dy of
Exiles to 'War'; Defy U.S. Stand
MIAMI—(UPI)—Spokesmen for a new Cuban underground organization today issued a "declaration of war on all Communist ships that enter or leave Communist Cuba" despite United States efforts to halt anti-Castro raids blamed on this country.
The spokesmen said the group is known as the "Freedom Fighter Commandoes" and will operate out of Mexico.
They sharply criticized the new U.S. crackdown but emphasized that their projected naval war on Communist shipping would not be carried out from United States territory.
The exiles said operation headquarters for the group have been "in the process of formation for some time" and are located "in a certain place in Mexico."
COMMANDER IN CHIEF of the group was identified only as Maj. Liovez. The organization, carrying out attacks under the code name "Operation Wolf," has no Americans among its members, according to the informants.
The announcement came amid a mounting criticism by Cuban exiles in the Miami area of the new U.S. crackdown on raids against the Cuban regime of Premier Fidel Castro and the imposition of tight travel restrictions on certain refugee leaders.
One prominent exile leader, Dr. Luis Conte Aguero, denounced the new policy as "anti-Monroe Doctrine" and said it put American armed forces and officials in the "incredible position of protecting the Russians in Cuba."
RELIABLE SOURCES said 25 to 50 restricting orders had been given but authorities would not confirm this.
U. S. immigration officials fanned through the refugee colony, tracking down past or "potential" raiders. The exile leaders were handed orders restricting them either to the United States or to the 50-by-50 mile area of Dade County, which includes Miami.
The Immigration Department said the orders would "continue to be issued" against persons suspected of planning to violate U.S. policy. Penalties for violation of restriction orders include $5,000 fines and imprisonment up to five years.
In Nassau, the Bahamas government said today the British frigate Londonderry has been ordered to halt refugee attacks against Cuba from British territory. Bahamas colonial secretary K. M. Walmsley said the 2,150-ton frigate left Bermuda Saturday on its way to the Bahamas under a joint decision by the Bahamas and British governments.
Pedro L. Diaz, former commander of Castro's air force, denounced the United States action as "coexistence with Castro."
SURVIVORS of the unsuccessful 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion expressed shock, and one former invader said refugees who want to continue the fight against Castro will have to leave the United States.
"Not even Castro would have done this to us," said one prominent refugee, who would not permit the use of his name.
Havana radio called the U.S. crackdown "another hypocritical maneuver" by the U.S. government.
Spokesmen for the "Freedom Fighter Commandoes" said they had no desire to use U.S. territory for their attacks. But they said the new policy, "by making virtual prisoners out of exiles, for example confining some of them to Dade county, is simply playing right into the hands of the Communists."
Stephenson Hall Wins College Bowl Contest
Four men from Stephenson Hall walked away from the Kansas Union yesterday carrying a model of "The Thinker."
The four men, David C. Scott,
Jackson Heights, N. Y., senior;
Christopher P. Hadley, Prairie Village
senior; Willard E. Hiebert,
Whitewater senior, and James P.
Girard, Wichita freshman, were
Stephenson's College Bowl team.
They were taking the traveling College Bowl trophy, on which the "The Thinker" sits, home for the second time in two years. Stephenpenn Hall is the only champions the College Bowl tournament has had.
BESIDES THE TRAVELING trophy, they also won a permanent trophy for their house and individual medals for each member of the team.
Stephenson won the title this year in a final match with the Beta Theta Pi team composed of George Benson, El Dorado sophomore, William E. Schaefer Jr., Shawnee Mission junior, John W. Tullock, Bartlesville, Okla, freshman, and Robert Clyde. Kansas City senior.
The final match was one of the closest in the tournament. In the last minutes of the round Stephenson successfully answered the final toss-up question to tie the score at 270. The final score was Stephenson 275-Beta Theta Pi 270.
The toss-up question which decided the match asked for the location of a second Douglas County college, Lane College, which once was located in LeCampton, Kan.
Competition in the match got off to a slow start when neither team could answer the first question on the winner of the 100-yard dash in the last Olympic games. Both teams guessed a name, but neither answer was correct, because there is no 100-yard dash in the Olympics.
"THE BETAS gave us the hardest competition of the tournament, but this match was practically a repeat of our match with them last year in the semi-finals." Christopher Hadley, a second year member of the Stephenson team said.
THE SEMI-FINAL MATCHES were also held Sunday, immediately before the final match. The Beta team competed against last
Weather
(Continued on page 12)
The weather bureau predicts brief April showers and cooler weather tonight and tomorrow. Today's high temperature will be in the 70's and tonight's low in the 60's.
Daily hansan
60th Year, No.115
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Monday, April 1, 1963
Folk Singers Awe Crowd—
SUNDAY JULY 16TH
PETER
FATUR KALIYA
PAUL
TOMMY CURRIE
Peter,Paul,Mary Enjoy Adapting Show to Audience
MARY
By Carol Lathrop
Peter, Paul and Mary played to the largest audience of their careers Saturday night at Allen Field House but it was a snap compared to a special performance before President Kennedy.
Mary, a tall, willowly blonde, compared Saturday's performance before 9,500 to the trio's performance for the second anniversary of President Kennedy's inauguration.
"I just couldn't bear to look at him," she said. The remark was made during an interview when they were asked what type audience they prefer to play for. Peter said all audiences are fun because they are so different from each other.
"However, we like to work with a more intimate audience such as a night club. We can develop a better response with our facial expressions. Much of the comedy in our routine is missed with a large audience." Peter said.
Mary explained the group's basis for selection of music for their folk song repertoire:
"If I find a song that really moves me, I bring it back for Peter's and Paul's approval. They do the same. The three of us sit down with the song and discuss it. Each says what he likes about it, and then, changes are made accordingly. Finally, the song may appear as one of our numbers."
"Of course, we use a lot of comedy material from Paul's former act." Peter said. "In fact, we often build a number around one of Paul's routines."
Paul Stookey was the highest paid comedian in Greenwich Village in 1961. Much of his comedy lies in his ability to create various sound effects.
The three met in the Village in 1961. Mary Allin Travers previously had held jobs in literary and advertising agencies. Peter Yarrow is a graduate from Cornell University in psychology. He was an instructor in folk ballads.
"Al had the idea before he had us. He believes the American people will buy pure beauty and dedication, that this vacuum exists in America, and a lot of people want it filled."
"Our merger was really a dream of our manager, Al Grossman," Paul said. "He is managing such people as Odetta and Joan Baez, but he wanted to try working with a trio who sang folk songs.
"We consider ourselves to be urban folk singers," Peter said. "We can present in a modern musical form the feelings of many ethnic groups, and we try to do it with integrity." Peter tugged on his beard as he continued. "Many folk singers today imitate a certain style or type of people. We
try to be more cosmopolitan and sophisticated in our approach."
Paul summarized folk music as the simple, yet profound way people tell of their lives.
"I believe we are able, sometimes, to say what they want said," Paul added.
The trio was well pleased with the backdrop and staging facilities at Allen Field House.
"The only complaint that I would like to voice, concerns the cracks in the floor of the stage," Mary said as she stood up to demonstrate her point.
"I stepped back in one part of our song, when it came time to return to the microphone, I found my heel wedged tightly in a crack. It's difficult to get out of a crack, and do it gracefully."
When Mary was asked why she wore severely plain dresses, she answered, "Any other type of dress would classify my part. We sing such a variety of songs that I need a dress which can lend itself to any mood. For another reason, we don't want attention drawn to a costume, but rather we want the audience to notice our facial expressions."
Mary was born in Louisville, Ky., and lived on a chicken farm. Paul grew up in Birmingham, Mich. Peter is a native New Yorker.
New York Papers Celebrate Strike End
NEW YORK — (UPI) All major New York City dailies were back in business today for the first time since Dec. 8.
Giant high-speed presses of four morning papers rolled out of their enforced winter hibernation a few hours after holdout photoengravers wrote the finish to the 114-day newspaper shutdown.
The 213-104 vote by photoengravers to approve their contract offer turned the warm spring Sunday into a day of excitement. The costly strike that had a dozen false endings had finally stopped.
THE DAILY NEWS, whose circulation of over two million a day leads the nation, followed with the headline "Well, Hello There! We Have News for You."
"This is the best news story of the year — and no April Fool's Day joke about it," began the Herald Tribune story under the headline "Oh, What a Beautiful Morning."
Some estimates of the economic losses to the city due to the shutdown ranged up to $450 million.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Monday, April 1, 1963
Potential Threat to UN
Frederick H. Boland, president of the UN Security Council, put the shift in the "center of gravity" of the United Nations in a new light in his speech Friday at the opening of the Model United Nations.
The shift in the effective strength of the UN from the Security Council to the General Assembly has been fairly obvious. The results of this shift also have been fairly obvious-at least on the surface. With more emphasis on the role of the General Assembly, the threat of the Russian veto in the Security Council in many cases would be circumvented.
OF COURSE this shift in emphasis also diminished the UN strength of the big powers. One nation, one vote—this is the rule in the General Assembly. The increasing number of new, nonaligned members, achieved greater significance when the effective power of the UN moved to the General Assembly. This, too, has been a fairly obvious development.
What has not been obvious, though perhaps it should have been, is the potential danger of the divergence of interests between the big powers and the newly influential non-aligned nations. These nations are primarily newly independent ex-colonies. The bitter taste of colonialism is still fresh in the mouths of many of these nations.
It hardly is surprising that an ex-colony would think that the abolition of all the remaining traces of colonialism is the most important function of the United Nations. Anyone tends to see his own problems as the most important. The
overall picture is remote by comparison with the everyday conflicts that these nations faced for years as colonies.
THE NON-ALIGNED ex-colonies have the voting strength in the General Assembly to keep UN activity focused on the problems of colonies emerging as ful-fledged nations and members of the UN. In recent months UN activity has focused on the Congo. This is an area of great importance to other ex-colonies, but not exclusively so. The Congo rates all the attention it is getting. That ex-colonies are particularly concerned with the Congo situation does not diminish its importance to the rest of the United Nations. This is not a case of divergence of interests.
The big powers are not likely to lose interest in the Congo, but less spectacular colonial problems could have great difficulty holding the interest of the big UN powers. As yet this is a POTENTIAL threat to the United Nations. The disinterest shown by the big nations from time to time has more often than not been the result of developments other than a possible preoccupation of the United Nations with problems almost exclusive to the small, non-aligned nations or ex-colonies.
As a potential threat, the divergence of interests between the big powers and the non-aligned ex-colonies need not and must not be allowed to undermine the United Nations. If the big powers were to lose interest in the United Nations and withdraw their financial support, the UN would go the way of the League of Nations.
— Dennis Branstiter
Editor:
Kansan Politics
Several days ago a letter appeared in the UDK stating that this paper was and still is prone to support Vox Populi. I, of course, did not believe this since I had been led to believe that newspapers (and I use the term loosely) are not to support any particular view or group, but to give an overall unbiased picture. I am afraid that I have been sadly misinformed.
A PICTURE appeared in today's UDK of Reuben McCornack and John Underwood, Vox's candidates for ASC president and vice-president. I probably would not have noticed this if it had not been for the fact that there were no apparent reasons for this picture to appear. It's only relation to the article it appeared above was that these two are running for these two positions next year. I am not saying that this picture should not have appeared, but only that The University Party candidates, Charles
... Letters ...
Whitman and Doug Hall should. also, have been pictured.
I had understood that a university newspaper was not to show favoritism to any particular campus affair or election but to present both sides, giving each equal coverage. It seems, in the case of the UDK, that the overall picture is not given and all the readers receive are the opinions of the editors.
Marcia Spicer
Wichita freshman
(Editor's note: The front page picture of the Vox candidates for student body president and vice-president was used to balance photo coverage of the candidates from both parties. The Kansan used a front-page picture of the UP candidates when their candidacy was announced, but no picture of the Vox candidates was available when Vox announced its candidates. Actually, the UP picture was larger, although no favoritism was intended.)
BOOK REVIEWS
50 GREAT SHORT STORIES, edited by Milton Crane (Bantam Classies, 75 cents).
Though the short story can't compete these days with the novel, here is a collection that includes some of the best. Certainly the writers are top-drawer: Hawthorne, Pushkin, De Maupassant, Poe, James, Conrad, Mansfield, Huxley, Joyce, Hemingway, Parker, Faulkner, Saroyan and Salinger. Some of the choices are obvious, but by and large this is one of the better short story anthologies.
JOURNEY TO SHILOH, by Will Henry (Bantam, 50 cents).
Civil War fans should not expect here anything very definitive about the battle of Shiloh. Mainly it's about a bunch of Texas kids who are trying to join up with Hood's forces, and the troubles they have, and their eventual involvement in the bloody battle of Shiloh.
---
VEECK—AS IN WRECK, by Bill Veeck, with Ed Linn (Bantam, 75 cents).
For many years Bill Veeck has been known as one of the craziest and most outspoken sports figures in America. This is his story—front office maneuvers, the players themselves, the ball clubs, the stunts, the prejudices. As America moves into another baseball season this volume is likely to attract many readers.
55 DAYS AT PEKING, by Samuel Edwards (Bantam, 50 cents).
One of the latest publishing gimmicks is to write a novel from a screenplay; this has been done in "55 Days at Peking." Edwards has constructed from Philip Yordan's screenplay a short novel about the Boxer Rebellion.
Individual Freedom
Editor:
In regard to Robert Strevey's letter of March 28, may I say that the argument used by Mr. Strevey and others when they advocate Prohibition, Censorship, or allied evils, is a gross fallacy.
To claim that by taking away the freedom to choose between several courses of action, one is giving "... greater freedom to the individual ..." is to say that by chaining the individual to a post, one is giving him the freedom to move. This claim has the inherent fallacy of contradicting itself on the most important point it brings up, that of giving the individual freedom.
ASIDE FROM the absurdness of the argument, is the danger it presents. To take away one freedom, even if it is a minor one, is to make the way easier for the abolition of other freedoms, and finally to allow totalitarianism and group regulation.
Prohibition was tried earlier in this century with disastrous results. The crime rate went up, and the public became very disrespectful of law and order and of our law-making and law-enforcement agencies. It was several years after the repeal of prohibition before public respect of law and order was again common in the United States.
The common failing of proponents of "Social Reform" is that they cannot look further than the tip of their collective nose, which is usually high in the air. Please, Mr. Strevey, review your definition of "liberal" and "freedom."
Charles G. Hanna Wichita freshman
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became bieweekly 1904,
trieweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Telephone Vlking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office
Member Inland Daily Press Association,
Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service and the University of Kansas News service; United Press International.
Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the university year except Saturdays and holidays. Acceptance period: Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
Ponderables Apathy? What Apathy
A Kansas editorial writer (you guessed it, me) (or is it?) recently contended that the cause of student apathy in campus politics is that the ASC and campus politicians are out in left field. That is, they sweat the small stuff in Mississippi and ignore the local issues.
This editorial was written with a base realization that those vested interests with sensitive toes would holler a rebuke in defense. This happened all right. An ASC spokesman, Greg Turner, made the reply.
BUT IT was not a defense nor an explanation of student apathy towards campus politics. Turner simply denied that there is any apathy.
For an ASC member to contend, seriously, that there is no such thing as student apathy is comparable to a fish saying, "Water?— what water?"
This crude but telling analogy can be carried further: Like the fish who knows nothing but water, and thus replies in wonder, "What water?", the ASC has been swaddled in apathy so long it considers it normal—like home.
AND THEY WELL might consider it home. Given the heavy academic load of school work, student apathy is understandable. The leaders don't have time to handle anything but the signing of resolutions (those dirty dogs at Ole Miss) and other actions which can be carried out by following the old tried and true formulas.
Not that the leaders wouldn't like to cover the local scene with a fine tooth comb, but they just don't have the time. The students have neither the time nor the interest to even so much as attach their signatures to resolutions to be sent to those dirty dogs at Ole Miss.
But this leaves us with a semantic dilemma. While we can't fairly blame the members of ASC for the existing conditions, we can't honestly call their achievements and outlook, progressive or forward-looking.
Perhaps the critics of ASC (myself included) fail to realize that the possible vistas for achievement by the ASC are limited. Chances are the ASC has done, and will continue to do, the things which the members are in a position to handle.
Since Turner doesn't dig the business of calling this condition student apathy, let's be fair and find another name for it. But we must not play foot loose with the true meaning of words.
I FIND no complaint with this. After all, the members of the ASC are students first and legislators second.
I give up. If someone else can think of another description for student apathy, we are open to suggestion. But with one stipulation. Please document your suggestion with facts that reflect the truth of your description.
Sorry, but after one-half hour of plowing the furrows of my brain, I can't think of another adjective or phrase to describe the condition.
THE ANSWER must lie in the realm of coining new adjectives.
Let us give it a fling. ...
— Terry Murphy
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
SNOOKER NO PROPANE
"I'LL SURE BE GLAD WHEN NEXT TERM STARTS — SEEMS SO DEAD AROUND HERE NOW DURING FIRST WEEK."
Page 3
Fancy Diplomacy, Stern Soviets Liven Model UN Proceedings
er
By Terry Ostmeyer
The Soviets walked out, the president of the General Assembly nearly lost his job, and practically everyone else was lost in the rigors of parliamentary procedure in a lively KU Model United Nations conference last Friday and Saturday.
This year's Mock UN found itself deep in the throes of heated debate right from the start and by the time the two-day conference adjourned Saturday, only two of the four resolution areas were voted on in final form by the Assembly.
In the third session, charges of Western bias, inconsistency in decisions, and general incompetence were repeatedly directed toward the General Assembly president, the Steering Committee, or the assembly as a whole, by delegates from countries in the Sino-Soviet bloc, and finally, the Soviet delegation, followed by the Communist bloc, stalked from the Assembly floor.
BEFORE THE walkout, the chairman of the Soviet delegation, said in a stormy message to the assembly, that the Sino-Soviet bloc could no longer abide by the decisions of the Model UN because of Western bias, capitalist plots, inconsistent decisions, and unrealistic voting and representation by many of the nations.
The latter seemed to be the principal reason behind the Soviet move. And Betty Reynolds, Wellington senior and secretary-general of the assembly, appealed to the Sino-Soviet bloc to return, she reminded the delegations of their responsibilities to the countries they represent and to vote as their nations, not their persons.
The Communist bloc heeded the appeal of the secretary-general and returned to the assembly, its point apparently well-taken.
The mock UN conference became deadlocked in its first session Friday morning concerning the first resolution to admit the People's Republic of China (Red China) into the agencies of the UN.
THE RESOLUTION was defeated in amended form that afternoon by a vote of 50 for, 20 against, and 13 abstentions. The United States and the Republic of China (Taiwan) led the debate against the resolution.
The next resolution area, regional disarmament, was introduced by a delegate from Laos and was quickly amended by the Republic of the Congo-Leopoldville.
Following the defeat of an amendment to the amendment, the Soviet Union voiced the first of its charges of incompetency of the assembly. The Soviet delegation said the UN could not make decisions to
apply to all nations of the world, such as disarmament.
The Soviet charge was overruled and the resolution overwhelmingly passed, 68-8, with six abstentions.
SATURDAY'S FIRST session began with the introduction of the next resolution, the internationalization of foreign aid, but it was immediately bogged down by intervening motions to suspend the rules by several nations.
With considerable debate, two amendments were added to the resolution before the assembly recessed for lunch.
The fireworks began as soon as the last session opened. The Soviet Union moved to suspend the rules to move for aensure of the chair — Stan Walton, Kansas City senior and General Assembly president. The motion failed, however.
The delegation from Iraq followed this charging the Soviets with making a mockery out of the assembly, and the Sino-Soviet bloc retaliated when the Rumanian delegate charged the chair and the Steering Committee with Western bias.
The "orders of the day" were called for, and the assembly soon went back to normal, but the illated resolution on foreign aid was tabled by a motion by Iraq in order for Great Britain to introduce the resolution concerning the India-Red Chinese border dispute.
APPEALS from the chair and more charges of inconsistency flew hot and heavy following Great Britain's move. A delegate from Ghana then stopped action on the India-China border resolution by succeeding to bring to the floor a resolution on the violation of human rights by Portugal in Angola and Mozambique.
By this time, however, the assembly was definitely engaged in a full-fledged parliamentary procedure battle. Shortly thereafter came the Soviet walkout.
When the Communist bloc re-
Students Interviewed For Navv Program
Four Navy ROTC seniors are being interviewed by Vice Adm. Hyman Rickover in Washington, D.C., this week for admittance to the Navy nuclear power program. They are Richard Hartman, Kansas City, Mo.; Michael Sween, Prairie Village; Lorrence Mahaffey, Coffeville, and Frank Breen, Cincinnati, Ohio. All are engineering students.
Each of the students is in the top 15 per cent of the engineering school's senior class according to Lt. Comm. Richard Dobbs, NROTC instructor.
You and Your Friends Will Enjoy Eating
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Monday, April 1, 1963 University Daily Kansan
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Great Britain attempted to bring back the resolution on the border dispute and several moves to bring back the foreign aid question followed the action on Portugal, but none of the efforts could make any headway.
turned, the Portugal resolution and its amendment still remained on the floor. After several attempts to block the vote, the resolution was passed in part.
The confusion became greater, until almost unnoticed, the Soviet Union with the assistance of members of the Western bloc, managed to move for adjournment.
The motion passed and the 1963 Model UN ended with the disappearance of stern diplomacy, replaced by broad smiles and a great deal of handshaking.
SHEFFIELD, England — (UPI) Bus driver Dillwyn Williams sneezed three times yesterday and sent seven persons to the hospital.
Bus Driver's Sneezes Injure
His sneezing bout ended when the bus hit a lamppost.
Leonard's Standard Service
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Monday, April 1, 1963
VOTE FOR THE MAN
NOT FOR THE PARTY
To all K.U. Students.
We encourage all students to join with us in voting for excellence in student government leadership. Our group is a mixture of students representing both political parties, many living groups, and a variety of campus activities. We feel that the approaching election offers all students a challenge.
It is imperative that the candidates be considered as individuals rather than as members of particular political parties. And it is equally important that we vote as individuals and not as meaningless political blocks.
Please join with us in supporting REUBEN McCORNACK and JOHN UNDERWOOD for student body president and vice-president.
Sincerely,
Students for Excellence In Student Leadership
CARY, N.J.
Reuben McCornack
Pris Osborn
Steering Committee
Ken Coleman
Ken Colemar
Jerry Harper, Chairman
Ken Coleman Peggy Conner
Sandee Garvey
Peggy Corme Curt Boswell
June Dearing
Dick Epps
Richard Miller
Carl Peck
Curt Boswell
Sandee Carve
Frank Thompson
Paid for by
Students for Excellence In Student Leadership
R. W. F. H.
John Underwood
Monday, April 1, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Landon Discusses Politics Before International Club
Techniques of politicians have not changed from ancient times, Alf Landon said at the International Club's annual dinner Sunday.
The former governor of Kansas and 1936 Republican presidential candidate said present-day campaign techniques were also used in Roman times.
Landon noted that there are no political campaigns in the Communist countries. He said, because of this, the Communist countries have weakened their credibility with the rest of the world.
LANDON SAID the Democratic party is made up of several blocs labor, southern, racial, urban Americans for Democratic Action, etc. But, he said, the Republican party is made up of more homogeneous elements.
***
Welcoming guests at the International Club's annual dinner, Sami Afify, president of the club, said the main objectives of the club are to promote better relations, to strengthen the bonds of friendship and to create the mutual understanding among the students from many nations studying at KU.
THE MAIN food dishes at the banquet were kofta, Pakistan; bansit, the Philippines, quiche, France; aaloo matar, India; egg roll, China; paella, Spain, potted hough, Scotland; dolma, Arab countries, and zevtinvagle faselye, Turkey.
Salads included yoghurt and cucumber, Iran; insalate capriccioso. Italy, and geriebner kartoffel salat, Germany.
THE DESSERT was made by students from India, Brazil and Arab nations.
Foreign students and American students from about 18 different nations entertained the audience with dances, folk songs, and skits. Honorary International Club memberships were presented to Landon and L. P. Cookingham, executive director of People-to-People.
STOP
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 1, 1963
SPRING BOOK SALE
Drastic Reductions on Hundreds of fine volumes
99c to $9.88
Sale starts tomorrow at 8:00 a.m.
KANSAS UNION BOOKSTO
The Life and Times of Theodore Roosevelt
BY STEFAN LORANT. Here, in 150,000 words and 750 exciting pictures, is a magnificent portrait of the great man, presented against the background of burgeoning American growth from the 1850's to World War I. $ \frac{8}{2} " x 1 1 ".Pub. at $15.00.
The Union Reader
Richard B. Friarott
THEODORE
ROOSEVELT
BY STEPAN LORANT
The Union Reader
AS THE NORTH SAW THE WAR, ed. by R. B. Harwell. The mighty pageant of the Civil War as recorded and reported by the soldiers, civilians and famous generals of the North, in the form of battle orders, prison narratives, popular songs, political speeches and numerous sketches. Pub. at $7.50.
In The Days of McKinley
BY MARGARET LEECH. Immense dramatic biography of our 25th against the background of the Span War, William Jennings Bryan, Male election and assassination. 686 page photographs. $7.50.
IN THE
DAYS OF
McKINTZ
BY
MICROARTS LTD.
Monday, April 1, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
STORE
In the Days McKinley
LEECH. Immensely absorbing, of our 25th President, set bound of the Spanish-American manhings Bryan, Mark Danna, renation. 686 pages, 32 pages of.
IN THE
DAYS OF
McKINLEY
JULY 20TH, 1823
SCHROBERT LEMOZ
STEPHEN HARRINGTON
BYRON
ED. BY WALTER HAVIGHURST, with over 100 historic illustrations. Stirring panorama seen through personal accounts by Jolliet and Marquette, Clark, Audubon, Bancroft, Howells, Masters, Sandburg — among scores of others. 8"x11". Pub. at $12.50.
The Midwest: Land of the Long Horizons
Byron, A Biography
PROF. LESLIE A. MARCHAND'S remarkable scholarship reveals the whole life of this restless genius. Recreating his tumultuous loves, his glittering circle of friends and contemporaries, his tragic early death. Three large, beautifully bound volumes in a decorated slip case. Over 1,400 pages, 55 illustrations. Pub. at $20.00.
Land of the Long Horizons
William Howell
Land of the
Long Horizons
Walter H. Hayes Jr.
