessive drinking within our house by socially ostracizing those persons who made tools of themselves," he added.
Another suggestion was levying excessive fines or taking the individual's fraternity pin away from him.
Most of the women leaders favored a discussion with members of their living groups.
D&G AUTO SERVICE VI 2-0753 1/2 blk. E. 12th & Haskell
-
5+ 6
A Portrait by
The Only
PERFECT
Christmas Gift
VI 3-1171
924 Vermont
Roller skating
EVERYONE'S ON THEIR WAY TO
Sandy's
Thrift & Swift Drive-in
ACROSS FROM HILLCREST
Hamburgers
15c
French Fries
10c
Tastes Great because the tobaccos are!
21 Great Tobaccos make 20 Wonderful Smokes! CHESTERFIELD KING tastes great, smokes mild. You get 21 vintage tobaccos grown mild, aged mild and blended mild, and made to taste even milder through its longer length.
CHESTERFIELD KING
Tobaccos too mild to filter, pleasure too good to miss!
Chesterfield
KING
CIGARETTES
LINERT E. MAYER TOWRECK CO.
ORDINARY CIGARETTES
CHESTERFIELD KING
Longer length means milder taste
The smoke of a Chesterfield King mellowns and softens as it flows through longer length . . . becomes smooth and gentle to your taste.