110289 414821
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 1, 1963
Book Collectors Given Chance To Make Their Efforts Pay
It is not often that the genuine student book collector, as opposed to the more common student textbook collector, is given a chance to gain recognition for his efforts.
But the undergraduate book collectors at KU have such an opportunity in the seventh annual competitive Taylor Book Collection Awards.
AN UNDERGRADUATE student can enter the contest with as few as 35 volumes. Paperback and hard-back volumes are acceptable, said W. Stuart Forth, associate director of libraries.
General collections can contain fiction, essays, poetry, anthropology, history, etc. Areas for specialized and general collections may range from movies, mesmerism and Lenin to war, witchcraft, and Erasmus.
BUT REGARDLESS of what the student's collection contains, he must present a method and reason for his acquisitions.
Breon Mitchell, Salina junior, won last year's contest with a collection concerning "pseudo science."
Forth explained that each contestant is required to submit a bibliography of his collection together with a description of why he collected what he did by April 16.
The preliminary judging is based on the bibliographies and personal statements by the entrants. The
finalists present their collections to the library for the final judging.
THE FIRST place award is $100,
second place, $50. Forth said the
number of contestants usually
averages from 10 to 25.
If the contest is won by a senior, he is eligible to compete for the Amy Loveman $1,000 National Award which is sponsored by the Book-of-the-Month Club, the Saturday Review and the Women's National Book Association.
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University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Disarmament Studies Seen As Inadequate
The psychological and sociological approaches of solving the disarmament problem need to be studied more seriously, a Current Events Forum speaker said Friday afternoon.
A. A. Strassenburg, associate professor of physics, acknowledged that disarmament is being debated today in numerous authoritative bodies.
"BUT WE ONLY pay lip service to the problem," he said.
Over 1,400 separate organizations exist to promote the discussion of nuclear warfare and its subsequent effects, he said.
More than 350 periodicals are printed around the world on the same problem, but they only make obviously inadequate studies, he said.
"We need to know more about the human behaviour of various countries before we can successfully understand why they are reluctant to relinquish certain controls," he said.
PROF. STRASSENBURG suggested that more study be given in three specific areas;
- human behavior;
- international relations,
- technical background
Specialists such as the sociologist should see why a nation is aggressive or warlike, Prof. Strassenburg said.
Prof. Strassenburg, proposed that the government supply larger grants to the cause of international relations.
Large corporations make grants now, he said, but the government devotes no financial aid to the cause.
"I see no signs of it coming soon." Prof. Strassenburg said, because not enough pressure is exerted by the general public. "Public opinion must sway governmental policy."
Concerning international relations, Prof. Strassenburg said that it is a generally accepted notion every other nation is aggressive. He said that we believe that war is the apex way to solve differences.
"We must understand the background of foreign countries before compromise can be reached. We need to know some of their needs," he said. Our proposals may not always be compatible with the ideals of an individual nation. In effect, a nation may justifiably be aggressive and a better solution may exist for nuclear warfare than one proposed by the United States.
Prof. Strassenburg said technical problems constitute the least important of the three areas because they can solve themselves.
Monday, April 1, 1963
The technical problems die away, Prof. Strassenburg said, but the job for the sociologist and the psychologist still remains.
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Merchants of Good Appearance
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Open Every Evening
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
Page 10
University Daily Kansan Monday, April 1, 1963
Baseball Home Opener Today
Arkansas Here For Two Games
The Kansas Jayhawker baseball team opens its home season today against Southwest Conference member Arkansas at Quigley Field. Game time is 3 p.m.
The Jayhawkers will be seeking their third victory in four starts. In a three-game Texas swing Thursday, Friday and Saturday, the Jayhawkers defeated Texas Lutheran twice while losing to St. Mary's of San Antonio.
THE JAYHAWKERS and the Razorbacks meet again tomorrow at 1 p.m. The two games will be broadcast over radio station KLWN as a part of the KU Sports Network's annual "Spring Sports Spectacular." Tom Hedrick will handle play-by-play.
In the Jayhawkers' 2-0 victory over Texas Lutheran Saturday, righthander Jerry Waldschmidt held the Bulldogs to two hits, both singles, in registering his first victory of the year.
The Jayhawkers scored one run in the first inning on singles by Ralph Pagani and Dick Fanning. The second run, in the sixth inning, resulted from a Bulldog error.
IN FRIDAY'S GAME, the Jayhawkers scored two runs in the top of the seventh inning to tie St. Mary's at 4-4. St. Mary's however, scored three runs in the bottom of the seventh and went on to win 7-4. Carl Nelson pitched for the Jayhawkers and was recorded with the loss. For St. Mary's, the victory was its fifth against one defeat.
Against the Big Eight's defending champion, the Missouri Tigers, the Arkansas Razorbacks split a doubleheader Saturday. The Tigers won the first game 10-6, but dropped the second 6-5 as the Razorbacks scored two runs in the last inning.
1963 Golf Schedule
April 4-5-6 — Oklahoma Invitational at Shawnee.
April 13 — Iowa State at Lawrence.
April 15 — Wichita at Wichita.
April 19 — Kansas State, Nebraska, Oklahoma at Lawrence.
April 26 - Missouri at Lawrence
May 2 - Washburn at Topeka.
April 20 — Kansas State, Nebraska, Oklahoma at Manhattan.
May 3 — Nebraska, Iowa State,
Oklahoma at Lincoln.
May 4 — Wichita at Lawrence.
May 10-11 — Pike's Peak Invitational at Air Force.
May 17-18 - Big Eight at Manhattan.
Portraits of Distinction
体育
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
FAST FINISHED Laundry Service RISK'S 613 Vermont
The KU track team's outdoor debut was spoiled by the University of New Mexico, 93-46, at Albuquerque, Saturday.
The Jayhawkers managed but four first place finishes compared to New Mexico's 12. For New Mexico, it was the Lobos fifth consecutive victory.
The Jayhawkers' first place finishes were registered by Yul Yost in the shot put, Kirk Hagan in the mile, Floyd Manning in the pole vault, and Tonnie Coane in the 880-yard run.
KU Track Team Falls In Opener
New Mexico's Larry Kennedy set a new school record in the discus with a 173-9$ _{1/2}$ tooss. Ken Medley of the Lobos set another record with 48-3$ _{3/4}$ in the triple jump.
Two New Mexico performers were double winners. Adolph Plummer won the 220 and 440-yard dashes and Fred Knight won the 120-yard high hurdles and the 330-yard intermediate hurdles.
According to KU Coach Bill Easton, the Jayhawkers were hampered by injuries and a number of indoor dropouts who passed the spring season for football.
The Summaries
SHOT PUT 1. Yul Yost, KU, 56 feet
21-38, John Kennewell, NEM, 51-94,
20-36, John Kennewell, NEM
MILE RUN 1, Kirk Hagan KU. 4.12
MILE BACKER 1, M. 4.18.3.
Herald Hadley KU. 4.19.7.
440 I, Adolph Plummer, N. M., 47:5.
441 I, Adolph Plummer, N. M., 48:1. J, Jim Stewart,
N. M., 48:2
HIGH JUMP—1, Larry Kingsley, N. M.
6-4; 2, Tyce Smith, KU. 6-4; 3, Ron Swanson, KU. 6-2. (Kingsley awarded first on fewer misses.)
100 1. George Gardner, N. M. 9:6.
2. Lloyd, N. M., 9:6.3. Art Carter,
N. M., 9:9.
JAVELIN 1. John McMahon, N. M.
JAVELIN 2. Doe Dee, 215-15-3.
3. Pete Talbott, KU, 260-6-3.
BROAD JUMP = 1. Ken Mesley, N. M.
Joe Thompson, N. M. 23-34.
S. Billy Joe Thompson, N. M. 23-34.
120-YARD HIGH HURDLES 1. Free
N. M.
14:46, 3. Bill Chambers, KU, 14:47
613 Vermont
POLE VAULT 1 - 1. Floyd Manning,
81-62½; 2. Bob Radunzel, N. M.
12-63¹.
880 — 1, Tonnie Coane, KU, 1:54.2; 2, Paul Taylor, KU, 1:54.6; 3, Ron Singleton,
220 — 1, Adojot Plummer, N M
2, Ed Lloyd, I
DISCUS,
J. 1, Larry Kennedy, N. M.
M. 154;
J. 2, Barry Harrah, N. M.
151; 3, Barry Harrah, KWJ, 163-01-.
M. 1934, M. 1934,
220 A. M. A. Plummer, N. M. 212;
220 E. Lilow, N. M. 217; 3. Art Carter.
330-YARD INTERMEDIATE HURDLES
— 1, Fred Knight, N. M., 38.0; 2, Bob
Little, N. M., 38.9; 3, Glen Martin, KU
39.0.
TRIPLE JUMP=1, Ken Medley, N M, 38
45-34, Bob Loney, KU, 45-34,
Bob Loney, KU, 45-34.
TWO-MILE 1, Lloyd Goff N. M
3-PAWLE 1, Lloyd Goff N. M; 4:46.4
2-MAI Acevedo, KU, 9:54.1
MILE RELAY — 1, N. M., (Art Carter, Joe Carceau, Jim Stewart, Eld Lloyd). 3:13.2; 2, KU, (Chuck Lanning, Nate Sill, Bill Baughn, Kirk Hagan). 3:19.6.
Tennis Team Wins Season Opener
The KU tennis team opened its season successfully Saturday by defeating Washburn.
The Jayhawkers won all nine matches.
The summaries:
SINGLES — Burns, KU, def. Keller 6-3, 6-1; Burr, KU, def. Lord 6-2, 6-1; Campbell, KU def. Eckles. 8-3, 6-3; McGrath, KU, def. Brooks 6-3, 8-6; Cobble, KU, def. Miller 7-5, 6-4; Guyot, KU, def. Rebek 6-4, 6-1.
DOUBLES: Burns and Burr, KU,
def. Keller and Eckles 1-6-4;
Campbell and Cobble, KU, def.
Brooks and Lork 2-6-3; McGrath
and Guyot, KU, def. Rebek and
Proskovec 6-0, 6-2.
Cage Stars Compete For Pam-Am Games
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — (UPI) — Forty-eight of the nation's top amateur basketball players open two days of competition tonight for a berth on the United States team going to the Pan American games.
A team comprised of six NCAA college division players and six NAIA players will take on the AAU
Golfers Lose Opener 11-4
The Big Eight's defending golf champions, the Oklahoma State Cowboys, handed the KU golf team a season opening loss at Lawrence Country Club Friday.
For the Cowboys, their 11-4 victory was the fifth of the present campaign. OSU's Duke Evans was the medalist carding a 75 over the par 72 course despite a high wind. The summary:
George Hixon, OSU (76), def.
John Hanna, KU (79), $2\frac{1}{3}-\%$
Paul Carlson, KU (76), def. Tom Sisolak, OSU (81), 3-0.
Joe Campana OSU (76), def. Redd Holbrook, KU (83), 3-0.
Duke Evans OSU (75), def. Ron Szozygoli, KU (82), 3-0.
Dave Browning, OSU (77), def.
Dick Haitbirk, KU (80), 2½-1/₂.
Royals, Lakers Win NBA Playoff Games
By United Press International
A strong bench — trademark of the Boston Celtics — has given the Cincinnati Royals a 2-1 lead over the defending champion Celtics in the NBA eastern division final playoffs.
TONIGHT and TUESDAY
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Also
Gary Cooper in "The Naked Edge"
Show Starts at 7:00
SUNSET DRIVE IN THEATRE ---- West on Highway 40
"Our recruiting is going real good," is the word from KU football coach Jack Mitchell. "This may be one of the best years we've had." The Jayhawkers have 31 prospects signed to letters of intent to date and need only three more to complete their "most wanted" list.
Recruiting Successful
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VARSITY ART Attractions
VARSITY ART Attractions
QUALITY CRAFTSMANSHIP at
BUSH BODY WORKS formerly University Ford Body Shop
"We Repair ALL Makes & Models" East 23rd St. VI 3-3006
Now Showing
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ROBERTA SHERWOOD and RONNY HOWARD
Glenn FORD · Shirley JONES
Evening Showings at 7:00 and 9:05
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students
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East 23rd
VI 3-9753
Monday, April 1, 1963
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 Dally Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion.
FOR SALE
TRAVEL
Fly to FLORIDA and the BAHAMAS for Spring vacation. Private charter flight. Still have room for two more boys or girls. Cheaper than commercial. For information call Jay Rupar—VI 3-8544 Now. 4-3
Motorcycle 4-cycle, single, 350 cc, low
Motorcycle 4-cycle, $250.00 take it, Call
4-55 6077 evenings
1956 Buick convertible, radio, heater,
power 1961 Volkswagen, like new. Would
consider trade for older car. See at 1244
Louisiana.
4-5
Burbell and weights, 110 lb set. $18.00
Burbell and weights, $45.00 Call W.
$87.00 at 8:00 p.m.
8:00 at 8:50 p.m.
1961 Tru Tone stereo Hi-Fi automatic
stereo microlens $39.95 Peterson
Davis - 723 Mass 4-4
Mercedes 180 SL, 1957 model — white
condition. $250.00 phone. Phone 3-0267.
GUNS: S&W 38 Special, Marlin 22 lever-
action rifle, Ammo .45, .30-06, 9mm.
Selling fast at 5c per round. See this and
more at Stouffer 6, apt. 8—VI 3-1110, 4-3
Assume payments on a 1958 Casa Manana one bedroom trailer trailer. 36’x6’H. M-Fafter 5 p.m. or weekends-Green Ae Court-Court-Opposed Happy Hale 4 OE 23rd.
1957 call Charles Marshall. **$425.00**
Bull Volkswagen sedan. **4-3**
4-5
New and used portables, standards and
electrics. Royal, Olympia, Smith Corona,
typing papers, Lawrence portables. Bond
typing papers, Lawrence Typewriter,
T. Mass. Phone VI 3-3644.
1962 M.G.A. Mark II 1600. Like new, only
$1915.950. Low mileage, white walls, wire
wheels, radio and tannaue. After 5 p.m.
call VI 3-5860. 4-8
1958 Crosley TV and Stand. Excellent condition. Call VI 3-8288. 4-1
1960 Ford convertible 352 — Black with standard Ford condition. Good condition.
Phys. Vehicle 3-9560
Complete set of golf clubs, bag and shoes
size $ 8^{1/2} $ . Call VI 3-1664 after 5 p.m. 4-1
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop service — Pet phone VI 3-259-801-6000 Modern, self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days.
Convertible 1956 Chevrolet Bel Air, V-8,
automatic transmission, radio, heater, red and white—new top. Excellent condition.
Best offer. Deanne Roche - VI 3-5890. 4-7
Transistor radio clearance! New 6 trans.
G.E. Radio cut to $13.00, 8 trans. radio
transmitter, 8 trans. receiver, 8 back's,
929 Mass. Headquarters for discount
prices, - - - - experienced typist does term papers
*beses, manuscripts and dissertations on
electric typewriter. Special symbols and
signs. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs
Robert Cook at 2000 Rhode Island. Phone
VI 3-7485. tf
Printed Biology Study Notes; 70 pages,
complete outline of lecture; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised
for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta Notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50. tf
Final reductions on Stere record player and multiplexed stereo FM radios-while present stock lasts-large selection-easy terms at Ray Stonehould's, 929 Mass. 4-1.
1961 VW. Excellent condition, will con-
vert to a convertible, power, set at 1244 La.
4-2
1958. 42 x10" trailer located 2 blocks from
cabine call Ray Kenoyer, VI 3-7553. 4-1
Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extensively comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.00 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery tf
All kinds of house plants. Potted . . .
Including philodendron to be used for
room dividers and in picture windows
Phone VI 3-4207. t
FOR RENT
Sleeping and study room for upper-
classman. Also want to share apartment
graduate student. Near campus.
Call Ni 3-4890 afternoons or even-
[220] Lc. 4-3
Mobile home. 38x8" one bedroom, gas heating, neat and clean. Call IV 3-9453.
Large quiet room, very attractive, furnished in nice house only 2 min from university responsible student—graduate upper uncommon. Private parking: VI 3-6695am. 4-1
Duplex two bedroom with stove and re-
entrance. Duplex paid except elec tricity. Call VI 5-2281.
Vacancies for young men in contemporary home with swimming pool, 5 evening meal weekly. utilities $90 per week 3-9655. Helga Kursh -200t Mitchell Rd.
Close to KU as lst floor, 5 room apartment. Unfurnished. Pay utilities except carpet. VI at 3-2055. After hours phone Mrs Dicker at VI 3-7431.
Crescent Heights Apartments, 25th & Redbud. Rear entrances. Large utility room. Close to off street parking — Built in ranges. Refrigerators — 2 BdRms, 840 sq. ft. Heating — Fully Carpeted and Draped Garbage disposals — Air-conditioned — Showers — Compare Rentals. Manager, 24th for 1 year. Housekeeper, 24th Redbud Lane, Ph. VI 2-3711 4-12
TYPING
TYPIST—experienced in term papers and theses. Prompt service, reasonable rates, electric typewriter. Mrs. Floyd-VI 2-1582. 4-4
MILLIKENES SOS — always first quality
typing on LB M. Carbon ribbon machines,
also do tape transcriptions. Office
house 7, am. 1n. 12—p. 021₂₁; Main
Phone VI 3-5820.
Will do neat and accurate typing in my home. Experienced in themes, theses, and term papers. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Adcock, VI 2-1795. tt
"GOOD TYPING CREATES a favorable impression with instructors." For excellent typing of theses and term papers, call Miss Louise Pope, VI 3-1097. tt
Theses, term papers, reports, typed quickly and accurately. Experienced typist; electric typewriter. Marian Graham. 1619 Del. — VI 3-0483. tf
Dissertations, theses, manuscripts and term papers typed on new electric typewriter, exhibition of 35 special keys. Experience in education. Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI 21-1546, II
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, these materials, which an electric typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Pitti. VI 3-8379.
experienced typist 7 years experience in heses and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable writer. Barlow, 2047 Yale Rd., VI 2-648.
Former secretary and English major Will do neat typing — term papers, theses, reports, etc. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Crompton—1311 N.H.
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers papers and reports. Reasonable rates. Electric ala. Ph. VI 3-85688. M Eldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-85688.
Good typist. Would like to do term papers, and theses. Mrs. Oxford. VI 2-0673.
Efficient typist. Would like typing in her
theses, letters. Call anytime at V1-3561-284
Typist experienced in theses and term papers. Prompt service, reasonable rates, electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Howard Mhlenger at VI 3-4409. tf
English major and former secretary will type themes and theses on electric typewriter. For neat and accurate work call Mrs. Mellisand Jones, VI 3-5267. tt
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast accurate, neat work, reasonable rates Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff VI 2-1749. t
Prompt neat accurate work on wide carriage electric typewriter. Journalism-Business secretary experience. Charlotte
tef
VI, 3-3485.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: WILL type
theses, term papers, and themes, neatly
on new electric typwriter. Call Mr.
Fulcher. VI 3-0558, 1021 Miss. tt
BUSINESS SERVICES
Transportation plus parking convenience an opportunity to earn your monte ride; demonstrate and sell in your spare time. Blevin's *Bike Shop*, 7th and Michigan.
WANTED
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center, 1218
conn. Personal service—sectionalized
cats, chimneys, chameleons, turtles,
gulfina pets, etc., plus complete line
pet supplies.
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.
MISCELLANEOUS
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For
Dressmaking, Ola Smit 939%,
939% Call. Mail VI 3-5263.
Bumper Stickers: "Not Bombs but Brotherhood" or "Speak Up for Peace." Write Jim Masters, 84015 Ky.-No obligation. 4-5
Party time — School house available for parties, dances and meetings. Call Vi 572-1600.
Matt Garr, formerly of College Barber
Atty, Barber Shop--8421 Mass. 4:35
Amryx Barber Shop--8421 Mass. 4:35
See Us Before You Buy
Used cars—highest prices paid. Call VI 3-
9811. 601 Vermont. tf
TYPEWRITERS
NEW AND USED PORTABLES STANDARDS ELECTRICS
Sales - Rentals - Service
HELP WANTED
LOST
LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER
735 Mass. VI 3-3644
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 1, 1963
In Potter Lake: Fish Die - Why?
Fish in Potter Lake started dying Friday, and KU officials are trying to determine if an attempt to save the flora killed the fauna.
A thousand fish are dead, according to an estimate by Frank Cross, associate professor of zoology.
But what killed the fish is still a moot point.
CROSS AND KEITH LAWTON, vice-chancellor in charge of the physical plant, said it is a logical assumption that methoxychlor, a
TODAY
El Atenco se reunira hoy a las 4:30 en laalle 11 de Fraser. La Señora Christina Enseña ha reunido la Señora Christina titulada "El Salvador y son influenza en Centramerica." Todos son invitados.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
phony," by Prof. Robert Baustian. Refreshments.
International Students: Students who have not been contacted about having an exhibit or number in the program of the INTERNATIONAL FESTIVAL on April 20 should see Dean Coan, 228 Strong Hall, this week.
Official Bulletin
TOMORROW
Quill Club. 8 p.m.. Pan American
Students welcome to read man-
uscript.
physical plant, said it is a logica spray used to kill the bark beetles that cause Dutch elm disease, is responsible for the death of the fish.
WEDNESDAY
Catholic Masses, 7:00 a.m. 11:40 a.m.
St. Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford,
Road.
SCHEDULED INTERVIEWS
James Peke Jr., New Mexico State University.
Buildings and Grounds employes sprayed the trees on the campus Thursday. They used a pressure gun, spraying methoxychlor into the tops of the trees.
But Harry Buchholz, superintendent of the physical plant, said methoxychlor is not that toxic.
"WE COULD DUMP a certain amount of the spray directly into the water and it wouldn't kill the fish," he said.
HE SAID IT IS known that .026 parts of methoxychlor in 1 million parts of water will kill bluegills, but the concentration of methoxychlor in Potter Lake, or even its presence at all in the lake is not known.
If you are interested in a teaching position for September, 1983, in any of these areas, please sign up for an interview in 117 Bailey Hall.
The spray has been used for the last two years, and the University has always had good luck with it. Lawton said.
The death of the fish is a "matter of accident circumstance" he said.
April 4—117 Bailey—Northview Public Schools, Grand Rapids, Michigan.
or accidental circumstance," he said. Cross said the dead included numerous blue gills, bass, catfish and crappie.
April 5—117 Bailey—Midiothian, Illinois Public Schools (Cook County).
A concentration of 026 parts per million could be obtained by pouring about half the contents of an eight-ounce beer glass into 1 million gallons of water.
Methoxychlor is a compound of carbon, hydrogen and chlorine.
Stephenson (Continued from page 1)
year's College Bowl runners-up, Joseph R. Pearson Hall. The Betas took the lead at the first of that match and maintained it all the way, winning by 410-230.
This was the high score for the entire tournament.
In the Stephenson-Pearson Hall semi-final match, Pearson lost five points at the first of the match by pressing the buzzer to answer a question before the question had been completed. They maintained a score of -5 over half-way through the match, but finally pulled it up to 55 to lose 455-55 to Stephenson.
By winning the KU tournament, Stephenson has earned the right to compete in the Big Eight College Bowl Tournament which is being sponsored by the KU College Bowl Committee here May 12.
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And the cost will never be as low as it is today.
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Buenos Aires Revolt Termed Psychological
BUENOS AIRES—(UPI)—Retired military officers proclaimed a revolt to block what they termed a threatened Communist takeover, but the government scoffed at the uprising.
The defense ministry described the political dissidents as retired army and navy officers and die-hard anti-Peronists engaged "only in psychological action."
The government claimed "absolute calm" in all commands at midday. The statement contrasted sharply with the rebels proclamation of a "national revolution."
Rebel broadcasts identified aged retired Lt.-Gen. Benjamin Menendez as "commander-in-chief of the revolution." Sole casualty of the revolt up to mid-day was government Gen. Osiris Villegas, shot and wounded by gunmen who sped past his home in an automobile.
Defense Minister Jose Manuel Astigueta said the revolt movement was confined to a radio station seizure. But a later communique from army Commander-in-Chief Gen. Juan Carlos Ongania warned the government would crush "any totalitarian actions."
A GOVERNMENT STATEMENT SAID the people should not be alarmed. At one point civilians were ordered evacuated from the Casa Rosada (White House) and cavalry reinforcements moved into position around the building, but 20 minutes later the evacuation order was cancelled.
Former Argentine dictator Juan D. Peron, when told by United Press International of the revolt in Buenos Aires, said today Argentina is going to "break the record of revolutions in Latin America."
The first concrete indication that the rebels were not getting universal military support came from Col. Lopez Aufrance, commander of armored units at the Magdalena base near La Plata. He said his troops would "remain with the constitution and laws." The tank forces of Col. Lopez Aufrance were decisive in the revolt of last September when army forces favoring early elections defeated factions supporting imposition of a iunta for five years.
Juan Manuel Algarve, a secretary, speaking to UPI from Peron's house, said that "General Peron does not even know what to say."
ALGARVE QUOTED PERON as saying when told of the military revolt: "Everyone is getting mad . . . we (Argentina) are going to break the record of revolutions in Latin America."
Peron planned today to remain in his villa outside Madrid.
Political tension has been building up in Argentina over plans for the June 23 election and a resurgence of the Peronists, followers of former dictator Juan D. Peron. The situation has been aggravated by worsening and chronic economic difficulties.
Several times recently, army, navy and air force units were put on alert, arousing fears of a coup d'état against the government of President Jose M. Guido. Another alert preceded the proclamation by army generals today of a rebellion "to prevent the establishment of a pro-communist government."
ARGENTINA HAS BEEN TORN by dissension for months because of the failure of Guido's interim government to find a formula for "safe" elections. Military leaders sought a way to hold free elections that would not permit a comeback of the large, restive mass of Peronists.
The military, remembering the iron one-man rule and excesses when Peron reigned from 1943 to 1955, oppose any move that might permit a return to power of Peron's followers. Though Peron has been in exile in Spain since he was ousted by a military coup, he maintains effective control over the Peronists' Popular Union party.
The party has widespread labor support.
Fears of a new coup came into the open recently when it was disclosed that the Roman Catholic church had lifted its excommunication of Peron. Peron's opponents were concerned that the Church's act might lead the former dictator to attempt to return to Argentina, or his followers to try an uprising.
JFK Cuts Foreign Aid; Promises More Thrift
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — President Kennedy, faced with an economy-minded Congress, took the unusual step today of cutting $420 million from his foreign aid request. He also promised stricter standards and more thrift in the aid program.
Kennedy, who had asked for $4.9 billion in new funds in his January budget, cut that figure to $4.5 billion in a special foreign aid message to the lawmakers.
OFFICIALS SAID that this, coupled with carryover funds, would result in actual aid spending of $4.83 billion. The figure would have come to $5.1 billion under Kennedy's earlier request.
Kennedy adopted many of the recommendations for tightening aid made last month by a citizens' committee headed by retired Gen. Lucius D. Clav.
In a new proposal to spur economic development overseas through private channels, the President called for a tax credit for U.S. taxpayers who invest in developing countries.
U. S. FOREIGN AID officials could recall no case in recent years in which a President substantially cut his own foreign aid request before Congress considered it.
Kennedy said his proposed cut would come partly from $200 million in economic aid funds not spent this year and from "a number of reductions" in the earlier budget estimates for military and economic aid to certain countries that can be made "without serious damage to the national interest."
60th Year, No. 116
Tuesday, April 2, 1963
Dailu hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Whitman said the students were offered a choice between two attitudes toward student government. "The student can choose between the present, partisan, relatively unbusinesslike attitude and a fresh, unbiased, nonpartisan, businesslike attitude toward the potentialities of student government."
In interviews last night, the two candidates offered different interpretations of the basic issues in the election.
Both Candidates Confident On Eve of Campus Election
McCORNACK SAID only that he had strength in "many areas." He said victory in the election hinged on converting the enthusiasm he had encountered into votes.
McCORNACK SAID the basic issue is "what student government should do. We think student government should provide services to the students," the Vox candidate said. "Our opponents merely criticize the present system, and offer no positive substitute. They haven't proven that the ideas and planks we propose aren't necessary."
By Ralph Gage
The campaign is almost over; elections begin tomorrow.
Both groups are making plans for victory parties. The Vox party plans to hold their celebration at the Dine-A-Mite restaurant, but UP has not yet decided on a location.
Both candidates for president of the student body are satisfied with the way the campaign has progressed. Neither is pessimistic about the outcome of the election.
Reuben McCornack, Abilene junior, who is the Vox Populi candidate, declined to make a prediction of the election results, but said he had encountered a "favorable response" in all living districts.
CHARLES WHITMAN, Shawnee Mission junior, who is the University Party candidate, said the manner in which he had been received made him quite optimistic. He said he nevertheless expected a tight race.
He said the issues discussed in the campaign were subordinate to the basic issue.
Whitman said he expected his support to come from his own Greek
See page two of today's Kansan for editorial views concerning the campus elections.
district, Joseph R. Pearson, Lewis,
Garruth O'Leary, Templin, and
Hashinger dormitories.
Kansan Explains Editorial Position
The Current Events Committee of the All Student Council was discussed at great length in the campaign. UP claims the committee has been inactive during the year, putting out a "flurry" of activity before the election.
"Most of the issues 'hashed-over' in the campaign are problems which result from the fact that Vox is fascinated with playing the game, but not with doing the job," Whitman said.
Vox says the committee has been quite active, but is limited by funds. George Hahm, student body vicepresident, says he has written 40 letters for the committee.
HE SAID THE winning candidate will face a "terrific" challenge. "Something needs to be done to student government to regain the students' confidence in it."
Partly cloudy skies, mild temperatures and strong southerly winds today, but colder temperatures and a possibility of thunderstorms is forecast for tonight and tomorrow. Low tonight in the middle 60's and high tomorrow in the middle 60's with temperatures falling during the day.
Weather
Hahm says the committee sponsored the appearance of the Cuban
ambassador to Great Britain, and has arranged a debate on medicine to take place after spring vacation.
THE VOX PLANK calling for the establishment of an ASC Student Travel Committee also drew heavy fire in the campaign. UP says the function of such a committee is already being performed by the SUA.
The University Theatre was also involved in the campaign. One Vox plank suggests that all seats in the Theatre be made available to students without charge.
Vox says the SUA committee is limited. The SUA committee cannot charter jet flights for international travel, but an ASC committee could. The proposed committee would also function to help commuting students form car pools, and would have, in general, a broader scope than the SUA committee.
VOX CLAIMS the charge for seats conflicts with the University policy of charging a yearly activities fee. McCornack says the University opposes the University Theatre's practice.
UP says the present Theatre policy should be upheld. The UP argument is that if the additional fee is not charged, the result will be either productions of poorer quality, or an increase in the fees of all students.
A. K. M.
Reuben McCornack
CHEMISTRY
Charles Whitman
Downslips Again? Call KU-Y Tutors
"What am I going to do now?"
The Student Tutoring Service sponsored by the KU-Y is one of the means of student help. This program, which was organized by students, provides each student in need of academic assistance with a tutor.
By Carol Lathron
This is the first of a three part series.
A STUDENT who needs assistance in raising his grades can receive help from the Student Tutoring Service, the Reading and Study Skills Service, and the Guidance Bureau.
The KU-Y Student Tutoring Service originated with an idea obtained by Carl Peck, Concordia senior, at the National Student Association Convention last August in Columbus, Ohio.
That is the question being asked by some students after mid-semester examinations. For those students, the results of six weeks of studying have ended in downslips, ranging in grades from "D" to "FF."
These downslips cause a student to wonder what he is going to do to raise his grades. He made an effort to study. Poor grades are the result. Where can he go to receive help?
WHEN PECK RETURNED to KU he presented the idea to various other students and deans of the College. With the help and planning of Kay Consolver, Wichita junior; Sharon Nelson, Larned sophomore; Gayle Graham, Almena junior; Tim Mitchell, Salina sophomore, and Steve Crowley, Quincy, Ill., junior. Peck organized the first student tutoring program at KU last semester.
This program which has continued this semester offers tutorial help to students in the College of Liberal
These tutors are not paid for their services. The only gain which they might obtain would be in certain advantages such as the teaching experience which is important to future teachers and prospective graduate students.
OTHER POTENTIAL advantages would be the opportunity for personal evaluation, the opportunity to extend a genuine self-less contribution to the scholastic and intellectual atmosphere of the University, the opportunity to be a part of a beneficial student project, and the opportunity to have the participation as a tutor become part of his college transcript.
TUTORS ARE SELECTED on the basis of an over-all grade point average of 2.00 or above, or an "A" grade in a particular course or major field of study. Each tutor is expected to spend about $1\frac{1}{2}-2$ hours a week in consultation with his assigned student who needs assistance.
Arts and Sciences. It has to maintain three major purposes. They are: to provide certified instruction for a fee of $50 handling costs to those students who desire to improve their scholastic standing, to give qualified students the opportunity for personal academic evaluation through tutoring experience, and to contribute to the scholastic and intellectual atmosphere of the University.
Tutors are obligated to spend 1-2 hours per week working with one student in one subject from midterm until two weeks before final week. Also, they must keep a rough record of their student's progress in the course, and help the student to grasp a fundamental understanding
(Continued on page 12)
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 2. 1963
Kansan Backs Vox Populi Leaders
- * *
Vox Interview
Reuben McCornack, Vox candidate for student body president, said defining the role of student government is the most important issue in the campaign.
He said student government has two basic obligations; to provide "student services" and to act as a "spokesman for the student body."
HE SAID BOTH these obligations definitely are within the jurisdiction of student government. He referred to the travel service, hospital service and the proposed opinion poll and paying fees by installment, as examples.
McCornack believes student government should act as "spokesman for the student body" in its relations with such groups as the Kansas Legislature and Lawrence city officials.
IN SITUATIONS affecting KU students, the student body indirectly can get the action it wants through the force of student opinion, even when direct action is out of the jurisdiction of student government.
John Underwood, Vox candidate for vicepresident, enlarged on the obligations of student government.
"THE FIRST OBLIGATION is to meet the present needs of the students," he said. And student government must also anticipate future needs. "And we are going to have to start working right now to plan for the time when KU is much larger."
Asked whether KU's student government should involve itself in non-local issues, McCornack said, "Anything that affects the students at KU should be considered, even if it is national."
He said the Mississippi integration crisis was not completely irrelevant to KU because there have been racial problems here, too. While this particular relationship was a bit remote, he said KU students were much more directly involved in the Wichita University controversy.
Referring to the action taken by KU student government on the WU issue, McCornack said, "I don't know how much effect we had, but at least we let people know what we were thinking about it here."
Underwood said that the danger in taking positions on national issues is that the members of the ASC may not be adequately informed.
ASKED ABOUT the adequacy and scope of the ASC committee system, McCornack said each of the committees is of a "different breed" and should not be combined with any other committee. He said that few committee meetings is not necessarily an indication of inactivity. Many committees are designed for specific limited functions, which may require only a few meetings to fulfill.
Giving his views on committee appointments, McCornack said, "I don't like the patronage or spoils system."
He said the present ratification system is a good check to guarantee that committee appointees are qualified. The ASC can question and reject any appointee that it feels is unqualified.
UNDERWOOD EMPHASIZED the need to interest qualified persons in committee positions.
"We have lost qualified people in my district, but we haven't had very many apply," Underwood said.
Asked about KU's participation in such groups as the Big Eight Student Government Conference, McCormack said, "We had a sort of Waterloo at the Big-8 Conference, but I don't think we can make any rapid conclusions from this. I think we ought to work through the Big Eight."
ASKED ABOUT the formation of a larger association of student governments, McCornack said such a group would be too unwieldy to accomplish much.
On the possibility for improvements in the current disciplinary system, McCornack said, "This is the part that I dislike — the secretiveness of the disciplinary committee."
The Kansan supports Reuben McCornack and John Underwood for the offices of student body president and vice-president in tomorrow's campus elections.
THIS EDITORIAL support is based on interviews (see adjacent articles), the campaigns and the past activities of the candidates.
All the candidates took generally tenable positions on the questions asked during the interviews and on other points that were brought up by the candidates themselves. The stories on the interviews show differences of opinion, but the opinions of both sides are generally reasonable.
A decisive factor was familiarity with the workings of student government and the ability to relate this familiarity in a clear, comprehensive manner.
ANOTHER DECISIVE factor in recommending McCornack and Underwood is the difference between the two presidential candidates' plans which they claim will be implemented if they are elected.
Both McCornack and Whitman have given attention to plans for the future, but McCornack impressed the editors as having better thought out exactly what he would do if elected.
WHITMAN might well have plans as good as those of McCornack, but he failed to convey them, in concrete terms, during the interview.
The difference between the qualifications of all four candidates is narrow. This is a good situation. It insures adequate leadership of student government whichever slate is elected. But the Kansan feels McCormack and Underwood are noticeably more qualified and thus they are recommended.
Interviews Explained
Sunday night the candidates for student body president and vice-president were interviewed for the purpose of determining the Kansan's editorial position in this week's campus elections.
The interviews were based on five questions:
- What are the most important issues in the campaign?
- To what degree should the ASC involve itself in national and international issues?
- Are the scope and committee system of KU's student government adequate?
- Should the ASC expend more of its efforts working through the Big 8, Big 10 or some other multi-school student government association or conference?
- Should the University publish a comprehensive, disciplinary code and apply it uniformly to all students? Should the University abolish the rule that any student accused of a felony is automatically suspended before he is tried and proved guilty or not guilty?
The interviews were not limited specifically to these questions. The candidates were invited to bring up any important topics they felt were overlooked by the questions.
SINCE THE candidates are elected as a team, the editorial decision is based primarily on the presidential candidates. For this reason, the questions were directed initially at the presidential candidates, and the vice-presidential candidates were invited to make any additions they felt were relevant. Each team was interviewed separately, and neither had prior information on the questions to be asked.
McCORNACK AND Underwood have no grandiose plans to improve student government, but they do have specific refinements in mind and should be able to do a competent job within a framework basically the same as that of current student government at KU.
Experience and a firm, practical grasp of the situations at hand—these are characteristics McCornack and Underwood show now. Given the opportunity, the pair should be able to provide a competent and effective administrative branch of student government.
— Dennis Branstiter
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Telephone Vlking 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
Fred Zimmerman Managing Editor
Ben Marshall Bill Sheldon Mike Miller.
Ben Marshall, Bill Sheldon, Mike Miller,
Art Miller, Margaret Cathcart ... Assistant Managing Editors EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Dennis Branstiter ... Editorial Editor
Terry Murphy ... Assistant Editorial Editor
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Jack Cannon ... Business Manager
\* \* \*
UP Interview
Charles Whitman, UP candidate for student body president, described what he called the "good intentions philosophy" of student government, as a major campaign issue.
"What we really need here is not just a statement of good intentions," Whitman said. Performance is the only measure of success. Being elected is not in itself success.
WHITMAN CALLED for a more non-partisan attitude except during elections. He said committees are often bogged down by petty political bickering.
Whitman said a third major issue is the need for greater "student contact" with the elected members of student government. He said the president and vice-president should make a positive effort to inform students of the activities of their government. Speeches would not be necessary, he said, but informal discussions in the living groups should be participated in by the president and vice-president.
Doug Hall, UP candidate for vice-president, added a fourth major issue. He said student government should "start really doing something positive on the ground level."
HE SAID MANY programs in the jurisdiction of student government are inadequate. Citing orientation as an example, he said, "This is a place where I feel we're really failing." The machinery is there but it is not being used to the best advantage of the students.
Asked whether the ASC should involve itself in non-local issues, Whitman said, "I think in an intellectual there should be a place for this kind of expression." But the members of the ASC are not qualified to express opinions on everything. The ASC could put its time to better use administering positive actions.
Hall was more definite in his position. He said it is not the duty of the ASC to voice public opinion. The ASC is a legislative body and its efforts should be expended in this area.
ASKED ABOUT the scope of the ASC and the committees, Whitman said. "There is always room for something that can be administered." But the work of other campus groups should not be duplicated.
Doug Hall said the ASC has been "heading in the wrong direction since I've been on the Council." Too much time is spent on administrative details and not enough on more important matters.
"The ASC this year has spread itself too thin" he said.
Whitman contended that some ASC committees should be eliminated and others combined. He said the Travel Committee should be eliminated because it duplicates the work done by the SUA. And the Calendar Committee should be given enough to do to keep it busy all year.
"THE NUMBER of people really interested in doing something is very low," said Whitman. The number of committees should be reduced and the scope of the remaining committees should be broadened.
Hall said new committees are formed every time a new resolution or piece of legislation comes up in the ASC. Existing committees should handle this work.
ON JOINT student government activities with other schools, Whitman said, "Here again we get bogged down with politics." Much more diplomacy should be used when dealing with other schools.
Whitman said that although a cooperative arrangement among Midwestern universities would be a worthwhile project, it probably would be better for KU to work within the Big Eight.
Hall suggested that KU's student government should try to find other schools with similar needs and objectives to supplement the Big Eight as a source of cooperation in student government.
CONCERNING KU's disciplinary structure, Whitman said formal codification would eliminate leniency. But publication of the action taken by the Disciplinary Committee "would help codify in an informal sense."
Laotian Corporal Confesses Killing
Page 3
VIENTIANE, Laos — (UPI) — A corporal of the Laotian Neutralist Army has been arrested and confessed the assassination of pro-Communist Foreign Minister Quinim Pholsena.
The death of Pholsena, who was killed by machine gun fire as he and his wife stepped from a car in front of their home here last night, threatened to upset the shaky three-way coalition government and set off a new crisis in this Southeast Asian kingdom.
THE ASSASSIN was identified by Neutralist Army Commandant Singh as Corp. Chy Kong, 20, one of the night guards at Pholsena's residence.
Singh said Kong confessed the assassination and quoted him as saying he killed Pholsena deliberately, although no motive was given. Kong was kept in custody of the Neutralists pending completion of an investigation.
Pholsera's wife was wounded seriously in both legs.
The Foreign Minister was the leader of a dissident pro-Communist group of the neutralist faction sharing the government with rightwing and Communist factions.
Quinim Pholsena's group had been suspected of engineering two previous political assassinations in the last three months, and shooting down an American supply last November.
HIS DEATH was expected to heighten the factorial rivalry which erupted in civil war in 1960 and led to a truce last year underwritten by a 14-nation Geneva agreement.
Reliable sources said Quinim Pholsena and his wife were returning from a party in honor of King Savang Vatthana when the shooting occurred.
At the party, the King called on the rival Laotian factions to cooperate in working toward prosperity and happiness for the country. He said he had been assured on a trip to countries which signed the Geneva agreement that East and
Thieves Take the Kitchen Sink
ALEXANDRIA. La. — (UPI) — Mrs. Elizabeth Landry returned home yesterday to find thieves had stolen her gas range, washtub, refrigerator, power mower, outboard motor — and the kitchen sink.
West have guaranteed the neutrality of Laos.
"Foreign interference, cause of our discord and dissension, has been excluded," the King said. "It is up to the government of national union, the neutral government of Laos, proposed and supported by great powers, to attend to its proclaimed aims."
RECENTLY THE neutralists, led by Premier-Prince Souvanna Phouma and Maj. Gen. Kong La, have given more active support to the coalition, working more closely with right wing Vice-Premier Gen. Phoumi Nosavan.
mid-February Col. Ketsana Vongsovanh, a neutralist follower of Souvanna Phouna, was shot to death. About two weeks ago, a neutralist provincial official named Khamphouy was similarly killed.
The dissident neutralists were widely blamed for the first killing and suspected of the second.
Physicist to Be First Spencer Lecturer
A Nobel prize-winning atomic physicist will present the first annual Kenneth Aldred Spencer Memorial Lecture at 8 p.m. Thursday in the University Theatre.
Sir John Cockeroff, Master of Churchill College at Cambridge University will speak on today's problems and progress in nuclear science.
The Spencer Lectures were established by friends and relatives of the late Kenneth E. Spencer, KU graduate and founder of the Spencer Chemical Co.
University Daily Kansan
Relays Chairmen Announced
KU seniors Gene Gaines, Joplin, Mo., and Lauren Ward, Ottawa, have been named co-chairmen of the 38th annual KU Relays student committee. The Relays will be held April 19-20 in Memorial Stadium.
D&G AUTO SERVICE
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We are presently decorating these units. Tenants renting now may select wall colors. .drapes. .etc.
All Units Are Air Conditioned, Garpeted and Have Disposals. Provincial Furniture Available. Swimming Pool Available.
PARK PLAZA SOUTH
Official Bulletin
TOMORROW
Ph. VI2-3416 1912 W. 25th Day or Night
Tau Sigma, 7 p.m., Robinson Gym.
Methodist Community Worship
9:15 a.m.
TODAY
Episcopal Evening Prayer. 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
Catholic Masses, 7:00 a.m., 11:40 a.m.
Lawrence, Catholic Chapel, 1910
Struthers, Catholic Chapel, 1910
Le Departement des Langues Romanes présente un film français en couleurs, avec un personnage de femme comédie de Molière, mercredi 3 avril a sept heures du soir, dans le Theatre de la rassee, en robes sont joues par des traînes à la Comédie Française. Entree gratuite.
El Ateneo se recurría el miercoles el 18 de noviembre de 2013 a Fraser. La Señora Christina Echeser da una conferencia titulada "El Salvador y su influencia en Centroamerica." Todos
Mathematics Collobium, 4:30 p.m.
109 Strong Hall (cooking at 4:00 in 119
Groups') by E. James Peake, Jr., New
Mexico State University
If you are interested in a teaching position for September, 1963, in any of these areas, please sign up for an interview in 117 Balley Hall.
April 4, 117 Bailey, Northview Public Schools, Grand Rapids, Mubien
Scheduled Interviews
April 5. 117 Bailey, Midlothian, Illinois Public Schools (Cook County).
Old Blue Laws Added To Sunday Closing Bill
He amended the proposed new bill by cutting out most of its provisions and inserting the old statutes, minus the three words which he said made the law unconstitutional.
TOPEKA — (UFI) — The Kansas House Judiciary Committee today made a major revision in the proposed Sunday selling law and passed the bill without any recommendation.
Among provisions lost in the revamping of the bill was one which would have allowed grocery stores to remain open until 10 a.m., Sundays.
The committee, acting on a motion by Rep. Richard Liebert, D-Montgomery county, rewrote the bill to include most provisions of the state's century-old blue laws which were declared unconstitutional last year.
Liebert told the committee that there were only three words found objectionable by the State Supreme Court in the old Sunday closing laws.
THE WORDS came from a section of the old bill which allowed the sale of articles of immediate necessity on Sundays. The Supreme Court found it impossible to define what articles of "immediate necessity" were and struck down the old law.
THE OLD LAW provides that no merchant may sell or offer for sale on Sunday any goods except medicine and drugs.
The bill will now also contain the old prohibition against working on Sundays.
Violation of the proposed law would be a misdemeanor punishable by a $50 fine.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 2, 1963
Festival Features American Appeal
The 1963 International Festival will have more appeal to American students than any of its predecessors, according to Vinod Patel, Baroda, India, special student, who is chairman of a planning committee in charge of the festival.
The show this year—"Happy Fella Around the World"—will include exhibits and an evening of entertainment.
AMONG THE groups and nations planning to have exhibits are Latin America, Korea, Pakistan, Africa, Scandinavia, India, Greece, the Philippines, Turkey, People-to-People, Arab nations, Cambodia and the Peace Corps.
Among the countries or areas listed for the program are Germany, Africa, the Philippines, India, Arab nations, Cambodia and Latin America.
Each group will have eight minutes for their performance. Each group will present a program which will relate to the theme of the show.
THE FESTIVAL, sponsored by the foreign student adviser's office, will
Those countries, which have not been listed and still are interested in participating, should contact the foreign student adviser's office in Room 214, Strong Hall.
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
be held Saturday, April 20, in Hoch Auditorium. The exhibits will open at 5 p.m. and will remain open until 7:45 p.m. They will re-open again for one hour following the evening program. The evening program will be at 7:45 and will last for about 90 minutes.
Members of the planning committee are Fatal; Suzanne Bolstad, Oslo, Norway, graduate student; Luis Umerez, Caracas, Venezuela, senior; Gregs Thomopolus, Benin City, Nigeria, sophomore; Kang Seng, Cambodia, sophomore, and Costa Rosa Macedo, Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, graduate student.
Rab Malik of Pakistan and Omneya Souelm of Egypt, both graduate students, have been selected as the master and the mistress of ceremonies.
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A KU professor will lecture tomorrow on "The Role of Physics in Modern Society."
Strassenburg to Talk At Faculty Forum
Arnold Strassenburg, associate professor of physics, will speak at the Faculty Forum at noon in the English Room of the Kansas Union.
He said he will also explain his views on what part physics has played in the national defense effort.
Wed Saturday: 700 Couples
ROBERTO'S SUNDAY SPECIAL on Spaghetti & Pizza DANCING
LONDON — (UPI) — Over 700 couples were married in London Registrar office Saturday in the rush to get wed before April 5, the deadline for claiming tax relief on 1962 income.
Commissioned officers from the KU Army ROTC program have been, on the average, in the top 25 per cent of their classes at the United States Infantry School at Fort Benning, Ga., according to a letter from the Commanding General there.
KU Officers Do Well In Infantry School
Vice Chancellor George B. Smith commended the ROTC program.
"We are proud of the military science department for maintaining the tradition of producing outstanding commissioned officers," he said.
KU is one of the 224 universities supplying commissioned officers to the infantry school.
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Tuesday, April 2,1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 2, 1963
Americans Say Khrushchev Not on Way Out as Leader
WASHINGTON — (UPI) American authorities on Soviet affairs expressed doubt today that Premier Nikita Khrushchev's political difficulties would cost him his job.
They said it was obvious that major policy arguments have been going on within the Kremlin for some weeks. But according to intelligence reaching Washington, the process is one of adjustment to bring Khrushchev's policies more in line with the ideas of other members of the hierarchy, rather than a power struggle to oust the Soviet premier.
There is no evidence, according to U.S. authorities, that top Soviet officials who are disappointed with some of Khrushchev's strategy wish or need to plunge the country into the uncertainty which would accompany a drastic leadership change.
The "Khrushchev in trouble" reports were stirred by an article in the Italian Communist Party newspaper Unita which claimed Moscow was in a "delicate political moment" because of last fall's Cuban crisis, farm problems, cultural disputes and
International Club Trip West Cancelled
The International Club's trip to San Francisco has been cancelled because of lack of interest.
Dave Roberts, chairman of the trip committee, said the trip for the spring vacation was planned for about 45 students. But only 30 students signed up.
the rift with Red China.
Unita's article, published Sunday, was followed yesterday by reports from the Italian news services A.R.I. and the Agenzia Italia and the Paris newspaper Aurore. All three quoted unidentified Communist sources as saying there was a Kremlin power struggle threatening Khrushchev's position.
Agenzia Italia inferred that the
opposition against Khrushchev was led by Mikhail Suslov, a member of the Soviet Presidium and regarded as the Soviet Communist Party's top theoretician.
Western observers in Moscow interpreted the Unita report by Moscow correspondent Giuseppe Boffa to be merely a chronicle of the problems facing Khrushchev as head of the Soviet party and government.
Symphony Orchestra Scheduled For Tonight
"An excellent evening of music making."
This was the description given to the coming performance of the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra by Robert Baustian, associate professor of orchestra, during the SUA Classical Music Forum yesterday.
The Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra will present its concert at 8 tonight in Hoch Auditorium.
"The program which the orchestra will present is actually quite heavy in nature," said Baustian.
"It begins with a light number, 'Overture to the Opera,' The Marriage of Figaro," by Mozart and proceeds to a heavier number, "Symphony No. 5" (Sinfonia Sacra) by Hanson," said Baurian.
Hanson's work invokes an atmosphere of Easter and the renewal of
Christian faith. It was composed in 1954.
That will be followed by Strauss's "Death and Transfiguration" (Symphonic Poem), Op. 24. That work is the story of a dying man, and the fight which he wages with Death. The theme is similar to Hanson's work, but it is more on a secular plane rather than a religious one.
Bastian said. "It is a very pictorial work. One can even hear the man's pulse beating at the opening."
After an intermission, the orchestra will play the Prokofieff "Symphony No. 5," Op. 100. That work written in 1944 portrays the spirit of man in time of war.
The Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra is the fifth oldest in the country. Conducted by Max Rudolf, this 100-member orchestra has given well over 1,250 concerts in over 35 states.
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Sclerosis Drive Nets $2,068
Walter Sandelius, professor of political science, said the results were "the best so far." He announced that $2.068 was collected.
Student collectors completed a successful fund-raising drive for the Multiple Sclerosis Society last night.
Prof. Sandelius is a member of the Douglas County chapter of the
Soviets Launch Fourth Moon Shot
MOSCOW — (UFI) — The Soviet Union launched its fourth unmanned space rocket towards the moon today.
Tass news agency said the automatic space research station, known as "Moon IV," is installed aboard the space rocket. The automatic station is expected to reach the area of the moon in three and a half days.
Tass said all apparatus aboard the automatic station is functioning normally.
Multiple Sclerosis Society and advised the sororites and fraternities which waged the fund-raising campaign.
The Multiple Sclerosis Society will give a trophy to the sorority and fraternity who collected the most money.
Delta Gamma and Sigma Alpha Epsilon collected $1.065; Delta Upsilon and Delta Delta Delta. $200, and Kappa Kappa Gamma and Phi Delta Theta. $803.
Great Men Group To Hear Record
Joseph J. Russell, visiting assisting professor of philosophy, will discuss Bertrand Russell with that group at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Meadowlark Room of the Kansas Union.
A recording of Bertrand Russell, taken at a peace conference in London, will be plaved for the KU-Y Great Men Study Group.
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Tuesday, April 2, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
VOTE FOR THE MAN
NOT FOR THE PARTY
To all K.U. Students.
We encourage all students to join with us in voting for excellence in student government leadership. Our group is a mixture of students representing both political parties, many living groups, and a variety of campus activities. We feel that the approaching election offers all students a challenge.
It is imperative that the candidates be considered as individuals rather than as members of particular political parties. And it is equally important that we vote as individuals and not as meaningless political blocks.
Please join with us in supporting REUBEN McCORNACK and JOHN UNDERWOOD for student body president and vice-president.
Sincerely,
Students for Excellence In Student Leadership
MICHAEL C. WILSON
Reuben McCornack
Steering Committee
Pris Osborn
Jerry Harper, Chairman
Ken Coleman
Peggy Conner
Curt Boswell
Sandee Garvey
Dick Epps
June Dearing Richard Miller
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Frank Thompson
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 2, 1963
200 Women Participate In Alpha Phi State Day
Approximately 200 Kansas colleges and alumnae of Alpha Phi attended State Day in Lawrence Sunday.
KU to Host Club Women
Several KU faculty members and students will take part in the convention of the Kansas Federation of Women's Clubs to be held this weekend on campus.
Approximately 350 women are expected to attend the 68th annual convention tomorrow through Friday in the Kansas Union.
Nine KU faculty members will speak on subjects ranging from experiences abroad to adult education and women in government.
Also on the program are KU students who will appear in a one-act comedy opera, "The Telephone." Following a luncheon at the convention's conclusion, several foreign students will participate in a style revenue.
Couple Announces
Spring Engagement
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh E. Brownfield of Kansas City announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Ann. to Russell Crane, son of Mr. and Mrs. Glen Crane of Independence.
Miss Brownfield, a senior education major, is a member of Chi Omega sorority. Her fiance is a senior majoring in psychology. The wedding date has been set for June 15.
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Members of the KU Alpha Phil chapter and members of the local alumnae club were hostesses. Every spring Kansas collegiate chapters rotate as hostesses for the event.
Representatives from active chapters at the University of Wichita and Washburn University and alumnae from Topeka, Salina, Wichita, Emporia and Kansas City participated in the meetings, discussions and the banquet at the Eldridge Hotel.
- ADVERTISERS -
Style Show Scheduled In Dorms Tomorrow
Mrs. Fred Hatton of Kansas City, Mo., the sorority's international director of programs, spoke to the State Day participants on "Alpha Phi in the Space Age."
Spring and summer styles will be modeled Wednesday night in two fashion shows to be sponsored by the Associated Women's Students (AWS) Fashion Board.
The two fashion shows are scheduled for 10:30 p.m., in Gertrude Sellards Hall and at 11 p.m., in Corbin Hall.
Petitions for new years Aws Fashion board must be turned in this Friday to the Dean of Women's office, Susan Olson, Toppea senior and chairman announced.
Twenty KU women will be chosen for interviews from these petitions. The final selection of board members will be made at the end of April.
Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall, has started a new kind of party. Freshman women on all ten floors made up songs and competed in a singing contest.
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On Campus with Max Shoimai (Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf," "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis," etc.)
HOW TO GET EDUCATED ALTHOUGH ATTENDING COLLEGE
In your quest for a college degree, are you becoming a narrow specialist, or are you being educated in the broad, classical sense of the word?
This question is being asked today by many serious observers —including my barber, my roofer, and my little dog Spot—and it would be well to seek an answer.
Are we becoming experts only in the confined area of our majors, or does our knowledge range far and wide? Do we, for example, know who fought in the Battle of Jenkins' Ear, or Kant's epistemology, or Planck's constant, or Valsalva's maneuver, or what Wordsworth was doing ten miles above Tintern Abbey?
If we do not, we are turning, alas, into specialists. How then can we broaden our vistas, lengthen our horizons—become, in short, educated?
Well sir, the first thing we must do is throw away our curricula. Tomorrow, instead of going to the same old classes, let us try something new. Let us not think of college as a rigid discipline, but as a kind of vast academic smorgasbord, with all kinds of tempting intellectual tidbits to savor. Let's start sampling tomorrow
He was so moved he wrote Joyce Kelmer's immortal trees'
We will begin the day with a stimulating seminar in Hittite artifacts. Then we will go over to marine biology and spend a happy hour with the sea slugs. Then we will open our pores by drilling a spell with the ROTC. Then we'll go over to journalism and tear out the front page. Then we'll go to the medical school and autograph some casts. Then we'll go to home economics and have lunch.
And between classes we'll smoke Marlboro Cigarettes. This, let me emphasize, is not an added fillip to the broadening of our education. This is an essential. To learn to live fully and well is an important part of education, and Marlboros are an important part of living fully and well. What a sense of completeness you will get from Marlboro's fine tobaccos, from Marlboro's pure filter! What flavor Marlboro delivers! Through that immaculate filter comes flavor in full measure, flavor without stint or compromise, flavor that wrinkled the care derides, flavor holding both its sides. This triumph of the tobaccoist's art comes to you in soft pack or Flip-Top box and can be lighted with match, lighter, candle, Welsbach mantle, or by rubbing two small Indians together.
When we have embarked on this new regimen—or, more accurately, lack of regimen—we will soon be cultured as all get out. When strangers accost us on the street and say, "What was Wordsworth doing ten miles above Tintern Abbey, hey?" we will no longer slink away in silent abasishment. We will reply loud and clear:
"As any truly educated person knows, Wordsworth, Shelley, and Keats used to go to the Widdicombe Fair every year for the poetry-writing contests and three-legged races, both of which they enjoyed lyrically. Well sir, imagine their chagrin when they arrived at the Fair in 1776 and learned that Oliver Cromwell, uneasy because Guy Fawkes had just invented the spinning jenny, had cancelled all public gatherings, including the Widdicombe Fair and Liverpool. Shelley was so upset that he drowned himself in a butt of malmsey. Keats went to London and became Charlotte Bronte. Wordsworth ran blindly into the forest until he collapsed in a heap ten miles above Tintern Abbey. There he lay for several years, sobbing and kicking his little fat legs. At length, peace returned to him. He looked around, noted the beauty of the forest, and was so moo! that he wrote Joyce Kilmer's immortal Trees . . . And that, sweet-apple, is what Wordsworth was doing ten miles above Tintern Abbey."
1963 Max Shulman
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Tuesday, April 2, 1963
University Daily Kansan
Page 9
1915 College Grad Returns to Campus
Myrtle Burgert seems like other KU women students.
She chatters about her classes, fellow students and her study schedule
Yet Mrs. A. L. Burgert is different from most women students.
She wears a hat and high heels to class.
THE ALERT, white-haired woman is working on her second college degree.
Mrs. Burgert attended KU an was graduated from Huntington college in Huntington, Ind., in 1915 with a degree in French. After her husband's death in 1958, she began work at KU on a second degree in history.
This semester she is taking five hours — recent American history and Kansas history. Sixteen hours is the maximum study load she has
carried at KU.
"I study about 12 hours a day," she said. "I used to study in the library, but now I do it at home."
MRS. BURGERT lives in the Baptist Student Center with other women students.
She plans to graduate from the University in June, 1964.
"I'm not going to work after graduation," she said. "I just want to enjoy my home."
Home means Sterling to Mrs. Burgert who has a large, rambling home there.
"TM NOT A gardener, but I belong to 9 clubs there which keep me busy."
Mrs. Burgert's friendly blue eyes twinkled as she spoke. Occasionally she fingered the lapel on her muted
"I'm going to miss KU," she said. "The students are so friendly and alive. They want to learn."
plaid coat.
Mrs. Burgert was born in Lawrence, the daughter of an Evangelical United Brethren minister. She spent her girlhood in Hiawatha and was graduated with honors from Sabetha high school.
gate, Iowa. She moved to McLouth where she taught school, met and married A. L. Burgert, a banker.
AFTER HER graduation from Huntington, Mrs. Burgert was principal of a high school in Brad-
Several years later, the couple moved to Sterling where he became president of a bank, and she was cashier.
"Short skirts are not for me.
Speaking of college women's dress, Mrs. Burgert said,
Short skirts are not for me.
"Women my age should wear them a little longer.
"It looks better."
Railway Work Changes to End Diesel Firemen
than 10 years seniority — were expected to be separated or furloughed within one year, with three months' to one year's notice.
About 40,000 firemen would be affected over a period of five to 10 years.
No Wedding: Canceled Thrice
PETERBOROUGH, England — (UPI) — Olive Stimson, 20, was set to be married three different times within a month but each time her fiance backed out.
CHICAGO — (UPI)—The nation's railroads were expected to order sweeping anti-featherbedding work rule changes today that conceivably could result in a countrywide strike. About 13,000 — those with less
"Now I'm finished with him for good . . . There must be something wrong with him if he just can't face up to a wedding.
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IT IS TIME FOR A CHANGE
Charles WHITMAN
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For PRESIDENT and VICE PRESIDENT of the Student Body
---
COLLEGE MEN - Jay Roberts
COLLEGE WOMEN - Carole Clancy
BUSINESS - Maurie Childers
EDUCATION - Wendy Wilkerson
FINE ARTS-Janie Lutton
ENGINEERING - Don Pellow
GRADUATE - Robert Steffen
JOURNALISM - Steve Clark
LAW - Jim Lawing
PHARMACY - Butch Ball
Paid For By THE COMMITTEE For Efficient Student Government-SUSAN FLOOD-Chairman
Page 10
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 2.1963
Jayhawks Fall 15-7 in Opener
KU was too generous in its home baseball opener yesterday.
With 5 Jayhawker pitchers giving up 15 walks and the infield committing seven errors, Arkansas gained an easy 15-7 victory.
THE JAYHAWKERS and Razor-backs meet again today at 3 p.m at Quigley Field. Coach Floyd Temple has named Carl Nelson as KU's starting pitcher, Ted Mott, who had the best Arkansas earned run average last year, will start for Coach Bill Farrell.
KU will go into today's game with a 2-2 record. Arkansas, with three victories over Buena Vista of Storm Lake, Iowa, and a split last weekend with Missouri, has a 5-1 record.
Arkansas scored in all but three innings yesterday, but the first was its big one. The Razorbacks scored five in their half and KU countered with three in its segment of the half-hour long inning.
THE PORKERS filled the bases when leadoff hitter Ken Hatfield singled and Bill Gray and Jim Jay got on base by infield errors. Marl Carter cleared the bases with a grounder on the third straight Jayhawker error.
Before the inning was over, four more walks gave Arkansas a 5-0 lead.
In the Jayhawker half of the first inning, Dick Ruggles doubled to score Steve McGreevy, Ralph Pagani and Dick Fanning. The inning closed with Arkansas leading 5-3
Del Cotton of Arkansas pitched the entire three-hour long game, giving up 10 hits and six walks and striking out four KU batters.
MONTE STEWART replaced Roger Brock, KU's starting pitcher, in the third inning, with Arkansas leading 7-3.
Steve Lunsford replaced Stewart in the fifth inning with the bases loaded and KU trailing, 8-3. Before the fifth was over, the Razorbacks had picked up three more runs.
Fred Littooay relieved Lunsford in the seventh inning, and by that time the Hogs led 12-6. John Higgins finished for the Jayhawks, blanking Arkansas in the ninth.
Jim Jay was the leading hitter for Arkansas. He picked up two hits in five times at bat.
DICK RUGGLES and Keith Abercrombie led KU hitting, each getting a double and a single. Abercrombie's double came in the sixth inning when he scored Ruggles. A single by pitcher Stewart scored Abercrombie.
An infield error gave Arkansas two runs in the second when Paul Soden's grounder was bobbled and Lynn Elliot and Mike Havnie scored.
Arkansas' Carter scored Cotton in the third inning with a bases-loaded infield hit. Arkansas made three more runs in the fifth inning when Carter scored on a wild pitch by Lunsford and Elliot scored on an infield hit made by Jim Bone.
The Razorbacks got two runs in the seventh on a sacrifice fly and a single, and two in the eighth on a wild throw to first base.
KU's Abercrombie scored on an infield error in the fourth and McGreevy scored on a wild pitch in the eighth, accounting for KU's scoring.
Belinsky Reveals He Is Engaged
HOLLYWOOD — (UPI) — Ac-tress Mamie Van Doren and Los Angeles Angel pitcher Bo Bellinsky confirmed yesterday they are engaged to be married.
"Yes, it's true," the blonde bosomy actress said when contacted at her home.
"We're engaged," the handsome 26-year-old bachelor said when contacted at San Jose, Calif., where the ball club is playing two exhibition games.
JOE'S BAKERY
Open 24 Hours Night Deliveries 412 W.9th VI 3-4720
'Hill' Volleyball Playoffs Today
The "Hill" intramural volleyball "A" and "B" league championships will be decided in Robinson Gymnasium this afternoon.
The "B" championship game will be held at 4:30 p.m. followed by the "A" game at 5:30.
SIGMA CHI will be attempting to regain its "Hill" title which it lost last year. The Sigs won the "Hill" in 1960 and 1961, but lost to the Harriers in the "Hill" finals last year. Sigma Chi defeated Beta Theta Pi 15-15, to 11-10 to win the fraternity A championship.
The opposition will be formidable. The Hicks won the Independent A title yesterday by defeating Liahona 15-15 to 4-12. The Hicks have perhaps the best intramural volleyball player on the "hill" in Dick Hoagland, who was an All-America several years back.
Beta Theta Pi will meet Liahona for the Hill "B" championship. The Betas knocked off Phi Gamma Delta, the thrice defending Hill champions yesterday to advance to the Hill playoffs. The match went three games with the Betas winning 15-7 to 4-15-8.
Liahona won the Independent B title yesterday having little trouble disposing of C & O. Liahona won the first game easily 15-1, but was pressed in the second game 15-13.
In other competition yesterday, Beta Theta Pi won the Hill "C" championship by defeating Sigma Chi in three games. The Betas won 15-11-15 to 12-15-12. The victory gave Beta Theta Pi its fourth consecutive hill "C" title.
Palmer Favored in Masters
AUGUSTA, Ga. — (UPI) — Kingpin Arnold Palmer bemoaned his misbehaving driver today but drew no sympathy from fellow pros who feel he can win his fourth Masters golf title even by using a brassie off the tee.
Palmer, of course, will stay with his driver when the first round shooting starts Thursday over the Masters' lush 6,980-yard layout and he'll be trying not only to become the first four-time winner here but
also the first player ever to win titles back-to-back.
"I wish my driving would be a little better," he claimed after spraying a few during yesterday's practice round. "I've got a couple of days to work on it, anyway."
Peeling his glove off, the perspiring Palmer then headed for the barber to get a haircut, and most of the other competitors in the probable field of 82 believe that's all he needs to win his fourth Masters in the last six years.
STARTS WEDNESDAY
MOTHRA
MOTHRA TOHOSCOPE EASTMAN COLOR
CHUBBY CHECKER in "Don't Knock the Twist" Gates Open Nightly at 6:30. Show Starts at Dusk.
Ends Tonight!
"Black Gold"
SUNSET
Grid Scandal Nears Climax
"The Naked Edge" DRIVE IN THEATRE ... West on Highway 40
ATLANTA —(UPI)— Gov. Carl E. Sanders said he would make public today the details of a state investigation into an accusation that former Georgia Athletic Director Wallace Butts and Alabama Coach Paul Bryant conspired to rig a football game last fall.
Sanders received a final report on the investigation last night from state Attorney General Eugene Cook, but he refused to release its contents until his news conference today.
"I don't think a midnight news conference would be a good thing." Sanders told newsmen who sought details of the investigation last night. "That might look clandestine and we don't want that."
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified
Cook said over the weekend that the investigation report will show that Butts, who resigned his university post last February, passed "vital
A Sanders aide said the governor, who conferred briefly with Cook by telephone last night, definitely would have some comment on the investigation at his news conference.
VARSITY
MOW SHOWING
Positively Last Times Tonight!
Jack Lemmon and Lee Remick
"DAYS OF WINE AND ROSES" WB
Presented by WARNER BROS.
information" to Bryant just before the 1962 game in which Alabama beat Georgia, 35-0.
Both Butts and Bryant have denied the accusation contained in a recent issue of the Saturday Evening Post and Butts has filed a $10 million libel suit against the magazine.
Now
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RICHARD BEYMER
The FREDERICK BRISSON
Production
FIVE
FINGER
EXERCISE
...it marks the sensitive spots in a woman's private life!
Screenplay by FRANCES GODDICH and ALBERT HACKETT • Based on the stage play by PETER SHAFFER.
Produced on Broadway by EFI
FIVE FINGER EXERCISE
BEIMER
FIVE FINGER EXERCISE
The FREDERICK BRISSON Production
...it marks the sensitive spots in a woman's private life!
TO OUR ART PATRONS:
FIVE FINGER EXERCISE is not a foreign film, but is an excellent example of an American art picture; it is the faithful adaptation of Peter Shaffer's Broadway hit that won the New York Drama Critic's Award.
VARSITY ART Attractions
Shows at 7:00 and 9:00 — Adults Only — All Seats $1.00
Max Logan . vice-president
SENIORS of '64...Elect
Bruce Hall president
Kay Cash - secretary
Mary Meisel treasurer
Tuesday, April 2, 1963 University Daily Kan
Page 11
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
149. $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.
TRAVEL
Fly to FLORIDA and the BAHAMAS for Spring vacation. Private charter flight. Still have room for two more boys or girls. Cheaper than commercial. For information call Jay Rupar—VI 3-8544 Now. 4-3
For
Contact
Travel Arrangements Home
Moupintour Associates Mall Shopping Center VI 3-1211
TRAVEL — make your airline reservations for Easter early so you won't miss any time at home.
First National Travel Agency
746 Mass. VI 3-0152
Motorcycle 4-cycle, single, 350 cc, low
weight. $250.00 take it. Call V-45
6077 evenings.
FOR SALE
1956 Buick convertible, radio, heater,
power. 1961 Volkswagen, like new. Would
consider trade for older car. See at 1244
Louisiana.
4-5
Barbel and weights, 110 lb set. $18.00
Burrell and weights, $45.00 Call V.
$790 at 8:00 p.m.
1961 Tru Tone stereo Hi-Fi automatic
Davis; $39.95. Pets Davis; -725 Mass. 4-4
Mercedes 190 SL, 1957 model — white
cabriolet. For sale.
C$250.00 Phone Y3-0367, 4-4
GUNS: &W 38 Special, Marlin 22 leav-
action rule. Ammo .45, .30-06, .9mm.
Selling fast at 5c per round. See this
and more to Stouffer 6, apt. B—VI 3-1110, 4-3
1957 call Volkswagen sedan. $425.00
Call Charles Marshall. 4-3
4-3
New and used portables, standards and electronics, Royal, Olympia, Smith Corona, Box typing papers, Lawrence Portables, Typewriter, 735 Mass. Phone VI 3-2644.
Assume payments on a 1958 Cascade Manana one bedroom trailer house — 36'x8'' M-Ferrier p.m. or weekends—Green Accord Court—Court-Oppose Happy Hals Ace on E. 2*7rd.
1962 M.G.A. Mark II 1600. Like new, only $1995.00. Low mileage, white walls, wire wheels, radio and tannaue. After 5 p.m. call V1 8-5860. 4-8
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center--most complete shop modern self-service -- Pet phone VT 51-2836 Modern, self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. weekdays.
Transistor radio clearance! New 6 trans.
G.E. Radio cable to $13.00, 8 trans. radio
cable to 4 models last, Star Stereo back's,
929 Mass., Headquarters for 4-5
price.
Printed Biology Study Notes: 70 pages,
complete outline of lecture; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised
for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta Notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50. tf
"YPING PAPER BARGAINS: Pink typing paper 85c per ream. Yellow typing paper 20c per ream, leads, per pound. The Lawrence Outdoor 100s Massachusetts, open all day Saturday.
1961 VW. Excellent condition, will con-
tinue to work convertible, power
set at 124 Laa. 4-2
Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extensively comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.00 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
All kinds of house plants. Potted .
Including philodendron to be used for
room dividers and in picture windows.
Phone VI 3-4207. tt
TYPING
TYFIST—experienced in term papers and theses. Prompt service, reasonable rates, electric typewriter. Mrs. Floyd—VI 2-1582. 4-4
MILIKENI SOS — always first quality
typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines,
also use 7 m tape transcriptions. Office
box 7 m tape 12 p-m-10213 Mast
Phone VI 3-5290.
Will do neat and accurate typing in my home. Experienced in themes, theses, and term papers. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Adcock, VI 2-1795. tt
"GOOD TYPING CREATES a favorable impression with instructors." For excellent typing of theses and term papers, call Miss Louise Pope, VI 3-1097. tf
Theses, term papers, reports, typed quickly and accurately. Experienced typist; electric typewriter. Marian Graham. 1619 Del. — VI 3-0483. tf
Dissertations, theses, manuscripts and term papers typed on new electric typewriter. Experience in keys. Experience in education and sciences. Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. VI 2-1546. ff.
Experienced typist does term papers
experience in typist duties. Specific symbols and signs. Prompt and reasonable rates Mrs. Cipriani at 200 Rhode Island Phone VI 3-7485.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, these and other written materials on an electronic typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patlift, VI 3-8379.
Former secretary and English major.
Will do neat typing — term papers,
theses, reports, etc. Reasonable rates.
Mrs. Compton-1311 N.H. tf
Good typist. Would like to do term papers and theses. Mrs. Oxford. VI 2-06757.
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, research reports, academic rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Edlowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568. tt
efficient typist. Would like typing in her home, letters. Call anytime at V3-2651-8
English major and former secretary will type themes and theses on electric typewriter. For neat and accurate work call Mrs. Mells sand Jones, VI 3-5267. tf
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast, accurate, neat work, reasonable rates. Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 2-1749. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST; Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Ms. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tt
LOST
cost=Pair of glasses, black frames in brown burlap case. Lost between Murphy and Watson. If found please call Marie Gelsier. VI 3-8255. 4-4
One time ___$1.25/inch
Monthly Rate
Every day ___ $1.00/inch
Classified Display Rates
Call KU-376
No art work or engraving allowed
or bring your ads to 111 Flint Hall
Birds on a Branch
BIRD TV-RADIO
908 Mass.
VI 3-8855
TV-
RADIO
- Guaranteed
- Quality Parts
FOR RENT
- Expert Service
Large 2 room, 2nd floor furnished apartment. Newly decorated and cleaned. Share bath with one. $50.00 per month all utilities paid. Call VI 2-2533. 4-8
Sleeping and study room for upper-classman. Also want to share apartment with college student. Near campus. Call Ti. 3-4850 afternoons or evening-1220 La.
Dunlex two bedroom with stove and re-
electricity. Call VI 3-2281.
Close to KU as 1st floor, 5 room apartment. Unfurnished. Pay utilities except water. Contact 75 McGrew Agency, I-3 2055. After hours phone Mrs Dicker at IM 3-7431.
Refrigerators – 2 Bdrms. 840 sq.
ft. Living area – Individual Controlled
Heating – Air-conditioned
Garbage disposals – Air-conditioned
Showers – Competitive Rents – Discount for 1 year's Lease. Manager. 2436
Redbud Lane, Ph. VI 2-3711. 4-12
HELP WANTED
Crescent Heights Apartments, 25th & Redbud: Rear entrances - Large utility room - Balconies - Sun decks - Concrete off street parking - Built in ranges
Delivery boy for Campus Hideaway,
Hours 5 p.m. to 1 a.m.-1 to 3 days per
mileage. If interested call Gene
Campus Hideaway-VI 3-9111. 4-3
Consideration is being given to applicants for the position of psychiatric social worker in the KU Psychological Clinic. Graduate training and experience in the field of social work are required. If interested, call VI 3-2700, Ext. 332. 4-5
Wednesday Night
BUSINESS SERVICES
Transportation plus parking convenience and an opportunity to earn extra money, ride a new motor scooter for your choice, demonstrate and sell in your spare time. Get our deal—Blevin's Bike Shop, 7th and Michigan. tt
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center, 1218
conn. Personal service—sectionalized
girds, nesters, chameleons, turtles
up pigs, etc., plus complete line of
pet supplies. **if**
RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267.
DRESS MAKING and alterations. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith $939\frac{1}{2}$ Mass. Call VI 3-5263. tf
Wednesday Night
CHICKEN SPECIAL
All You Can Eat
ONLY $1
drink and dessert extra
WANTED
Used cars - highest prices paid. Call VI 3-9811. 691 Vermont. pt
MISCELLANEOUS
"Brotherhood" or "Speak Up for Peace"
"Jrite JM Masters, 840'"; Ky—No. 4-5
offense
Free Bumper Stickers: 'Not Bombs but Brotherhood" or 'Speak Up for Peace'
Write Jim Masters, 8401' $ _{2} $ Ky—No obiqation.
4-5
Matt Farris, formerly of College Barber
Amyx Barber Shop—842₁₅ Mass. 4-3
1065 West 7th Street
Little Banquet
Ample free parking on the Mallis
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
Cycle-Logically Speaking
Early Bike Repairs Save Money!
Spring Tune Up-Clean Up Prices Reasonable
Downtown Western Auto 910 Mass.
Support
CAMPUS CHEST
Give Your Fair Share
there goes that
red box again
"Zabby"
by Town & Country Shoes
Wear it just once...
and you!
837 Mass.
Royal College Shop
VI 3-4255
Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 2, 1963
Downslips?
(Continued from page 1)
of the course through suggestions on study habits, correct approaches to class work, and extra work designed to increase understanding.
TUTORS DO NOT serve the purpose of telling students how to "beat" their instructor, but rather, they are to help the student understand himself and how he can better use his own skills.
Anyone who is interested in becoming a tutor may apply at the KU-Y Office in the Kansas Union, room 110.
A student who feels that he could beneficially use such help should apply also at the KU-Y Office. There he will be asked to fill out an information sheet which tells the tutor which course he needs the assistance in and the reasons for the assistance.
A COMMITTEE reads each application, and then tries to match each need with the best tutor available. The student is told his tutor's name and address, and that he should contact him as soon as possible. If the tutor is not contacted within two weeks, he is given another student to help.
Last semester's results show that the biggest problem encountered was the failure of some students to contact and arrange an initial meeting with their assigned tutor. Thirty-eight per cent of the tutors reported that they were not contacted by their student.
However, 53 per cent of the students who contacted and met with their tutor, raised their grade by one letter grade or in some cases two letters.
ONE GIRL who had trouble with a science course said, "Many points which I didn't understand were clarified by having another student explain them to me. I felt freer to ask questions, and the answers received were much easier to understand."
A boy who had difficulties in comprehending a language said, "I never had a language before coming here, and consequently I didn't know how to study for one. My tutor helped me to develop a good set of study habits. Also, she explained constructions which my instructor would take for granted that we understood."
TUTORS HAVE SUGGESTED that they could be of more service if the student who needs assistance would contact them as soon as possible.
One tutor told, "I was assigned a student who was having trouble with her math course. By the time she came to see me, the situation was almost hopeless. She was doing problems the wrong way that most of our time together was spent in correcting her past learning instead of building on to it."
Another tutor suggested asking advisers and counselors about the problems of each student.
THE MOST FREQUENT suggestion received from tutors was that of having forums and exchange sessions of ideas among the various tutors.
They felt that an intensified forum which would give general suggestions on tutoring methods would help to orientate themselves more capably to the program.
Also, many felt that similar problems which were encountered during the first three or four weeks of tutoring could be discussed at an exchange session.
ANOTHER SUGGESTION for program improvement was to ask each student about his opinions of the program.
If the tutoring service meets with success in the College, it is hoped to expand the program to include the other schools on the campus.
Thus, this program is one step which the student who needs academic assistance may take in the direction of better grades.
YELLOW CAB
VI 3-6333
PATRONIZE YOUR
• ADVERTISERS •
French Government, Miners Renew Negotiations on Strike
PARIS — (UPI) — Representatives of 200,000 striking coal miners renewed negotiations with the French government today in search of a compromise settlement to end a month-long labor crisis.
Both sides have said they will not back down from their stated positions on the strike which halted production in the state-owned coal mines March 1 and led to widespread sympathy strikes by other state workers.
The reopening of talks at the headquarters of the French Coal Corporation this morning after an eight-day lapse brought cheer to the coal centers, where miners and their families have held out on small strike payments.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
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and the
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Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
HOUSEMOTHERS and HOUSE MANAGERS
RUGS
• DYED
• CLEANED
• REPAIRED
Simply call or come in and we'll give your furniture and rugs a new look.
Attend to your house cleaning jobs during Spring vacation
UPHOLSTERY CLEANERS
NewYork Cleaners VI 3-0501
926 Mass.
Merchants of Good Appearance
Campus Chest Auctions Begin
By Kay Jarvis
Everything from an old hat to the resident directors of the upperclass women's dormitories is being auctioned off to raise money for the Campus Chest.
Some living groups are selling lost articles accumulated during the past year to the highest bidder.
Rulers selling for 25 cents and 98- cent bookcases going for $2 was not uncommon.
ONE WOMAN was heard to cry out at the auction to reclaim her long hat, only to finally buy it herself for $2.08.
Other groups are offering the services of their officers or resident directors for the highest offer.
Such schemes as serving breakfast in bed and washing cars have been planned for these martys.
OTHER GROUPS are stressing the collection of Kansas Union rebate slips which may be turned in to the drive as cash.
As of today Tau Kappa Epsilon has donated $28.50 and third floor north of Corbin has donated 69 cents.
The amount turned in to the Campus Chest so far is about as expected, according to Allen Schuermann, Wichita sophomore and treasurer.
He said most contributions would come in Wednesday or Thursday nights.
ALTHOUGH THE drive is officially over Thursday, donations will be accepted up to three weeks after the deadline, he said.
Money to be credited to a living group in competition for a trophy must be in by April 17.
This year's Campus Chest goal has been set at $10,000.
Weather
Considerably cooler weather was forecast for Kansas today following a night of thunderstorms that brought light rain, hail and high winds to many parts of the state.
A tornado struck at Fort Scott last night causing some property damage, but no injuries were reported, the weather bureau said.
Skies were clear over the entire state today and highs this afternoon were expected to range from the 40s northwest to about 60 southeast. Temperatures were expected to dip to the 30s to night.
"We'd like to reach the goal, but we don't expect to," said Bob Cathey, Shawnee Mission junior and chairman of the drive.
He felt the $1 needed from each student to meet that goal is not asking too much.
The theme this year is "Help at Home — Help the World." Cathey said this theme was chosen because over one half of the contributions goes to students in other countries.
He pointed out that $2 buys eyeglasses for a student in India.
VotingTurnout Good at 11:30
The voting turnout in the spring election for student body president and vice-president and 13 All Student Council seats was termed good early today.
Bob Tieszen, McPherson junior and election committee chairman, said 825 votes had been cast by 11:30 a.m. in the four polling locations.
Strong Hall had the heaviest turnout with 586 votes of the 11:30 total being cast there.
Tieszen said if the voting remains this heavy it is possible that 4,000 ballots could be cast during the two-day elections.
He said the polls were operating promptly at 8:30 this morning. Tieszen said he felt this was an improvement over last year and probably explains the early heavy voting on the first day.
He said there was very little let-up in the balloting this morning and it is expected to increase this afternoon.
Tieszen said there has been a surplus of election workings assisting the election committee so far in conducting the voting.
The election committee indicated there is a strong possibility for write-in candidates in the sophomore class elections for the offices of secretary and treasurer.
Tieszen said there is always the possibility of write-in candidates, but in this case it is even more so because there is only one candidate on the ballot for each of these two offices.
The polls will close at 6 p.m. both today and tomorrow.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Dailu hansan
60th Year. No.117
Wednesday, April 3. 1963
[Image of an orchestra performing in a concert hall]
CINCINNATI CONCERT -The 100-member Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Max Rudolf, played last night to a crowd of
2,000. The performance closes out this year's concert season. See review of concert on page 9.
Power Failure Causes Confusion on Campus
Chi Omega sorority got an impromptu serenade last night because the lights went out.
The University was without electricity until 11:45.
When the power failed, students working in the basement of Lindley Hall lighted Bunsen burners so they could see. Someone reported the glow as a fire, the firetrucks came, and so did a large following of male students.
THE FIREMEN left after discovering the fire was a false alarm, but the male students stayed and treated the Chi Omega's to several verses of "Hey, Leidy Leidy."
The power failed at 11:08, after high winds snapped a utility pole.
A Kansas Power and Light official said the wind started transmission lines "galloping," and the pole finally gave way.
The pole carried transmission lines leading to two major sub-stations which feed the University and most of west and south Lawrence.
IN HASHINGER HALL, several women decided they couldn't go to bed until they were sure their electric alarm clocks were set at the right time. They got out candles and plaved bridge.
In West Hills, a woman who asked to not be identified, was standing in front of a window when the lights came back on at 12:14. She was wearing a nightgown.
She said she looked at the windows of the house next door, and saw several men with binoculars.
Then she closed the blinds.
IN THE JAYBOWL at the Kansas Union, employs got a small oil lamp and played pool until the lights came back on.
The cash register was open when the electricity went off, and they couldn't get it closed until power was restored.
The chances of this happening again will be slim after Spring vacation.
During vacation, Kansas Power and Light will tie the University's facilities into an auxiliary power line.
Political Clubs Struggle Through Off-Year
This is the first of a three part series concerning political organizations on campus.
Bv Rov Miller
National elections won't be held for 18 months.
Ferhaps this fact explains the small amount of political activity at the national level and collegiate level as well.
Few meetings have been held by either the KU Young Democrats or Young Republicans this year. Neither of the clubs are worrying about the size of their memberships, but leaders in both admit they would like to attract more interest and participation.
THIS YEAR'S YOUNG Democrats Club has about 200 members and the Young Republicans' total is about 800. These figures, down considerably from election year memberships, are in line with recent off-year totals.
"I don't see any purpose in joining the clubs," David Evans, Overland Park freshman, said when asked why he didn't belong to either organization. "I don't see that they accomplish anything. Members just attend meetings and listen to speakers.
But, why haven't memberships of the two political clubs increased along with the growth in enrollment here?
"I read the newspapers to keep informed on issues."
Replying to the same question, Bob LaFrentz, Mattoon, Ill, freshman, said he didn't really know why he hadn't joined one of the clubs.
"I JUST NEVER SIGNED up. I had the chance, but wasn't interested at the time." LeFrentz said.
"I don't have the time, Henry Dodd, Independence, Mo., junior, said. "If I had the time, I'd join the Young Democrats. I think both clubs create an interest in politics while people are in college."
Another student, Frank Restituto, Long Island, N. Y., senior, said:
"To tell you the honest truth, I don't know anything about either club. I haven't been exposed to any information about either club. Yes, I read the Kansan, in part, but I haven't been able to get sufficient information this way. And, besides, I'm an architecture student — that takes about 90 per cent of my time."
JERRY DICKSON, president of Young Republicans last year, believes the clubs' membership is limited by an influx of other campus activities.
"You always have dedicated people joining the clubs, but you can't get the participation you should because of all these activities such as ASC (All Student Council), SUA (Student Union Activities), People-to-People and International Club," Dickson, who now is student body president, said.
Reuben McCornack, present president of the Young GOP's, said membership in the club hit 1,000 before the 1960 national election. McCornack foreseees the same total in conjunction with the 1964 presidential election.
During the 1956-57 school year, the Young Republicans claimed 800 members, accounting for the second largest membership total among collegiate Young Republican clubs in the nation.
PARTICIPATION IN A FALL statewide kickoff rally and attendance at a rally in connection with Vice-President Richard Nixon's appearance in Kansas City were cited as qualifying factors for the 1956-57 organization's recognition.
Lawrence campus enrollment is approaching 10,000. In 1938, the enrollment here was about 4,000. One would think, therefore, that the number of members belonging to political clubs then would not begin to equal present day totals.
But, according to a member of the KU Young Republicans in 1938, the club's membership was about 1,000.
As for the Young Democrats, this year's membership of about 200 represents a 20-member increase over last year. The club had about 200 members in the 1960 election year, according to Jim Lawing, membership chairman of the club then.
PRE-ELECTION ENTHUSIASM swelled when three busloads of Young Democrats heard John Kennedy, then a presidential candidate, speak in Kansas City. But only six members heard Gov. George Docking's parole attorney speak at a scheduled meeting later in the same year.
Max Logan, newly elected president of the Young Demo's be,
lieves that the club's membership will increase substantially in the months preceding the 1964 election.
Little activity has been shown by the Young Democrats in recent months. The organization held only a few isolated business meetings in almost a year.
The Young Demo's had been too embroiled in internal difficulties until the end of the fall semester to be concerned with any kind of activity other than business meetings.
ALTHOUGH PART OF THE organization's problems could be traced to before 1960, the recent discord in the Young Democrats began March 14, 1962, when Barry Bennington was re-elected president. His second term as head of the club was short-lived, however.
A faction in the club, led by Fete Aylward, claimed that membership cards for Bennington's re-election were issued illegally.
A special election was held March 28,1962,and Aylward, Ellsworth senior,was elected to the position.But his term of office was likewise brief.
THE 1961-62 SCHOOL year ended with the club having no president chosen for the 1962-63 term. Bickering over the club's top office continued last fall.
A faction opposing Aylward charged that the election had not been held in accordance with the Young Democrats constitution.
Without any form of organization, the Young Democrats held no meetings except sessions for the
purpose of attempting to solve the organizational problems.
After the Christmas break, Bennington, Cheney senior, said he planned to become a counselor in a men's residence hall for the spring semester and would not be eligible for the president's office he and Aylward were still fighting for.
Finally, on Jan. 19, Bennington nominated Aylward, Logan and John Young to serve as directors of the organization until a new president could be elected.
With this "trio" in power, the Young Democrats finally had a meeting Feb. 27. John Ise, KU professor emeritus of economics, spoke at the meeting. Leaders of the club were pleased with the turnout of about 40 persons at the club's first meeting in nearly a year.
LOGAN WAS UNANIMOUSLY elected president March 6. So far, he's still president of KU Young Democrats.
Logan said he plans to call another meeting in April. He hopes to secure Jack Glaves, state Democratic chairman, to speak. The Young Democrats' president also hopes to stage a picnic in May.
McCormack, Abilene junior, has held a more secure position. He was elected president of Young Republicans last spring and has held that position without challenge ever since.
But, this lack of organizational problems hasn't meant that the Young Republicans Club has been more active than the Young Democrats to an overwhelming extent.
(Continued on page 12)
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 3, 1963
A Fighting Chance
They want to abolish boxing. It is a cruel, nasty business not worthy of the name "sport."
They are right when they say it is cruel. It is worse than that; two defending world champions have lost their lives as a result of boxing, in the last two years. First, Benny Paret, and then last week, Davey Moore.
Both were uneducated, common men whose sole claim to even fleeting fame was their ability to do more damage to an opponent than they received.
BUT WHAT is odd about their deaths is that the righteous and the sincere men who want to abolish boxing should really care about what happened to them. By the present-day social yardstick, neither Paret nor Moore are deserving of tears.
So why do those who want to abolish boxing bother themselves with such inconsequential men? Had Paret and Moore had the good sense to stay out of that nasty, cruel sport, they could have died natural deaths. Or perhaps, because they had no marketable skills, they could have died in prison for stealing.
IT IS A cinch that if Paret and Moore had had the good sense not to try to earn acclaim and wealth at the only thing they could do well, no one would have mourned their deaths.
This reveals something about the people who want to abolish boxing. These people feel an obligation to protect future Moores and Parets from their own ignorance.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
But just how dumb do these saviors think Paret and Moore and their fellow boxers are? They knew better than anyone the risk of dying in the ring. These men know the pain of their profession.
PARET AND Moore would have been anything but surprised if told they could die in the ring. But they went ahead. The reason they went ahead is important. At least to the Parets and Moores of the world.
They went ahead because it was the one door open to them which could give to them and their families what every man wants and has a right to try for. Even at the risk of his life.
What really bothers the people who want to abolish boxing is that the sport apparently feeds
on some sick obsession of the people who pay their money to watch it. They view it as a cancer in the heart of society.
BUT WHAT about the cancer in society which condemns a black man to a life of being a secondrate citizen, a man who must renounce all hope of ever possessing the things which fill every white man's heart with hope?
Just where do these people recommend the Parets and Moores of today and tomorrow turn for an honest glimmer of hope? Ditch-digging, or maybe janitor work?
Let us hope not. For if the ever-lasting dream of America is smashed—that every man, regardless how poor his parents, can make it "big"—we smash to earth the heart and vitality of the American spirit.
JUST WHAT do these people think keeps those in the tenement slums and worse from rising to open rebellion? It certainly is not the "hope" of someday rising to the high, exalted post of janitor.
This hope and belief—backed by the living evidence of Jack Dempsey, Rocky Marciano and a multitude of others—that even the uneducated can make it, is what keeps them from the throats of the very people who want to abolish this vehicle of social escalation.
If these people think that anything but hope sustains those who are so dumb as to fight for a living, they are wrong.
HISTORIC documentation of people without hope revolting is resplendent. Karl Marx wrote a manifesto for a people sealed off from the top without hope.
Not that open revolt will follow the abolition of boxing; it won't. But before these people start saving the Parets and Moores from their own ignorance, let the saviors find a suitable substitute for the Parets and Moores.
They allow their rightfully pained consciences to burn one of the few remaining bridges from poverty to the "big time."
Indeed, it is a sad commentary that men have to turn to bashing each other's faces to earn their spot in the sun.
But even the lowliest man in America deserves that much of a chance.
— Terry Murphy
STUDY ASSIGNMENTS FOR FINALS
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BOOK REVIEWS
MIGNON. by James M. Cain (Bantam, 60 cents).
Cain was a big name in the thirties and forties, and his novels became smashing movie thrillers. He lost his touch years ago, and so many others write in the hard-boiled school that he seems almost old-fashioned. "Mignon" is a sensational tale, raw and realistic, unadorned by writing of any beauty, fast-moving, a historical novel with touches of the fifties.
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TEN NORTH FREDERICK, by John O'Hara (Bautam, 75 cents).
John O'Hara, like Marquand before him, has dealt with the theme of failure. The hero of "Ten North Frederick" is like the other O'Hara heroes, an essentially unlikable slob who has one big love affair, one unhappy marriage, and a life that really can't be set down as a success. The book appeared in paperback format several years ago. This is a reprint.
Candidate's Qualifications
Editor
Letters to the Editor
In listing his qualifications for Student Body Vice-President, John Underwood has attempted to place himself in a favorable light. This is perhaps a natural phenomenon of propaganda, but the extent to which he has tried this practice and the misrepresentation of the facts he lists is extremely gross.
In a recent VOX information sheet titled "Meet the VOX Candidates!" John lists eight qualifications. Of these eight, six are either completely inaccurate, or are partially so. These qualifications are listed as follows:
(1) HE IS presently MRA representative from Templin. In truth John was a representative to the MRA but he is not presently a representative to that organization.
(3) He is a member of the Social Committee for Templin. He is not on the Social Committee now, nor has any record been found of his participation on that Committee to any other extent than as a resident of the hall helping with decorations for dances.
(2) He is a member of the Templin Senate. Yet, upon a check of the minutes of the Templin Senate, no record was found of his participation as a Senator.
(5) John is a member of AURH and was a delegate to the Midwest Convention. That he was a delegate to the Midwest Convention is only partially true since he participated in name only and did not actually show up for the convention.
(4) HE IS Templin's representative to People-to-People. He is not Templin's representative to P-t-P nor does Templin have a personal representative to P-t-P.
(6) John is a member of ASC.
No problems here; this is a fact.
(7) John is now serving on the Committee on Committees and Legislation. OK.
(8) AS TO his participation as a delegate to the Big Eight Student Conference, we may view this inaccuracy from his own report to the Templin Senate: "A Big Eight Student Government Conference will be held at MU Dec. 14 and 15; the council voted to send Jerry Dickson, Dean Salter, Greg Turner, Kay Kash, and Scott Payne." John attended on his own expenses but was not voted to be a delegate to the Convention by the ASC.
As can be seen from the above listings, John Underwood has falsified his qualifications before the student body. As such, it becomes extremely difficult to justify these qualifications as they concern a candidate for Student Body Vice-President.
Walt Chappell Wichita senior
Campus Politics
--ing, which had been scheduled for over two months. 2) The other condition of the debate was that both John Underwood and Doug Hall (vice-presidential) attend, but it seems that Mr. Underwood just couldn't make it.
Friday's (3 29 63) UDK "Letters to the Editor" column contained a letter by K. K. Kuntzelman and Diana Morphew accusing University Party of using unfair tactics in regard to a debate that was to be held at Corbin last Tuesday. I, also attended the debate which did not take place, because of Vox Populi's unwillingness to extend fair courtesies to UP.
Editor:
Agreed, Charles Whitman did not attend, but for very good reasons:
1) Both candidates were to agree on said time and place; a) Vox set the debate for March 28th at 7:00 p.m. and then kindly INFORMED (not asked if the debate was at an agreeable time) Mr. Whitman when the debate was to be held; b) UP already had a 6:00 p.m. meeting at GSF and a 7:30 UP assembly meeting, which had been scheduled for over two months. 2) The other condition of the debate was that both John Underwood and Doug Hall (vice-presidential) attend, but it seems that Mr. Underwood just couldn't make it.
IN REFERENCE to the tape recorder, which was there not to record any particular Vox remarks, but by chance—since the person who brought it happened to be there and decided to record the debate (not just Vox) before going to record another meeting.
It seems, to me, that Vox should be flattered to have its remarks recorded for posterity, instead of fearing that they had "goofed" and not wanting anyone to know.
Marcia Spicer
Wichita freshman
***
Dear Firm-jawed and Jealous "Warmonger."
Peace Movement
In reference to your expert advice of March 29th for one Peter
University of Kansas student newspaper
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Allen, Mr. "respectful (but not very)" A-h, you should have attended the meeting so that you don't misquote or read between the lines.
First of all, a minor correction of the Kansan: the topic of the SPU discussion reported beneath the "open-mouthed vagabond" — and thank God that P. A. didn't try to talk with his mouth closed — was "How Can the Peace Movement Succeed." The following day the topic was "The Causes of the Cold War."
SECOND, P. A. stated explicitly that neither he nor the SPU is for unilateral disarmament (although certain members may advocate such a policy).
Finally, when P. A. read the purported paraphrase that although a majority of Americans don't participate in the peace movement, most of them support such movements, he said that this was not entirely accurate reporting. Obviously most Americans do not support the peace movement, and our "dear intre vagabond appeaser" is all too aware of this fact. He was campaign manager for an unsuccessful Peace candidate. Sidney Lens, so knows in more than his SPU field staff capacity that not even a plurality of Americans cast their lot on the side of the peace movement per se.
TRUE, VIRTUALLY all Americans (as well as all other homo sapiens) are for peace—and a comment to that effect was made by one of the SPU members at the discussion, but the sad fact is that too many of them are like you; they want peace (or "victory") at any price—including sacrifice of the human race. That kind of peace—a still lifeless world—as President Kennedy (and K. and Co.) realize, would only be "ashes in our
mouths." Think of your ashes, Mr. Ash, and you may not be so cynical about the peacemakers.
**
Wilfred Danielson Lindsborg senior
Apathy and Discourtesy To the KU Student Body
At the special convocation of Friday, March 29. 1963 (an hour when classes were dismissed for the occasion) you had a rare opportunity to bear a man, who as a United Nations representative, is deeply involved in the multitude of happenings in our world today. I have no idea of the specific number of students present, but it was appalling to me to see the great number of vacant seats in Hoch Auditorium. Your academic life here at KU should go far beyond the brief time you spend in the class room and should also concern the many additional functions of educational value which are made available to the student body.
ALSO WHEN the 10:20 whistle blew signifying the end of the class period which was not meeting, many students left the auditorium during the concluding remarks of the speaker. It was most disconcerting to me as a listener to hear the rustle of seats and the opening and closing of doors, while the Honorable F. H. Boland brought the address to a close; I wonder how he felt at such a discourteous display? We as students are faced with many challenges today, a great deal more than those which confront us in the class room. It is up to all of us as "educated adults" to meet and show interest in these challenges.
Jerry S. Weis
Lawrence graduate
student
Wednesday, April 3, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Pacifist Fears British Role In World War
Bertrand Russell does not oppose war on the general principle of pacifism, according to Joseph Russell, a visiting professor from Glasgow, Scotland.
"He opposes something quite definite — British participation in a particular war." Prof. Russell said
Prof. Russell] said the British philosopher was intensely opposed to World War I because he realized it would be more horrible than all previous wars.
BERTRAND RUSSELL believed Germany would defeat France if Britain withdrew from the war.
"But he felt this would be more desirable than the lunatic carnage of war," Prof. Russell said.
Study Group to Hear Recording by Russell
A recording of a speech made by Bertrand Russell will be played at a meeting of the Great Men of the 20th Century study group tonight at 7:30 in the Meadowhark Room of the Kansas Union.
"He has not really participated in the European academic community or shared its interests since then," Prof. Russell said.
Russell made the speech at a peace conference in London.
As a result of his pacifist activities during this period Russell was rejected by the European academic world, charged with subversion and jailed by British authorities.
Concerning Bertrand Russell's philosophic method, Prof. Russell said:
"INSTEAD OF putting forth original ideas on philosophical morality, he applies particular views on morality to practical problems." he said.
Russell advocates the view of John Stuart Mill, who believed the right thing to do is "that which will create the greatest amount of happiness." Prof. Russell said.
He said Russell is against all faiths, Christian or non-Christian, because he feels they are morally wrong and wicked.
"HE ADVOCATES acting vigorously on best beliefs, always maintaining a skepticism of that belief," Prof. Russell said.
He said critics attacked Russell for his belief of pursuing one's own happiness. The critics said the happiness of others and society in general should be given more consideration, Prof. Russell said.
"He said. If you want to be happy yourself, you'll have to put up with your neighbors being happy too," Prof. Russell said.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 3.1963
Education School Cites "Outstanding Senior"
By Willis Henson
A Lawrence student was named the outstanding senior in the School of Education last night at the Student National Education Association Banquet.
Mrs. Elizabeth Keller was recognized for services in leadership and scholarship. She has traveled to Europe for study, been active in the SUA, and worked with the Campus Chest crusade. Mrs. Keller is also a member of PhiLambda Theta, honorary educational fraternity.
He pointed out that only recently have foreign languages been considered a critical subject to be taught in schools. He said World War II set the precedent for the teaching of foreign languages.
The presentation of the award preceded a talk by Seymour Menton, professor of romance languages.
Prof. Menton said that during the war, men were taught to speak foreign languages at a rapid pace. He said under the Army Specialization Training Program (ASTP), years of class work were squeezed into three months.
The ASTP showed educators languages could be taught in a short length of time. Prof. Menton said
He said after the war, the teaching of foreign languages was advocated in grade schools.
He said grade school pupils can easily learn foreign languages because "they are less self-conscious, and their vocal chords are more receptive." They also can learn cultural background better.
Prof. Menton feels that language training should start at the third or fourth grade. He said the number to
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However, he cautioned that "a better articulation" should exist between secondary and elementary schools. He said the improvement should start in high schools.
Colleges must also upgrade their programs, he said, in order to cope with the improving situation.
"We must face up to these problems" and consider other teaching methods, Prof. Menton said.
Concerning educational television, Prof. Menton said he would not eliminate the classroom teacher. But, an era of automation was set in motion in the teaching of foreign languages.
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Wednesday, April 3, 1963 University Daily Kansan
British Physicist Speaks Tomorrow
Page 5
A. Nobel Prize-winning atomic physicist will deliver the first Kenneth A. Spencer Memorial lecture at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the University Theatre.
Sir John Cockroft will speak on "Scientific Problems and Progress in the Development of Nuclear Science."
The lecture honors the late Kenneth A. Spencer, Pittsburg and Kansas City industrialist. Spencer made significant gifts to the KU School of Medicine and the Engineering Science Research Center before his death in 1960.
Cockroft and E. T. S. Walton won the Nobel Prize in 1951 for work in transmuting lithium and boron by high energy protons with equipment of their invention.
Fry It Out—Kansan Classified
Tractor Restriction Passed
TRENTON, N.J. — (UPI) — The Senate passed a bill yesterday to put farm tractors to bed with the chickens.
The bill said tractors should not be driven on public roads between sunset and sunrise because such machines are not subject to the night driving equipment inspection requirements of normal motor vehicles.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 3. 1963
Hicks Win Intramural 'Hill' Volleyball Crown
An experience-loaded Hicks team defeated four-time fraternity champion Sigma Chi for the "Hill" intramural volleyball championship in Robinson Gymnasium yesterday.
THE HILL "B" championship went a full three games. Independent Liahona won the opening game 15-13, but fraternity champion Beta Theta Pi came from behind to win the last two 15-4 and 15-9 to win the title.
The match was decided in two games. The Hicks won the first game 15-6 and the second 15-5.
Experience was the Hicks forte. Leading the independent league champions was Dick Hoagland, a two-year Collegiate All-America for KU several years back. Supporting him were KU's three-sport letterman Jay Roberts, who has been playing volleyball since an early age under the tutelage of his father who was a Collegiate All-America, Bill Gamm, a varity volleyball player for KU in 1961, and John Hanson, who was a member of the Harriers team which won the "Hill" title last year. The remaining team members were Gary Potts and Larry Brown.
SIGMA CHI, which waltzed through its regular season to win the fraternity championship, too has quite a volleyball heritage. Starting in 1930 under the direction of former All-America Bob Russell, now a law student at the University of Missouri, the Sigs have won four consecutive fraternity A championships and two "Hill" titles. Last year, the Harriers wrested the title from Sigma Chi.
The Hicks were coached by Bob Lockwood, who was an All-America for KU and who coached the last varsity volleyball club the school fielded in 1961.
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"It was a real good game," said Hicks coach Lockwood. "We played a little better than we should have and the Sigma Chis did not play quite as good as they should have. They have a good team.
- ADVERTISERS -
A member of the Sigma Chi team and one of its organizers this year, John Reiff had this to say of the Hicks' victory. "We did not play as
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Nelson Leads KU To Victory
Page 7
Wednesday, April 3.1963
Coach Floyd Temple said that Nelson's 18 strike outs was the most ever recorded in a single game by a Jawahk pitcher to his knowledge. Temple has been KU's head baseball coach for nine years.
Jayhawker pitcher Carl Nelson did yesterday what five KU pitchers could not do the day before.
Nelson struck out 18 Arkansas batsmen while allowing only four hits and one walk to spearhead a 9-1 Jayhawker victory over the Arkansas Razorbacks.
AIDED BY three infield errors, the Jayhawkers scored two runs in the first inning. KU picked up another run on a Razorback infield error in the fourth inning.
The next KU action will be Friday and Saturday at the University of Oklahoma where the Jayhawkers open Big Eight play. KU placed third in the conference last year with a 13-8 record, while the Sooners placed seventh with an 8-13 mark.
THE JAYHAWKERS had used five pitchers Monday in losing to the Razorbacks 15-7 in the KU home season opener. Kansas now has a 3-2 record, while Arkansas' mark is 5-2. The only other Razorback loss was to Missouri, the defending Big Eight champions.
Nashville Favored In Women's Meet
ST. JOSEPH, Mo. — (UPI) —Top-seeded Nashville, Tenn., meets Marion's Lounge of Denver, Colo., in the second round of the national AAU women's basketball tournament.
Both teams were idle in yesterday's opening round play. Nashville, the defending champion, drew a bye, and the Denver club won by forfeit when Berkeley, Calif., failed to appear for the tournament.
The Jayhawks picked up three runs in the seventh with two of these resulting from infeld errors committed by the Razorbacks. Arkansas' only run came in the ninth inning with two outs. A hit, a hit batsman and an error loaded the bases. The only walk given up by Nelson forced in Marl Carter. Nelson, a senior, struck out the next batter to end the game.
Keith Abercrombie accounted for two runs in the fifth, when his sharp hit to left field was bobbled. Abercrombie, who was credited with a single, scored Dick Fanning and himself when a relay throw went astray.
Two to Miss Spring Drills
Two KU lettermen will miss spring football practice because of operations. Center Larry Fairchild underwent knee surgery last week. Fullback Willis Brooks will undergo shoulder surgery April 8. Coach Jack Mitchell will start spring practice April 15.
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813 Mass. McCoy's VI 3-2091
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified
VOTE-UP
CHARLES WHITMAN
and
DOUG
HALL
Candidates For President & Vice-President of the Student Body
For An Effective Student Government
Paid for by Committee for Better Student Government—Susan Flood: Chrmn.
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, April 3, 1963
Twenty-three Chosen as Candidates for Relays Queen
Twenty-three KU women have been chosen by their living groups as candidates for KU Relays Queen.
Candidates for NC 10th Grade
Those nominated are Deannin Beals, Independence, Mo., freshman Douthart Hall; Pat Wilson, Kansas City senior, Lewis Hall; Dee Woolridge, Des Moines, Iowa, senior, Alpha Delta Pi; Karen Lou Vice, St John junior, Alpha Chi Omega Margo Van Antwerp, Plymouth Mich., sophomore, Hachinger Hall; Edda Buchberger, Gmunden, Austria, graduate student, Alpha Omicron Pi.
Susie Caple, Neodesha freshman,
Watkins Hall; Mary Jozabradnik,
Kansas city sophomore, Chi Omega,
Erenda Harrison, Lincoln, Nebr.
junior, Lewis Hall; Merry Moore,
Raytown, Mo. junior, Lewis Hall.
Dana Hayes, Kansas City, Mo,
sophomore, Sigma Kappa; Dianne
Turner, Kansas City, Mo., junior;
Kappa Alpha Theta; Linda Bolan,
Wichita sophomore, Hachinger Hall;
Julie Winkler, Caney sophomore,
Sellards Hall; Sharon E. Law, Kansas
City, Mo., sophomore, Alpa
Kappa Alpha; Nan Johnson, Caldwell
sophomore, Hashinger Hall;
Mary K. Estes, Lubbock, Tex., sophomore, Delta Gamma.
Marjorie Anne Fischer, Lawrence sophomore, Gamma Phi Beta; Kay Wingert, Leawood sophomore, Alpha Phi; Janice Klusener, Lucas freshman, Miller Hall; Kay Cash, Cleveland, Ohio, junior, Piet Beta Phi; Martha Yankey, Wichita freshman, Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall, and Anne Graber, Hutchinson senior, Kappa Kappa Gamma.
Portraits of Distinction
Portraits of
Distinction
HIXON
STUDIO
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
Skiing
De Weese Designs
CALIFORNIA
Come to Hillcrest
"STRATEGY". . . sculptured tri-color lastex swim sheath. Colors softly shir from the feminine scoop neck and dip to join at the low-cut back, which is outlined with the famed 'Stretch-strap'. Boneless 'Sta-cup' inner bra assures a contoured uplift.
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COLORS: Orange/Gold/Yellow Black Sand White
KIRSTEN'S SPORTSWEAR
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EASTER FLOWERS
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LILIES For THE LADY
We Will Deliver EARLY EASTER MORNING
We Will Wire Your Orders ANYWHERE
CORSAGES
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Created to Order
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THOMAS
941 Massachusetts
Phone VI 3-3255
Wednesday, April 3.1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Cincinnati Orchestra Offers Precision, Beauty In Concert
The Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra offered a concert as pleasing for its rich, warm beauty of sound as for its crisp precision last night in Hoch Auditorium.
By Tom Winston
Conductor Max Rudolf's way with the Mozart overture was graceful and bubbling. The nearly 2,000 in the audience returned enthusiastic applause.
University audiences are seldom privileged to hear an orchestra with a sound so well blended that they can forget there are brasses, woodwinds, strings and percussion and be aware only of the magic of the music.
THE PROGRAM INCLUDED Mozart's "Overture to The Marriage of Figaro," Howard Hanson's "Fifth Symphony (Sinfonia Sacra)," Richard Strauss's tone poem "Death and Transfiguration" and Prokofieff's "Fifth Symphony."
The Hanson symphony is a musical pictorial of Hanson's views on the resurrection of Christ. The piece
is interesting from standpoint of orchestral colors, but it also seems like sort of a synthetic "Mathis der Maler."
THE ORCHESTRA USED both power and delicacy when it needed them, as in "Death and Transfiguration."
There were two encores: a Slavonic dance by Dvorak and the "Tritsch-Tratsch Polka" by Johann Strauss Jr. Rudolf seemed to enjoy every measure he conducted.
the Robert Joffrey Ballet, the Goldovsky Opera Company doing Puccini's "Tosca," the San Antonio Symphony under Victor Allesandro, and pianist Ralph Votapek.
THE PROGRAM CLOSED the Concert Course for this year. The Concert Course events for next year are Contralto Maureen Forster,
The Prokofieff sypmhony, which closed the program, was exciting. The orchestra's virtuosity showed itself here especially. Mr. Rudolf had fine control of musical tension and release, and it was a thrilling experience to watch him work.
Mr. Rudolf's technique was not flashy. He used an economy of motion and he made great music.
JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass.
OPEN 24 hrs. a day
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY
STUDENTS
Bring Your Car Repairs
to
DALE'S BODY SHOP
Where You Can Be Assured of Quality Work at Low Cost
704 VT.
VI 3-4732
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
PUBLIC NOTICE
EARLY BIRD SALE
Sale Starts Thursday-April 4-7:00 a.m.
FIRST COME-FIRST SERVE ON THESE SPECIALS
Wooden High Chair ... 88c
3 Table Lamps ... ea. 88c
Wooden Ironing Board ... 88c
Walnut Step Tables ... 88c
Wall Mirror ... 88c
Black End Table ... 88c
21" TV Cabinet
Car Bed and Car Seat 88c
Electric Kitchen Clock 88c
Walnut Wooden Chairs 88c
Hassock 88c
Portable Record Player 88c
Walnut Coffee Table 88c
3-Occasional Chairs ea. $1.88
Dresser 1.88
2-Table Lamps ea. 1.88
27 x 48 Throw Rug 1.88
2-Table Radios ea. 3.88
Platform Rocker 3.88
3' x 4' Plate Glass Mirror 3.88
36'' Gas Ranges 5.88
Wall Telephone 5.88
Floor Lamp, Table and Mag. Rack 4.88
2-9' x 12' Rugs ea. 5.88
2-Pole Lamps ea. 4.88
Wooden Wardrobe 8.88
4 Dr. Unfinished Chest 13.88
Dresser, Chest, 4/6 Bed all for 18.88
7-Pc. Walnut Dining Room Set 19.88
Reclining Chair - Damaged 36.88
New 5-Pc. Dinette Set 31.88
Bathenette $1.88
21" Motorola TV 1.88
Gas Range 1.88
Wall Pictures 1.88
4' x 6' Felt Rug 3.88
Folding Card Table 3.88
36" Gas Range 4.88
Vornado Window Fan 5.88
Walker and Stroller 5.88
Child's Desk and Chair 5.88
20" Apt. Size Gas Range 8.88
Radio Phono Comb. 7.88
Frigidaire Refrigerator 10.88
Radio and Phono Comb. 14.88
2-Sofas ea. 11.88
Abernathy Wal. Dresser and Bed 22.88
New TV Lounger 36.88
New 9' x 12' Rug 23.88
Terms Available . . . Delivery Can Be Arranged New and Used Furniture——Bought and Sold
THE TRADING POST
704 $ 1 / 2 $ Massachusetts
VI 3-2394
Page 10
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 3, 1963
The Arts of Reading Are Taught Free To Students In Three Outside Classes
This is the second of a three part series. Rv Carol Lathron
While the Student Tutoring Service is directed to the needs of a student in a particular course, the Reading and Study Skills Service directs its help to the general study needs of a student.
Three types of services are being offered this semester.
This free service is offered by KU to any student who wishes to improve his reading ability or his general study methods.
THE FIRST TYPE CONSISTS of classes in reading and study methods. Groups of approximately 25 students meet for 18, 50-minute sessions to work on such topics as preparing for examinations, reading for comprehension, taking notes, improving examination marks, developing vocabulary and preparing term projects.
The second type consists of classes in rapid reading. Selected students who appear to have the potentiality to improve their reading speed without significant loss in comprehension are allowed to enroll for work with reading accelerators and tachisto-scopes.
These machines increase reading speed by projecting images on a screen for a brief measured period of time. Thus, the time for seeing the image can be controlled, forcing the person to develop speed in reading and retention.
The rapid reading classes meet for 24 sessions of 50 minutes each.
THE THIRD TYPE CONSISTS of a class which is designed to develop skill in spelling through reading. The
course work is based on a development of visual discrimination skill with the aid of machines. It consists of a maximum of ten sessions.
There are three instructors who work in the Reading and Study Skills Service. All three have had experience as teachers and training in methods of instruction in reading.
Robert W. Ridgway, assistant dean and professor of education, is in charge of the program. Charles Tegeler, teaching assistant of education, is the director and head instructor.
A student will be interviewed by a counselor and, on the basis of his needs, will be offered an opportunity to enroll in a program designed to improve his reading speed and comprehension or his general study methods.
THE INSTRUCTIONAL programs are planned so that they require not more than two or three 50-minute meetings per week. Sections are offered at various times during the day so that a student may choose a convenient time.
Instructors of these services advise the student who is enrolled in a course not to expect an easy, magic road to improvement. The student's development in reading speed and
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8:00 a.m.-8:00 p.m. Sun.
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HOWEVER, ANOTHER student felt that the obtainable results were too slow in coming. She became discouraged and failed to complete the course.
Many other students expressed the same feelings.
comprehension and his facility in using the best study methods will depend on his own efforts in adopting the suggestions made to him.
One student who enrolled in the reading and study methods course said, "It helped me so much. I learned to pick out the important ideas of a paragraph instead of spending so much time with the whole thing. Now, when I go to study, I know what I'm looking for. I realize what points should be stressed because of their importance, and what parts I can forget."
Results from these three programs, though, show that if a student applies himself, he can improve his grades by one or two letters.
Director Tegeler feels that those
students who successfully complete the courses can usually make better grades than those students who have the superior mental ability.
Plans for moving the laboratories to larger facilities on the fourth floor of Bailey Hall are now underway. Additional instructors will be added if enrollments continue to increase.
Grease Jobs . . $1.00
Brake Adj. . . . 98c
Baldwin Art Theater Presents
PAGE CREIGHTON
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd
7 a.m.-11 p.m.
Automotive Service
Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel
Balancing
7 a.m. - 11 p.m.
STUDENTS
Baldwin, Kansas 7:30 p.m.
"THROUGH A GLASS DARKLY"
INGMAR BERGMAN'S
ROSALD RUSSELL • JACK HAWKINS
MAXIMILIAN SCHELL
ACADEMY AWARD WINNER,
BEST ACTOR
(JUDGMENT AT NUREMBER')
RICHARD BEYMER
The FREDERICK BRISSON
Production
FIVE
FINGER
EXercise
...it marks the sensitive spots in a woman's private life!
Screenplay by FRANCES GOODRICH and ALBERT HACKETT • Based on the stage play by PETER SHAFFER
Produced on Broadway by FREDERICK BRISSON and THE LAYWRIGHTS COMPANY • Directed by DANIEL MANN • A BOONS CORPO
COLUMBIA PICTURES presents
Swedish With English Subtitles
TO OUR ART PATRONS:
FIVE FINGER EXERCISE is not a foreign film, but is an excellent example of an American art picture; it is the faithful adaptation of Peter Shaffer's Broadway hit that won the New York Drama Critic's Award.
VARSITY ART Attractions
Gem Theater April 2,3,4
TOHOSCOPE EASTMAN COLOR
Also
"Don't Knock
the Twist"
Show Starts at Dusk
Sunset
DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 40
MOTHRA
TOHOSCOPE EASTMAN COLOR
Also
"Don't Knock
the Twist"
Show Starts at Dusk
Sunset
DRIVE IN THEATRE • West on Highway 90
Sunset
DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 00
MOTHRA
— Now! —
HILARIOUSLY HEARTWARMING!
M-G-M
presents
the
Courtship
of Eddie's Father
by
Glenn FORD
Shirley JONES
PANAVISION with METROCOLOR
ADULTS ONLY, PLEASE ALL SEATS $1.00
Showings at 7:00 and 9:00
Shows at 7:00 and 9:10 NEXT!
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a
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METRO-GOLDWYN-MAYER presents
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WITH
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in PANAVISION $ ^{\textcircled{*} } $ AND METROCOLOR
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788
CONTINUES
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
13th ANNIVERSARY SALE
REG. WEIGHT SUITS
REG. WEIGHT SPORT COATS
LONG SLEEVE
SPORT SHIRTS
WOOL POPOVERS
SWEATERS
WINTER JACKETS
CORDUROY SLACKS
AT
AMAZINGLY LOW PRICES
VI 3-4633
1420 Crescent Road
the university shop
It's Tube Time
STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES invites you to another
another
T.V. PARTY
Thursday, April 4
7:30 P.M.
in the South Lounge of the Union Building. HALLMARK HALL OF FAME presents
"THE INVINCIBLE MR. DISRAELI"
Refreshments will be served and
the History Department will speak at 9:00 P.M. immediately following the program.
DR. ALDON BELL
Wednesday, April 3. 1963 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
1957 T.W.N. Motorcycle 125 cc 2 cycle.
Dave Shreer or Don Wilkins. V-4
3044. 4-9
Registered "Pek" puppies. Call VI 2-1817
PRE-MED SENIORS: 46' mobile home
3 blocks from Medical Center in Kansas
with Contact Roy Hartley, 3610 Rainbow Blvd.
K.C., Kansas. J-2 09511- 4-16
MOBILE HOMES. Students! We our big
issue! Todd M Homes.
Homes! 328 N. 2nd. 4-5
1956 Buick convertible, radio, heater,
power. 1961 Volkswagen, like new. Would
consider trade for older car. See at 1244
Louisiana.
4-5
Barbell and weights, 110 lb set, $18.00
Barbell and weights, $45.00 Culi V1.
6:29 on 8:00 p.m.
New and used portables, standards and
electrics, Royal, Olympia, Smith Corona,
Boris typing papers, Lawrence Typewriter, 735
Mass, Phone VI 3-3644.
1861 Tru Tone stereo Hi-Fi automatic
device. HDD size: $39.95 Petten
Davis. = 723 Mass. 4-4
Mercedes 190 SL, 1957 model
color white
cost $225.00, Phone VI 3-0267, 4-4
1957 cell Volkswagen sedan. $425.00
Colon Charles Marshall. 4-3
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete hop dog nest —Pet phone VI 5:39:20 Modern, self-service. Open 8 to 16:30 p.m. week days.
1862 M.G.A. Mark II 1600. Like new, only $195.000. Low mileage, white walls, wire wheels, radio and tannaue. After 5 p.m. call VI 3-5860. 4-8
GUNS: S&W 38 Special, Marlin 22 leav-
er action rifle. Ammo. 45, 30-06, 9mm.
Selling fast at 5 per round. See this
more at Stouffer 6, apt. 8 - VI 3-1110. 4-3
Printed Biology Study Notes: 70 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta Notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50. tf
*YPING PAPER BARGAINS*: Pink typing paper 85c per ame. Yellow sheets 20c per ame. Per pound. The Lawrence Outlook 1005 Massachusetts, open all day Saturday, tt
Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive mimeographed and bound for $4.00 per call. CVI II 1-2901 for free delivery tf
All kinds of house plants. Potted . .
Including philodendron to be used for
room dividers and in picture windows
Phone VI 3-4207. tf
TYPIST—experienced in term papers and theses. Prompt service, reasonable rates, electric typewriter. Mrs. Floyd—VI 2-1582. 4-4
TYPING
MILLIKENS SOS — always first quality
typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines.
We also do tape transcriptions. Office
phone: 32-5920 12 p.m., 10213. Ma
Phone VI 3-5920.
"GOOD TYPING CREATES a favorable impression with instructors." For excellent typing of these and term papers call Miss Louise Pope, VI 3-1097. t
Will do neat and accurate typing in my
home. Experienced in themes, theses, and
term papers. Electric typewriter. Mrs.
Adcock. VI 2-1795. t
Dissertations, theses, manuscripts and term papers typed on new electric type- keys. Experience in education and sciences. Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI. II- 1546; f.
Theses, term papers, reports, typed quickly and accurately. Experienced typist; electric typewriter. Marian Graham. 1619 Del. — VI 3-0483. tf
Former secretary and English major
Will do neat typing — term papers,
theses, reports, etc. Reasonable rates
Ms. Crompton—1311 N.H. tt
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, these. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Reasonable rates. Mrs Charles Patti, V 3-8379. Ct
Experienced typist does term papers
and reports on electric typewriter. Special symbols and signs. Prompt and reasonable rate* Mrs
Cook at 200 Rhode Island Phone
V1-37485
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, Electric curate writer, Reasonable Electric curate writer, Meldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8586 tf
Phone in your Classified Ad
Good typist. Would like to do term papers and theses. Mrs. Oxford. VI 2-0675.
Efficient typist. Would like typing in her home. Special attention to error reports.
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
Prompt neat accurate work on wide carriage electric typewriter. Journalism-Business secretary experience. Charlotte Weber, VI 3-3495. tt
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast, accurate, neat work, reasonable rates Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff, VI 2-1749. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tf
WANTED
Used cars - highest prices paid. Call VI 3-
8911. 601 Vermont. t
TRANSPORTATION
TRAVEL
Need a ride to the East Coast for Spring
vacation. Call Kenneth C. Leone, V4-5
Fly to FLORIDA and the BAHAMAS for Spring vacation. Private charter flight. Still have room for two more boys or girls. Cheaper than commercial. For information call Jay Rupar-VI 3-8544
4-3
Travel Arrangements Home
For
Contact
BUSINESS SERVICES
Maupintout Associates
Mall Shopping Center
VI 3-1211
MISCELLANEOUS
*Brotherhood* or "Speak Up for Peace",
in the Masters, 840°. Ky—No
gation. 4-5
Free Bumper Stickers: "Not Bombs but Brotherhood" or "Speak Up for Peace"
Write Jim Masters, $ 840_{12} $ $ \mathrm{K y} $ —No obligation 4-5
Matt Gras, formerly of College Barber
At the Amy Barber School--8421. Mass.
Transportation plus parking convenience
ride a new motor scooter of your choice,
demonstrate and sell in your spare time.
Blevin's Bike Shop, 7th
and Michigan.
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center, 1218
Conn. Personal service—sectionsalized
dancers, chameleons, turtles,
guinea pigs, etc., plus complete list
pet supplies.
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For
Form 92108. Ola Smith 3-5263. 939% Mass.
Call VIII 3-5263.
Consideration is being given to applicants for the position in the KU Psychological Clinic. Graduate training and experience in the field are required. Interested, call VI 3-2700. Ext. 3524 4-5
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. ttd
FOR RENT
HELP WANTED
Delivery boy for Campus Hideaway
Hours 5 p.m. to 1 a.m.—1 to 3 days per
week. Just have a care commission plus
Durham Campus Hideaway–VI 3-9111. 4-23
Rooms for women graduate students. Call VI 2-1689. 4-5
Air-cond, furnished apartments centrally
serviced by a refrigerator and stove. Call VI 3-2480.
Large 2 room, 2nd floor furnished apartment. Newly decorated and cleaned. Share bath with one. $50.00 per month all utilities paid. Call VI 2-2539. 4-8
Sleeping and study room for upperclassman. Also want to share apartment with graduate student. Near campus. Call 3-4890 afternoons or evening. 122 La.
Dunley two bedroom with stove and re-
tricity. Call VI 1-2281. *elect*
if
Close to KU as 1st floor, 5 room apartment. Unfurnished. Pay utilities except water. $75 McGrew Agency, VI 3-1055; after hours phone Mr Dicker at X 3-7431
Crescent Heights Apartments, 25th & Redbud: Rear entrances, Large utility room off street parking. Built in ranges Refrigerators - 2 Bdrms 840 sq. ft. Heating - Fully Carpeted and Draped Garbage disposals - Air-conditioned. Dumpster for 1 year's Lease. Manager, 2456 Redbud Hall. Ph. VI 2-3711. 4-12
LOST
Lost—Pair of glasses, black frames in brown burlap case. Lost between Murphy and Watson. If found please call Marle Gelsier. VI 3-8255. 4-4
Assignment: build superior stamina into our cars!
Result: Ford-built cars demonstrate outstanding durability in competitions like the Daytona 500
Results of recent competitive events prove dramatically the durability and reliability of today's Ford-built cars. Our cars swept the first five places in the Daytona 500 for example. More important to you—Ford-built entries had the highest ratio of finishers in this grueling test of stamina! Less than half—just 23—of the 50 starters finished; 13 of them were Ford-built!
Competitions such as the Daytona 500 are car killers. Piston rings can fail, transmissions can be demolished and engines blow up under these maximum efforts. It's a grinding demand for total performance and Ford-built cars proved they could take it better than any of the others.
Quite an eye-opener for car buyers. And conclusive proof that superior engineering at Ford Motor Company has produced more rugged engines and transmissions, sturdier bodies and frames and better all-round durability for today's Ford-built automobiles.
MOTOR COMPANY
The American Road, Dearborn, Michigan
Ford
WHERE ENGINEERING LEADERSHIP BRINGS YOU BETTER-BUILT CARS
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 3, 1963
Lawrence Voters Defeat Swim Pool
Three city commissioners and three school board members were chosen and a swimming pool bond proposal defeated yesterday in the Lawrence City elections.
Ernest Pulliam, housing manager for the KU dormitory department, and James Schubert, manager and owner of the Jay Shoppe, a women's ready-to-wear store, were elected to four-year terms on the Lawrence City Commission.
Fred Cooper, partner in the Cooper-Warren Mortuary, was elected to a two-year term on the commission. Cooper was the only incumbent to seek a second term.
The two candidates who received the highest number of votes serve four-year terms. The other newly elected commissioner serves a two-year term.
Mrs. Ethan Allen, wife of the chairman of the KU political science department and governmental research bureau, was elected to serve a second term on the Lawrence school board. She was appointed to the board to fill a vacancy in 1958.
Ray Culberson, vice-president and Lawrence manager of Capitol Savings and Loan Association and Oscar Rumsey, co-owner of the Rumsey Funeral Home, were also elected to the School Board. This is Rumsey's second term.
A bond proposal to construct a $195,000 swimming pool in Broken Arrow Park, four blocks south of 23rd and Louisiana was defeated 3,155 to 3,817. This is the third defeat of a proposal for a city swimming pool. Similar proposals were defeated by a 7-3 margin in 1956, and a 2-3 margin in 1961.
Political Clubs—
(Continued from page 1)
McCORNACK FEELS the most significant activity of the Young Republicans in the fall semester was participation in a statewide caravan in congressional candidate Bob Dole's behalf.
About 40 persons attended a first semester meeting at which Rep. William Avery spoke, and about 30 Young GOP's members watched an election night debate between Young Republicans and the then leaderless Young Democrats
Second semester action began with the announcement that the Young GOP's would conduct a statewide poll to sample student opinion on the University of Wichita status issue.
The poll was something short of being a success, however.
THE SURVEY, devised as a "public service," was to include the views of 200 students at each of the five state universities and
colleges and the municipal university at Wichita.
Of that 200-student goal, only 88 were contacted at KU. The total of 475 students contacted at KU, Kansas State University, Emporia State and Fort Hays State, represents a group considerably smaller than the 1,200-student goal.
Polling at Pittsburg State and Wichita U. apparently never took place.
ABOUT 35 YOUNG REPUBLICans heard Kansas Atty. Gen, William Ferguson speak at the club's only scheduled meeting so far this semester.
Officers of Young Republicans for next year will be elected at a meeting scheduled for April. McCormack said he hopes to arrange for Rep. Avery or Gov. John Anderson to speak at a meeting following spring vacation. He also indicated that the Young GOP's might have a picnic in May.
International Students: Turn in the book of the Foreign Student, Adviser, 228 Strong Hall, by Friday evening. The form will be sent to April International Campus newsletter.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Le Département des Langues Romanes presente un film français en couleurs, qui est édité par comédie de Moliere, mercurel le 3 avril a sept heures du soir, dans le Theatre de la rotes sont joues par des membres de la Comédie Francaise. Entrée gratuite.
El Atenes es reunir el miercoles el 18 de mayo
Fraser. La Senora Christina Escher dara
una conferencia titulada "El Salvador y
en Centroamérica." Todos
innovatios.
Mathematics Colloquium, 4:30 p.m.
109 Strong Hall (coffee at 4:00 in 119
Classes of Abelian
Groups" by E. Jamespeaker, Jr., New
Mexico State University.
Radio Production Center, 7:30 p.m.
Radio 220 Flint. Executive Committee
Meeting
Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel.
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses, 7:00 a.m., 11:40 a.m.
St. John's Catholic Chapel, 1910
Stratford Road
SCHEDULED INTERVIEWS
If you are interested in a teaching position for September, 1963, in any of these areas, please sign up for an interview in 117 Bailey Hall.
April 4-117 Bailey - Northview Public Schools, Grand Rapids, Michigan.
April 5—117 Bailey-Midlothian, Illinois Public Schools (Cook County).
Rugby Players Shy of Girls
GOSPORT, England — (UPI) The Rev. Tony Naden says he has formed a mixed rugby team of boys and girls aged 14 to 20, but is having difficulty booking games.
"Most of the clubs around here seem to fight shy of tackling girls," he said.
D&G
AUTO SERVICE
VI 2-0753
½ blk. E. 12th & Haskell
JOE'S BAKERY
Open 24 Hours
Night Deliveries
112 W. 9th VI3-4720
PRESENTS
SUA CLASSICAL FILM SERIES
"ASPHALT JUNGLE"
WEDNESDAY----7:00 p.m.
FORUM ROOM IN UNION
Library Announces Vacation Schedule
ADMISSION
$.60
Watson Library will begin its spring vacation schedule by closing at 12 noon Saturday.
The library will be open during vacation according to the following schedule:
April 6 8 a.m.-12 noon
April 7 (closed)
April 8-11 8 a.m.-5 p.m.
April 12-13 8 a.m.-12 noon
April 14 (closed)
'Sultan' Murders Neighbor
The library will be closed Saturday afternoon, April 6, while KU electrical power is being interrupted and put on a temporary line. It will again be closed Friday afternoon, April 14, while a new power system is being connected
DAX, France — (UPI) — Zoo officials reported yesterday that a lion named Sultan smashed a wire grill and killed the lion in the next cage.
Branch library schedules will be posted at their entrances. Watson Library will resume its regular schedule Monday, April 15.
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NO CARS ON campus does not halt election communication. Don Welch, Prairie Village freshman, contacts workers at Murphy Hall and the Kansas Union from in front of Strong Hall with a "walkie-talkie."
Two direct-line telephones between polls are being used for the first time in this election.
"Walkie-talkies" and direct-line telephones have been called into play in this year's election.
One line connects the main poll in Strong Hall with the poll in Murphy. The other connects Strong with the Kansas Union.
Phones Speed Intrapoll News
"I SHUDDER TO THINK what it might have been like if we hadn't had them. They were used an awful lot today." Bock Tieszen, McPerson junior who is elections committee chairman, said.
★★
He explained the devices are properly called "full period phones." When the receiver at one end is picked up, the telephone at the other end rings.
Tieszen said use of the phones in future elections is up to the election committee, but he recommended they be used.
ALTHOUGH THIS is the first election in which the phones have been used, Tieszen said walkie-talkies were used when the polls were first decentralized last semester.
They were being used by University Party yesterday to direct car pool operations.
Daily Hansan
"They didn't work too well, because of static from the car engines," said Alan Stamper, Plainville junior. He said the devices would be used for at least a while, today.
Thursday, April 4. 1963
60th Year, No. 118
TOPEKA — (UPI) — Opponents of the Wichita University Act, angered by University President Harry Corbin's reaction to the new law, pressed for its repeal today in the state legislature.
The Wichita University Act, bringing the municipal university into the state system of higher education, was signed into law last week by Gov. John Anderson.
The House Education committee planned to introduce legislation to repeal the act as soon as the bills could be drafted.
W. U. Opponents Press for Repeal
Award Draws 35 Nominees
Thirty-five faculty members have been nominated for the 1963 Hope Award, according to Mary Ann Warburton, Coffeyville senior and chairman of the selection committee.
The Hope Award is given each year to the outstanding faculty member by vote of the students.
Others from the College are Seymour Menton, professor of Romance languages; Franklyn Nelick, associate professor of English; C. P. Osborne, professor of philosophy; Edward Ruhe, associate professor of English; Frederick Samson, associate professor of physiology; Ambrose Saricks, professor of history; James Seaver, professor of history and director of western civilization; Vincent A. Serpa, assistant instructor of Romance languages; A. A. Strassenburg, associate professor of physics; Arvid Shulenberger, associate professor of English; Lewis Whee-lock, lecturer of history.
A furor developed yesterday over remarks Corbin made about the school coming into the state system, however, and the education committee voted 10-9 to introduce legislation repealing the act.
THE NOMINEES from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences are Oswald Backus, professor of history and the Slavic Soviet area; Gordon Bennett, assistant instructor of English; Cora Downs, professor of bacteriology; William Gilbert, associate professor of history; Stephen Glass, instructor of classics; J. Eldon Fields, professor of political science; Sidney Johnson, professor of German; Paul Kitos, assistant professor of biochemistry; Austin Lashbrook, associate professor of classes; and Stuart Levine, assistant professor of English.
BRUCE A. LINTON and Calder M. Pickett, professors of journalism, are the nominees from the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information.
The Business School nominees are H. K. L'Ecuyer, associate professor of business administration, and Keith W. Weltmter, professor of business administration.
Oscar Haugh, professor of education, and Nita Wyatt, assistant professor of education, are the nominees from the School of Education.
NORRIS S. NAHMAN, associate professor of electrical engineering, is the nominee from the School of Engineering.
Nominees from the School of Fine Arts are Robert Montgomery, instructor of design, and Joseph Wilkins, professor of voice.
Edward Smissman, professor of pharmacy, is the nominee from the School of Pharmacy.
PAST RECIPIENTS who are ineligible for the 1963 Award are also among the nominees. They are Clayton Krebblah, associate professor of music and 1959 Award winner; R. Q. Brewster, professor of chemistry and 1960 Award winner; Allen Crafton, professor emeritus of speech and drama and 1961 winner; and Vaclav Mudroch, assistant professor of history and winner last year.
The Hope Award committee, which is composed of one senior from each school, will examine the qualifications of each nominee.
The criteria are based on the nominee's willingness to help students, his success in stimulating students or challenging the students toward thinking, devotion to the profession, contribution to the general cultural life at the university, and accomplishment of scholarly works.
The winner will be announced April 29 at the Senior Coffee.
The award of $100 is part of the senior class gift of 1959 to the University.
Change Seen in CRC Meetings
The Civil Rights Council discussed last night whether the council should continue meetings in the face of lagging support.
Don Warner, Topeka senior and chairman of the CRS, told members that he did not see any reason to continue the weekly meetings when no one comes to them.
The meeting was attended by three other members besides Warner. Marsha Dutton, Colby senior, Douglas M. Hager, Hutchinson junior, and Frederick Tiffany, Lyndon senior.
Negroes have attended two of the meetings this semester.
"We cannot operate as an effective group without Negro support," Warner said. "If we are not in contact with them we lose our line of communication and cannot fully understand the problems we are trying to solve."
Miss Dutton said the lack of Negro participation and the small meeting attendance were not the most important factors. She said a group of four is more effective than each person working individually.
Warner, however, said the group could accomplish much without stronger support. He pointed out that two of the four would be graduating this spring, leaving the CRC with two active members.
"There is still a lot we could do if we had more participation," he said.
"I began to wonder how much it was my responsibility to push people to come," he said. "For the last two weeks I haven't mentioned the meeting to anyone."
He said that until two weeks ago he mentioned the meetings to all the members.
Warner said that to get people to come it seemed there has to be some kind of a fireworks display. He said parades and sit-ins are not activities in which civil rights progress is made.
Last week the meeting was adjourned after ten minutes because only one member came.
He said that if they were aware of the situation, they might start coming to the meetings. He also suggested that if the Negro fraternities and sorority were interested, they might appoint one representative from their group to attend the meetings regularly.
Before any decision was reached, Warner decided that he should talk to some of the Negroes who have been supporting the CRC in the past.
"Our continuation depends on how many people are willing to set 7:30 Wednesday evening aside as the regular part of their schedule," Warner said.
VOTE
The group decided to hold a meeting after Spring vacation to determine whether they should continue to meet weekly or whether semi-monthly, monthly, or specially announced meetings would be best in the future.
A voter lends a hand in student government. The spring election, which ended today, brought 2400 students to the polls.
Slow Voting Pace Threatens 3 Seats
The only hitch in yesterday's voting occurred in Strong, when the heavy turnout exhausted the supply of ballots for the School of Pharmacy. The situation was corrected this morning.
Yesterday's total vote of 1.962 was well ahead of last year's first-day total of 1.656.
The voting pace slowed considerably this morning, stopped momentarily in Strong Hall, and the possibility looms that several schools will not be represented on the All Student Council next year.
Tieszen said the ASC constitution requires a minimum of 75 ballots to be cast from an academic district for that district to be represented on the ASC.
THE VOTING halted at one point when a woman student dropped her senior card into a ballot box in Strong. Elections Committee chairman Bob Tieszen summoned members from both political parties for witnesses and opened the box to retrieve the card. The woman hurried away.
Tieszen said today's total might not be as high, since fewer students would be on the hill for Tuesday- Thursday classes.
A total of 468 persons had voted at 11 o'clock this morning. This compares with 825 at 11 a.m. yesterday, and 538 at 11 a.m. on the second day last year. This year's total vote of 2,430 is ahead of the 2194 figure for a day and a half last year.
In the voting for the 13 ASC seats, three schools may not cast enough ballots to insure their representation on next year's council.
IN ELECTIONS of class officers yesterday's vote totals were: sophomore, 559; junior, 482; and senior, 577.
SO FAR. 27 votes have been cast in the School of Journalism, 48 in the School of Pharmacy, and 38 in the Graduate School. Sixty-nine ballots had been cast in the Law School.
Weather
Generally fair and warmer tonight with a predicted low in the 40s. Partly cloudy and warmer tomorrow with a high near 70. Today's high was in the 60s.
Newly appointed officers of People-to-People discussed plans yesterday for an expanded program next year.
The totals for the ASC seats at closing yesterday were: College men, 421; College women, 431; Business, 81; Education, 159; Engineering, 159; Fine Arts, 105; Graduate, 36; Journalism, 22; Law, 62, and Pharmacy, 43.
P-t-P Officers Plan Expansion
The officer appointments were made after a series of interviews yesterday. Jerry Harper, Lawrence junior, was appointed P-t-P chairman.
Harper said the main work next year would consist of refining existing P-t-P programs. The group will concentrate on the Brother-Sister program, he said, "For I feel there has been a lack of the right kind of activity in this program this year."
Harper said the group plans to enlarge the English-in-Action program and the Forum Committee.
Plans were also discussed concerning the creation of a Speaker's Bureau and a sports committee.
Other officers appointed yesterday are:
Patsy Price, Bartlesville, Okla,
junior, vice-chairman; Dave Martin,
Coffeville sophomore, vice-chairman;
Ray Edwards, Bethesda, Md.
sophomore, vice-chairman; Karen
Indall, Ottawa sophomore, executive
secretary; Milan Loupal, Prostecov,
Czechoslovakia, graduate student,
treasurer; Lance Burr, Salina sophomore,
American Students Abroad
chairman; Frank Bangs, Wichita
sophomore, chairman of the Brothers
program; Betsy Greer, Topeka junior,
chairman of the Sisters program;
Barbara Cowen, Junction City junior,
hospitality chairman; Barry
Farmer, Wichita sophomore, publicity
chairman; Joan Wohlgemuth,
Cummings junior, special projects
chairman; Helen Nott, Evanston, Ill.
sophomore, office staff chairman,
and Patty Koos, Mission sophomore,
membership chairman.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 4, 1963
Two Views on News
The Kennedy administration has been coming under increasing pressure to explain and to modify its news management policies. Hallelujah. Maybe we'll finally see some changes.
REPORTERS have leveled their criticisms at lies told by the government and at the barring of reporters from covering news events—all supposedly in the interests of "national security."
The reporters say, and rightly, that administrative lies told to the press and attempts by the administration to use the press to further its ends are never justifiable. They destroy the faith of the press in government reports and they destroy the faith of the public in both the newspapers and the government.
The second point—barring reporters from covering stories—has not been satisfactorily explained.
IT WAS reported by UPI that White House Press Secretary Pierre Salinger was asked at a meeting of the Women's National Press Club why the administration barred reporters from covering the U.S. fleet in its quarantine of Cuba when such bans on the press had not been imposed during actual war.
"This was a very difficult decision," Salinger replied. "It was taken because we felt that the only chance for real success was to keep the Russians guessing on how we would react should they attempt to run the blockade. We had to keep the element of surprise."
RUBBISH. President Kennedy explained over national television what he planned to do. How would the presence of reporters on the scene have changed what did happen?
The danger in the administration's attitude is that the public will never have more than the administration's word on what has been going on. And the administration has proved that its word is none too reliable. Some facets of the United States' connection with the Cuban invasion in 1961 have only recently come to light. It makes us wonder what else happened that we were never told about.
We're not saying that the Kennedy administration isn't trying to do its best to improve conditions in and concerning the United States. We are saying the administration doesn't have the right to act in secret without an outside source—the press—on hand to let the public know at least eventually what has taken place.
Minnesota Daily
We are indebted to James Reston, chief of the Washington Bureau of The New York Times, for bringing sanity into the congressional hearings on "managed" news. Broadcasters and newspaper executives have been accusing the government of deceiving the people in times of crisis and engaging in policies that restrict or distort the news.
Unfortunately, there is a basis for these accusations. The Defense Department still is inhibiting the flow of news by its rule that anyone who talks with a reporter must have an information officer present or report the conversation to the information office the same day. That is a bad rule and should be revoked.
BUT TO SAY, as did a vice-president of the American Newspaper Publishers Association, that there is "a really serious crisis in the credibility of Government pronouncements," is stretching a good point a long way. As part of his documentation the speaker cited an incident in the Eisenhower Administration, but by and large the critics of "managed news" were rather quiet during the time the great master of "managed" news, James Hagerty, was President Eisenhower's press secretary.
Mr. Reston told the Congressmen: "I think a good reporter can dig out of this town (Washington) a great deal more information than when I came here 25 years ago." That is the reaction of one of the best newspapermen in the business, and it points to something that a good many editors, reporters and publishers seem unaccountably to overlook.
That is that a major function of the newspaper is to unearth facts that someone wants to cover up. This, indeed, is the responsibility of the press, and the price it must pay for its constitutional guarantee of freedom. If it does not do this it is not doing its job and it is not, in fact, and is not worthy to be, free.
THIS IS in no way to condone any effort by Government to suppress or "manage" news to its own advantage. But it is a mistake to become so involved in blaming the Government that one forgets his own obligation to dig out the facts, break down the barriers, and print the truth no matter what is said or done.
— St. Louis Post-Dispatch
the took world
THE RESCUE, by Joseph Conrad (Doubleday Anchor, $1.45).
Perhaps the most exotic of all Conrad's novels of the sea is "The Rescue." Yet it is more than a romantic work; it also has in its central character one of literature's most overpowering figures.
The story itself seems only a step beyond the Dorothy Lamour-Jon Hall epics of two decades ago—a yacht that wrecks on a southeast Asian island shore, where a group of island chiefs are committed to restoring a young prince to his throne. Simple as it sounds, the development is more than exciting; it is suspenseful and profound.
The chief character is the English sea captain Linguard, who is torn by circumstances between his loyalty to the native prince and his love for an Englishwoman who is the wife of the yacht's owner. Conrad effectively describes the disintegration of Linguard.
* *
THE SCARLET FEATHER, by Dale Van Every (Bantam, 50 cents).
Dale Van Every not only is a novelist whose theme is the American frontier he also is a historian of some note. "The Scarlet Feather" is about Indiana in 1779, about settlers who came up the Ohio by keel boat, led by a Virginia aristocrat. Their encounters with a white renegade, who wants the daughter of one of the men, form much of the excitement.
LORDS OF THE PSYCHON, by Daniel F. Galouye (Bantam, 40 cents).
Here is a new science fiction volume, telling about life after the Third Nuclear War, when squatters lived in the ruins and the U.S. armed forces had to fight off the "Spheres," who could select any living human being.
$$
$$
READ, WRITE, SPEAK FRENCH, by Mendor Brunetti (Bantam,
95 cents).
This is a handy guide for students studying French. It includes help in reading, writing and speaking, conjugations, idioms, vocabulary, and reading selections.
Letters
Editor:
Apathy
I'd like to commend Terry Murphy for his article on apathy and the ASC.
Apathy, that pallid horror, has held this campus in its grip too long. We need more articles about apathy.
But, what's the ASC?
K. C. King
Junction City senior
* * *
Campus Politics
Editor:
In looking at the campaigning tactics in the current student elections one thought comes to my mind. Are the so-called political parties on campus really interested in improving student government or tearing each other apart?
It seems to me that real political organizations should concentrate on strengthening their own party platforms rather than attacking destructively another platform on issues of nebulous importance. If campus politics are to really mean something I think that the parties involved should assume a more professional appearance and cease making a force out of student government.
Flaine McRobbie Leawood freshman
Short Ones
The works of great poets have never yet been read by mankind, for only great poets can read them.
—Henry David Thoreau
To him whose elastic and vigorous thought keeps pace with the sun, the day is perpetual morning.
—henry David Thoreau
Ponderables
"False Prosperity" Feels Real
What's all this jazz about false prosperity? Just when I thought that I had it pretty good, Barry Goldwater tells me that I really shouldn't enjoy what I have because it is a mirage. I'm not really prosperous, it is just a delusion created by fuzzy-thinking economists.
He tells me that ours is a chrome-plated facade of prosperity ready to topple into a full-scale disaster from its putty-soft pedestal of federal spending.
THIS IS indeed a terrible prospect. It would mean—in the full sense of the word—depression.
Bread and soup lines, tin cups and pencils, and in general a situation that would dash my fondest dreams of someday owning the car that I drive plus a growing percentage of equity in a vine-covered cottage amidst the restful shade of a pin oak grove.
I suppose that I could learn to stand in line, hustle pencils and live (unhappily) in a brownstone tenement; but there is one thing I couldn't stand: Sen. Goldwater saying, "I told you so."
NOT THAT he wouldn't be right. It's just that while he was chirping the national anthem of the Predicators of Doom, he also would be sitting in his counting house. And there is another thing I can't stand: A rich I-Told-You-Soer.
But even if, by some miracle, this false prosperity I am astride on my ride to economic perdition should prove durable enough to last through my life, a problem would persist.
It would be double-edged. When I get up in the morning, I am putting on a shirt, sox, trousers, shoes and undies that are the fruit of a false prosperity. Now I ask you—how can I get anything done, if, as a conscientious, clear-thinking American, I continually have to wonder if it will all evaporate as Sen. Goldwater predicts?
WHY, IT would be terrible. My wife would send me to the supermarket (another mirage created by false prosperity) to pick up a dozen eggs, a No.10 tin of chow mein and a package of frozen breast of turtle, and before I got there, I would forget.
But it is natural I want to be a conscientious, clear-thinking, loyal American, and all conscientious, clear-thinking, loyal Americans spend 9 out of their 10 waking hours walking around in a snit looking for a tell-tale signal of the coming disaster. With that load on my mind, how can my wife possibly expect me to remember something as trivial as food?
But then again, it's understandable. My wife is one of those fuzzy-thinkers who doesn't realize that our car, clothing and food are just a mirage. She is just silly enough to believe that her appetite is satisfied by a plate of this imaginary food, our transportation needs filled by an imaginary car and that we are kept warm by clothes produced in a false economy.
BUT IT'S understandable; our car drives much like a car produced in a true economy, the food tastes much like food grown and marketed in a true economy, and our clothes look and feel like clothes produced and marketed in a true economy.
What makes it even more difficult to buy Sen. Goldwater's line is that I have no way of knowing how it feels to live in a true economy.
But I've heard from the survivors of the Dirty '30s that those true economy deals aren't so very much fun. They tell me that no matter how hard I try I'd never learn to like unemployment and CCC camps and the other things that go along with true economies.
THEN AGAIN, maybe that shows how right Sen. Goldwater is on another point: The youth of today have no sense of adventure. And we all know that's what made America great.
Just the same I'll go along and hope against hope that our economy doesn't fold into depression. It's a whole lot better than a guaranteed depression. Thanks anyway, Senator.
— Terry Murphy
Daily Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912 Telephone Vlking 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
Fred Zimmerman ... Managing Editors
Ben Marshall, Bill Sheldon, Mike Miller,
Art Miller, Margaret Cathcart ... Assistant Managing Editors
Scott Payne ... City Editor
Trudy Meserve and Jackie Stern ... Co-Society Editors
Steve Clark ... Sports Editor
Murrel Bland ... Photograph Editor
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Dennis Branstiter Editorial Editor
Terry Murphy Assistant Editorial Editor
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Jack Cannon, Business Manager; Jim Stevens, Assist. Business Mgr.; Mike Carson, Advertising Mgr.; Joanne Zabornik, Circulation Mgr.; Brooks Harrison, Classified Mgr.; Bob Brooks, National Adv. Mgr.; Charles Hayward, Promotion Mgr.; Bill Finley, Merchandising Mgr.
KU Guidance Bureau
Students' Aid to Understanding
Page 3
(The last of a three part series.)
By Carol Lathrop
"I understand the course material, and I know how to study for it. But I can't concentrate when I study."
That lack of concentration is just one of the problems the Guidance Bureau helps a student to solve.
THE BUREAU is another means beside the Student Tutoring Service and the Reading and Study Skills Service which offers assistance to a student who needs academic help. The bureau is located in room 116 in Bailey Hall.
Many people refrain from using this assistance, because they feel they are showing their immaturity by admitting they can not solve their own problems.
However, the modern trend is that people are no longer expected to solve their problems alone.
GORDON COLLISTER, director of the Guidance Bureau and professor of education, said. "It is a sign of maturity to admit that one needs help and it takes courage to do so."
A student seeking help need only go to the Guidance Bureau office and schedule an interview with one of the seven counselors. A preference
'Quill' Magazine On Sale this Week
The first spring semester edition of the Quill magazine is on sale this week in the Kansas Union, in front of the Trail Room.
The magazine, edited and published by the KU Quill Club, is selling for 50 cents. Sales will continue Friday.
The current editor of the Quill is Charles D. Nicol, Lawrence graduate student.
The Quill includes short stories, poetry, drama, and pictorial essays submitted by students.
Selections are evaluated by the editors and either accepted or rejected. A Quill spokesman said it is generally expected that the selections in the magazine are submitted by the more capable student authors on campus.
April 15 has been announced as the deadline date for the next edition of the Quill.
for a man or woman counselor will be honored. Prof. Colllister points out that successful communication with a counselor does not depend on conferring with the common sex — a once popular notion.
WITHIN A short time the student will be interviewed by a counselor. During this interview, the counselor will determine if the student needs to take aptitude, personality interest, or interest inventory tests.
If taken honestly, the tests indicate a great deal about the student. But tests can be influenced by the individual so as to make the tests inaccurate.
After the results of the tests have been tabulated, the student comes in for conference sessions. The number of these sessions depends on the individual needs of each student. Some students have one session a week for ten weeks, while others may have two or three sessions a week for any number of weeks.
"WE TRY to provide an atmosphere in which a student can think through his own problems," said Robert Shepherd, counselor at the bureau and assistant professor of education.
"There are many problems which account for a student's poor grades. We try to encourage a student to feel free to talk out these problems. In this way a student will come to realize why he cannot concentrate on a subject, or why he has a lack of motivation to learn." Prof. Shepherd said.
Often the reason for a student's unsuccessful attempt in reaching his goal is in the unrealistic approach that he takes toward his goal.
Prof. Shepherd said that the counselors at the bureau attempt to show the student an alternate, workable approach to his goal.
"BECAUSE HUMAN behavior is so changeable, counselors must realize a particular person under the right conditions can solve his own problems, but no attempt is made to psychoanalyze students in the Guidance Bureau," Director Collister said.
"We don't say to a student, 'yes, do this or, no, don't do that,' but rather we take him down each alternative path as far as we can," Shepherd said.
COUNSELORS have found it hard to dissect a student and separate his
educational, vocational, and emotional problems. This interaction has caused Richard Rundquist, Guidance Bureau counselor and professor of education, to seek more information about various educational and emotional problems involved in different occupations.
Prof. Rundquist and his classes have interviewed representatives of many different occupations. They ask these workers such questions as what education do you recommend for persons entering this field of work? What special problems are involved?
These answers are recorded and filed in the Guidance Bureau office. They are available to any student who wishes to come in and listen to them.
BROCHURES and folders are also available in the Occupational Library which has been created from this study.
The Guidance Bureau has been described by many students who have used its facilities as the "most beneficial service organization on campus."
One student said, "The Guidance Bureau is one place where they don't tell me what to do. They just listen, and help me solve my own problems in that way."
ANOTHER STUDENT said, "Everything is moving so fast in this age that few people know what they are doing or where they are going. The counselors at the bureau take the time to listen to my problems, and this helps me to take account of myself."
University Daily Kansan
"I found that my poor grades were a result of lack of confidence on my part. My counselor gave me the confidence in myself that I needed. I'm now running for a student office. I would never have done something like this before," a third student said.
The modern guidance methods of counseling began at the end of World War II. After the war, veterans could go to college under a government contract, if they would consult regularly with a counselor.
For this purpose counselors were set up on college campuses by the government. When the contracts expired, guidance services were taken over by the colleges. Since then, guidance bureaus have grown from small services to the larger ones with many counselors.
Thursday, April 4, 1963
Margaret Lynn Thrasher, a 1961 KU graduate, will receive the $1,000 Kansas Library Association grant for graduate study in 1963-64.
$1,000 Library Grant Given
Library, her home city, will study librarianship at the University of Illinois.
Miss Thrasher, now a senior library assistant in charge of bookmobile service at the Wichita City
At KU she completed a double major in English and the humanities for the bachelor of arts degree.
NOW-TILL EASTER
BIG 18 inch inflated
EASTER BUNNY
COLORFUL LIKE AN EASTER EGG
for only
69c
That's what's up, Doc!
Get yours when you stop to have your tank filled with BIG GALLON Gasoline.
LISTEN TO TOM HEDRICK'S SPORTS REPORT. Monday thru Friday—KLWN—5:35 to 5:45
△
FRITZ CO.
CITIES SERVICE
8th & N. H.
VI 3-4321
Downtown—Near
Everything
Open till 8:30 Thursday Evening
CITIES SERVICE
Downtown
Near Everything
COLLEGE STUDENTS:
the first four college students who purchase a new mobile home from us during our spring clearance sale. This represents a savings to you of from $600 to $360 according to the model you buy. Free delivery up to 200 miles. Take local delivery now and we will move the 200 miles up to June 15. Free parking to June 15 for these four mobile homes sold to college students. Remember this offer applies to the first four purchasers only, so don't delay. Come out and look over our large selection today. Open 11:30 a.m.to 7:30 p.m.each day and 1 p.m.to 5:30 p.m.on Sunday.
738 N. 2nd
TODD MOBILE HOMES, INC.
Lawrence, Kansas
We Have a Racket
for you at
Ober's
Tennis Rackets By WILSON & VICTOR $5.95 and up
WILSON KRAMER AUTO.
Was $20.50
Now $15.80
TAD or IMPERIAL Was $21.00
VOLLEYBALL RACKET
Now $16.00
WILSON CHAMPIONSHIP OR EXTRA HEAVY DUTY TENNIS BALLS
Expert Racket Restringing
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Ober's
VI 3-1951
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 4, 1963
Value of Political Clubs Is Uncertain
By Roy Miller
By Roy Miller (Second in a three part series)
Membership and activity in KU Young Republicans and Young Democrats may not be earthshakingly great this year, but so what?
What role, if any, do these political clubs play at KU?
Of what benefit are they to the Democratic and Republican parties?
STUDENTS WHO BELONG to the two organizations say there is value in belonging to a political club. Some students who don't belong to the clubs see their importance, but have no desire to join them.
Others see no purpose performed by KU Young Demo's and Young GOP's.
Some members' reasons for belonging to one of the organizations might parallel the reason expressed by Glenn Hamilton, Leavenworth junior, who said:
"TM JUST INTERESTED IN politics. I knew one of the officers in the club, so I decided to join Young Democrats instead of Young Republicans. But, I'm not really certain which party I will be affiliated with after college.
"I think by belonging to a political club I'll be able to broaden my knowledge of political affairs. I think my participation in a political club on the collegiate level may tend to influence which party I eventually join."
L. C. Woodruff, dean of students, was graduated from KU in 1924. In a recent interview, Dean Woodruff couldn't recall the existence of any sort of national political club activity here when he was a student.
FRED ELLSWORTH, executive secretary of the Alumni Association, who was a KU student a short time before Woodruff, said he also does not remember such clubs existing when he was a student here.
Ellsworth thought the only club along the lines of Young Democrats and Young Republicans established here early in the 20th century was the Good Government Club.
But, by showing photographs to a reporter of Alfred Landon, former Kansas governor, and Roy A. Roberts, chairman of the board of the Kansas City Star, as being members of the KU Good Government Club in 1908, Ellsworth learned from the Jayhawker of that year that the "Democratic Club" and "Republican Club" had been created before 1908.
"IF WE HAD EITHER of the clubs when I was a student, I wasn't aware of them," Dean Woodruff said.
He said people today are so preoccupied with their own problems they are "prone to overlook the political issues of our country.
"In my day it was worse," Dean Woodruff said. "We were very little aware of political affairs in those days."
SPEAKING ABOUT TODAY'S political clubs, Dean Woodruff said: "I see importance in anything which stimulates interest in the political affairs of the nation and world. I question sometimes whether the activity of the Young Republicans or Young Democrats does very much of this, but sometimes they do."
Max Logan, president of Young Democrats, says the purpose of his club is "to provide a place where Young Democrats can become informed on the subjects which are presently bothering Democrats on state, regional and national levels."
"The club should provide a place for a Democrat to speak with other Democrats," he said, "and for the member to find out he's not alone on this campus."
REUBEN McCORNACK, president of Young Republicans, said the purposes of a collegiate political club are three-fold. These purposes are:
- To provide education on political affairs and issues.
- To assist the party.
- To allow students to participate in politics.
McCornack also mentioned a possible fourth purpose, that of political clubs conducting campus opinion polls. The Ablene junior called this the club's service function.
"WHEN YOU AREN'T in an election year, McCornack said of the purposes he listed, "you're down to two of them — experience and education.
"There isn't a whole of constructive work done in these clubs in off-years unless you can provide a service, and we have that element in other clubs on campus."
Logan believes that the creation of a service project for his club is one of its primary needs. Logan speaks of establishing a continuing project, "not one like surveys that go on for a year and quit."
UNTIL THE YOUNG DEMOcrats became bogged down in organizational problems this year. Logan had planned to suggest the club furnish information to state Democratic legislators on the University of Wichita issue.
The Holiday junior hopes to initiate a "continuing project" next fall, but, at present, has no specific one in mind.
Young was also vice-president two years ago and was elected one of three directors of the club after its shaky existence last fall and early winter.
John Young, vice-president of the Young Democrats, speaks of the clubs' educational value and assistance to the party, and emphasizes the club's role for enabling students to participate in politics.
"IT USUALLY MARKS THE first time most students join a political club," Young said. "Although it is a small commitment, I think it's a significant one."
Commenting on the clubs' educational value, Young said a discussion of issues is "quite healthy for seeing several sides to a question. If any group can inform its members of the issue, I think it will be doing a darn good job."
EACH OF THE CAMPUS political club leaders spoke of the value of their organization in assisting the party at the state level. But just how much help is extended, how beneficial is this help?
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McCORNACK SAID Collegiate Young Republicans don't serve as a "tremendous factor on the state party level in Kansas because of the state's one-party nature.
"In other areas of the country, the collegiate organization is very important and can make a difference in an election."
Because of their organization problems for the last two or three years, the Young Democrats' assistance to the Democratic party in Kansas has been negligible.
The alum, who was graduated in 1941, added that the Dole campaign was an "excellent example of good organization that took all segments into account."
McCORNACK SAID HE HAS talked to some of the Chicago Young Republicans who told him their work was so effective that they plan to repeat it for the 1964 election.
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McCornack cited the work of some collegians in Chicago as an example of the Young Republicans' importance to the party elsewhere. He said collegiate club members policed certain voting wards in Chicago for anticipated voting corruption in the 1962 election.
A KU alumni, who was active in Young Republicans when a KU student and who has since been active in the Republican party, said the KU group's support of Dole was a factor in Dole's victory over Democrat Flovd Breeding.
Rueschhoff Guest At Women's College
Phil H. Rueschhoff, associate professor of education and head of art education at KU is guest professor at the Women's College of the University of North Carolina, April 3-5.
The Young Republicans participated in a caravan in support of Bob Dole's candidacy in the 1st Congressional District and some of the members of the club worked in Dole's behalf during the summer months.
As part of the Southern Association for Children Under Six conference at Greensboro, North Carolina, Rueschhoff is conducting three seminars on creativity and child development.
The KU Young GOP president believes the most significant assistance to the party by a member of his club would be influencing the voting of parents and friends.
This appears to be the philosophy of state political leaders, too.
Young, vice-president of the Young Demo's, said the club makes better Democrats out of students. But, he said, it is a subordinate purpose for the club to boost the state ticket.
Young, perhaps, summed up the philosophy of the leaders of both campus political blubs when he said it's actually up to each club how much they participate in campaigns and help the party in other ways.
"THIS IS A CASE WHERE club activity made a difference even in Kansas," McCornack said of the Young GOP's participation in the Dole campaign. "By creating that campaign caravan last fall, it made a great effect. Of course, you can't tell if it was the big factor, but it was a factor."
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"CAMPUS CLUBS,THOUGH it may be more indirect than direct, do operate to influence the state leaders." Young said.
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Electrical Impulses Intrigue Nahman
How can one measure the speed of electrical impulses in such machines as digital computers, speeds which react in thousandths of a second or even less?
The study of electrical impulses and high speed digital systems has intrigued Norris Nahman, professor of electrical engineering, for some time.
Prof. Nahman, along with his coworkers Harvey Doemland and Robert Kulterman, assistant professors of electrical engineering, has been supervising study of the measurement of electrical impulses at the KU Electronics Research Laboratory.
PROF. NAHMAN said the laboratory has received support from many sources, including the Department of Defense, since January, 1956.
That was the year the Electronics Laboratory was built southwest of 15th and Iowa streets. The laboratory is permanently staffed by electrical engineering department professors who are assisted parttime by graduate and undergraduate students.
The total amount of external research support which the laboratory has received since its beginning is $734,205.
Prof. Nahman said he has been interested in high speed digital systems for many years. This led him
Awards Announced For Asia Institute
Seven students from four schools have been awarded National Defense Foreign Language Undergraduate Fellowships to attend the KU Summer Chinese and Japanese Institute June 10-Aug. 16.
Announcement of the United States Office of Education grants was made today by Thomas R. Smith, professor of geography, and director of the KU Center for East Asian Studies.
The three KU students recommended by the KU selection committee to the Office of Education in the national competition received fellowships. They are Sharon L. Briggs, Fort Leavenworth junior; Richard A. Lawson, Wichita junior; and Patricia E. Leonard, Tulaa, Okla., freshman.
FELLOWSHIPS were also awarded to Susan B. Rifkin and John Schoonbeek of Colorado University; Emma E. Tao of Washington University, St. Louis, and Adrian Akmaniain of the University of Arizona.
Eesides the undergraduate awards. Jack Salmon, Elkhart graduate student, received a National Defense Education Act Title VI fellowship. It will enable him to study Japanese at the institute.
An NDEA contract of $14,000, plus matching funds from KU, will finance the summer program, a cooperative venture with the University of Colorado.
Besides the newly announced awards, additional scholarship money from private sources has been made available. Prof. Smith said. It will be awarded on the basis of merit and need by the KU selection committee.
"This is an excellent opportunity for a student to begin serious study of Japanese or Chinese," Prof. Smith said. "We will consider applications from persons at all levels from high school seniors on up."
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to the study of the measurement of electrical impulses.
HE EXPLAINED that systems such as digital computers are being designed to run faster and faster. For these machines it is necessary to have components that react rapidly.
The electrical pulses which Prof. Nahman and his associates principally study have a time duration of less than a billionth of a second (nanosecond).
Through a pulse comparison system, Prof. Nahman has been able to measure time down to one thousandth of a nanosecond (pico second). In the pulse comparison system, the electrical pulse is divided into two channels and the two parts are compared to each other through coincidence studies.
THE RESULT of the method is that certain time characteristics of the original pulse are resolved down to picosecond increments.
Another area in which the measurement of electrical impulses is valuable is in long range radar. Prof. Nahman explained that long-distance radar is very useful in military and scientific systems. For example, in space exploration a lot of power is needed to generate the required radar pulses.
The pulses of energy are sent out into space. When they strike an object, a portion of the energy returns in the form of the reflected signal. The further out the radar is sent, said Prof. Nahman, the more energy is needed.
THE PROBLEM is how to pack a lot of energy into a short period of time. Prof. Nahman explained that nanosecond pulse techniques are useful in solving this problem.
Radar makes use of electro-magnetic waves which travel at the speed of light, Prof. Nahman said. Light in free space travels 30 centimeters in a nanosecond. He explained that accurate timing techniques are necessary for high accuracy in long-distance radar.
TV Party Planned For Tomorrow Night
A TV Party will be held during the telecast of "The Invincible Mr. Disraeli" tomorrow night.
The party, sponsored by Student Union Activities, will be at 7:30 p.m. in the south lounge of the Kansas Union.
The television program features Trevor Howard and Greer Garson.
Aldon Bell, assistant professor of history, will discuss the program afterwards.
An Exchange Visitors Committee composed of four KU faculty members, under the direction of the U.S. State Department, has been organized at KU.
Committee To Aid Foreign Students
The committee members are James K. Hitt, registrar; John H. Nelson, dean of the Graduate School; J. A. Burzle, professor of German and chairman of Foreign Students Scholarships Committee, and Clark Coan, foreign student adviser.
Page 5
Those under the supervision of the committee are foreign students on KU scholarships, on U.S. government grants, on assistantship and foreign faculty and staff members.
The primary purpose of the committee is to supervise all its members. The committee keeps records of its members' progress, reviews the financial positions of its members, and considers the applications of its members for employment.
The problems or questions of any member are forwarded to the committee by Coan.
Foreign students and faculty and staff members under this program are on J-1 stay visa.
The committee is completely free from the supervision of the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service.
Quantity Names in News
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — (UPI)
— If names make news, then Mrs.
Sarah Marion Himalstein, 50, is worth headlines.
University Daily Kansan
She was arraigned yesterday on four forgery counts after admitting nearly 170 aliases on bogus checks.
Thursday, April 4, 1963
Law Student Receives Award
Robert L. Driscoll, Lawrence second year law student, has been named to receive the Rocky Mountain Mineral Law Foundation $200 scholarship.
The award was based on scholarship and academic work done in studies of oil and gas, including the writing of an article on mineral law. Driscoll's article, "Condemnation for Underground Storage of Natural Gas," appeared in the most recent issue of the Kansas Law Review.
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University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 4. 1963
Projects, Hobbies Occupy Scannell
By Roxann Creitz
A more consistent grading system is one of the pet projects of the associate dean-elect of the KU Graduate School.
Dale Scannell, now director of Educational Research and Service, advocates an "anchored curve grading system," a curve modified to reflect the nature of an individual class. By means of this system, he hopes to make grades more meaningful.
SCANNELL'S primary professional interest is achievement testing. He is senior author of a battery of high school achievement tests which will be available commercially in the spring of 1964.
They will be standardized this fall: 80,000 students representing 47 of the United States will be tested with them, then.
Asked about his off-work hours, Scannell said, "I do spend numerous evenings writing and reading. At the same time, I have many non-academic interests.
"I bowl . . . in a faculty mixed bowling league.
"I enjoy athletics more now from a spectator standpoint. . ."
"HE PLAYS very good pool," commented another faculty member.
commented another faculty member. Mr. and Mrs. Scannell have four children: Steven, nine; Jeffrey, seven; Susan, 5; and Janet 1. "That's a handful right there," Scannell said with a smile.
"I suppose I have the normal doit-yourself urges that wives tell husbands they should have," he said. "... We terraced the side lawn ... poured a patio."
An associate professor of education, Scannell earned his Ph.D. in education psychology and measurement from the State University of Iowa in 1958. He had earned his B.A. in general science and his M. A. in education from that university.
WHILE IN COLLEGE, he held a variety of part-time jobs, including those with a service station, a telephone company and a lumber company. Five years prior to 1957, he was a chemistry instructor at Iowa City High School.
Scannell came to KU in 1959 from the University of California, at Berkeley, where he was an instructor in education.
He is a member of several professional organizations, including the American Educational Research Association, the National Council on Measurements in Education, the American Psychological Association, Phi Delta Kappa (professional) fraternity for men in education), and the American Association of University Professors.
AT A RECENT meeting of the American Educational Research Association, he presented his paper, "A New Type of Grade as a Criterion Measure." By use of which scores, how many, but not which, students should fall into each of the five areas of the curve (which then becomes anchored) is determined. Which students fall into each of the areas is determined by their relative achievement.
"After all, the definition of grades is arbitrary, and the important aspect of interpreting them is to know the basis on which they were assigned," Scannell explained.
Another Scannell paper, "Research in Creativity," was read by its author at the recent seventh National Art Education Conference.
In reply to questions about his goals, Scannell said, "In one way or another, everything I've done is related to the over-all process of improving education."
REGARDING THE importance of education, Scannell said, "I think everyone needs a certain amount of liberal education." He needs to be able to do such things as fill out his income tax return . . . he needs to be able to communicate . . . he needs to be happy and adjusted. "But this doesn't mean that everyone has to go to college," Scannell added.
"I think he ought to understand our way of life and how it differs from other ways of life . . . this is what I mean when I say 'liberal education.'"
In part of his paper, "A New Type of Grade as a Criterion Measure," which has been edited here, Scannell explains the relationship of the standard curve and his anchored curve in the following way.
THE STANDARD curve prescribes, for a cross-section of a school group, a grade distribution of 7% A's, 24% B's, 38% C's, 24% D's, and 7% F's. The percentages are obtained from the areas in a normal curve divided by setting the three middle categories each one unit wide with the C category extending from a value of -5 to a value of +5. The B category is between the values of +5 and +1.5, and the D category is between the values of -5 and -1.5. The A category is +1.5, and above, value: the F category is -1.5, and below, value.
If students in a given class were to represent a cross-section of the general population, ability scores would be distributed in the same proportion, although not necessarily to the same individuals. In actual practice, however, class members do not represent this cross-section — there are no typical classes.
THE ANCHORED curve provides an objective method of modifying grade distributions to reflect the degree and the manner of specific class departure from "typical" characteristics. The standard curve, used as a model for total distribution of grades in the general population, can determine what grades individual teachers should contribute to the total.
When a teacher calculates his grade distribution, ability scores for all class members are obtained. Distribution of ability scores determines grade distribution. Reference to the standard curve model reveals the type of grade distribution to be used. If a class is atypical because of a high proportion of very capable students, a relatively large number of A's and B's will be assigned: if the class is relatively deficient in talent, few A's and B's will be assigned.
HOWEVER, THE model curve does not determine who earns each grade, for this should depend on the student's relative levels of achievement.
Deadlines Given For Entrance Tests
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Applications must be in by Friday. They may be obtained in the dean's office at the law school, or from Educational Testing Service at Princeton, N. J.
The test, given quarterly, will be administered again Aug. 3, in Topeka. Applications for the August examination must be submitted by July 20.
The fee for the test is $12.
Music Symposium Set
Virgil Thomson, composer, critic, and conductor, and Samuel Rosenbaum, trustee of the Music Performers Trust Funds of the Recording Industries, will appear at the fifth annual Symposium of Contemporary American Music.
The Symposium committee has chosen 20 compositions for performance from among the 241 scores received. The symposium, held May 5-7, is unique in that any composer residing in the United States may submit compositions.
Compositions to be performed range from flute solo to full symphony orchestra and concert choir. The project is privately supported by funds from the KU Endowment Association and grants from the Music Performers Trust Funds of the Recording Industries.
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UNIVERSITY OF THE SEVEN SEAS
A UNIVERSITY AFLOAT - 110 DAYS AROUND THE WORLD WITH COLLEGE COURSES FOR CREDIT.
A "Floating University" which will take approximately 750 U.S. students on two World Cruises during which fully accredited college credits can be obtained will commence next October.
Called the "University of the Seven Seas", the cruises will take students on two voyages of 110 and 120 days during which calls will be made at 22 ports including Lisbon, Naples, Alexandria, Bombay, Hong Kong, and Honolulu.
The University has existed for three years and its courses will be conducted, coincidentally, aboard the motor ship "Seven Seas", a 12,574-ton, 482-foot liner of the EUROPE-CANADA LINE, for which Holland-America Line is general passenger agent.
The ship is being especially modified to serve as a floating university with complete classroom facilities including a well-equipped library, medical staff, special film equipment and various other material relevant to college study.
The first semester voyage will begin on October 22, 1963, when the "Seven Seas" sails eastward from New York from Holland-America Line's new Pier 40, and will terminate in San Diego, California on February 8, 1964. The second semester voyage will last 120 days and sails from San Diego on February 11, 1964, ending in New York on June 9, 1964.
Headed by William T. Hughes, President of the University of the Seven Seas, the non-profit organization, originally sponsored by the Whittier Rotary Club, is incorporated in California and has acquired official status as an institution of higher learning from that state, which empowers it to issue transcripts of student records and to grant degrees.
In addition to Mr. Hughes and Executive Director Dr. E. Ray Nichols, Jr., the University Afloat will have approximately 40 professors and instructors including some 15 women faculty members.
Among the academic courses open to students who attend the University will be classes in architecture, creative writing, music, painting, theatre, business administration, economics, education, political science, astronomy, geography, geology, oceanography, public health, languages, history, anthropology, philosophy, psychology, religion, sociology, and speech.
Rates for students who enroll will range from $1590 which includes gratuities and special field trips while in port. In addition, tuition for each semester voyage at sea is $400.
Chaplains of the Protestant, Catholic, and Jewish faiths will be aboard the vessel. From time to time at different ports-of-call, the students will be addressed by prominent political figures, international leaders and educators in the various parts of the world.
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Argentine Rebels Vow To 'Fight On'
BUENOS AIRES — (UPI) — a rebel radio vowed today that diehard foes of ousted ex-president Juan D. Peron will "fight on" despite the apparent collapse of their effort to overthrow the government
Maj. Gen. Juan C. Ongania, the army commander, declared last night that continued resistance by his men will be "absolutely repressed."
The rebel threat was broadcast even as Rear Adm. Eladio Vasquez, commander of the high seas fleet, held peace talks with leaders of the army and air force.
A SCORE of rebel officers had fled to Uruguay or Chile, and it appeared that effective resistance had ceased. Some rebellious army units were still holding out, however, and anti-Peronist gunmen roamed the streets of Buenos Aires last night.
A broadcast from a hidden radio station spoke of continued resistance by the "Patagonian Revolutionary Command," suggesting the rebels might intend to hole up in the bleak southern territory of Patagonia.
ONGANIA SAID a motorized infantry regiment, an artillery group and two motorized engineer battalions had ignored orders to lay down their arms. The rebel units were in widely separated areas, however, and there appeared to be little likelihood of their offering concerted resistance.
AT LEAST 25 men had been killed and 50 wounded in two days of scattered fighting, limited for the most part to air attacks.
Two volleys of gunfire were heard during the night near the Argentine "White House." There was no report of casualties.
A tank-led rebel troop column numbering about 700 men left the city of Junin last night for an unannounced destination.
The back of the revolt was broken yesterday when the navy ordered rebels in its ranks to cease fire. The revolt was led by retired army generals, but most of their supporters were sailors or marines.
Vasquez conferred for hours last night with leaders of the army and air force. He was reported resisting demands for reductions in the size of the marine corps and the navy's air arm and the retirement of a number of admirals.
THE GOVERNMENT took ample precautions against further trouble even though peace talks were being held.
The principal center of action in the two-day-old revolt was the Punta Indio naval air station. Rebel-piloted planes from the base pounded a government tank column with rockets and light bombs for 10 hours Monday.
Army tommygunners stood guard early today at the Buenos Aires post office, nerve center of Argentine communications.
When the military conference broke up, air secretary Eduardo McLoughlin announced that he and some of his officers would spend the night at the air ministry.
Defense Minister Jose M. Astigua, who is acting also as navy secretary, said he would spend the night at the "White House."
THE AIR FORCE retaliated yesterday with a raid on the airbase in
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The revolt was a reflection of military opposition to the government's plan to let supporters of Peron participate in the election scheduled June 23.
which 24 planes were destroyed on the ground. The rebels abandoned the base after the attack, and government troops captured 9 more planes intact.
WASHINGTON — (UPI) - President Kennedy has blocked a threatened nationwide railroad strike for at least 60 days by appointing a three-man emergency board to investigate the dispute over work rules.
For the railroads, it is a question whether they will be allowed to eliminate jobs which have become unnecessary because of technological advances. They estimate that the rule changes would save about $600 million a year at a time when economies are needed to meet ever-stiffening competition from other forms of transportation.
The navy ordered its men to "cease operations" soon after the government air raid on Punta Indie
The Peronists are the nation's strongest political force, and many military men believe they will sweep the June general election just as they did in the since-annulled local elections a year ago.
Threatened Strike Blocked by JFK
THE CONTROVERSY over "featherbedding" reached the showdown stage when the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the companies were free to abolish thousands of jobs previously protected by long-standing union rules.
The President named the fact-finding board last night in the final step available under the National Railway Labor Act to prevent a walkout. The action automatically bars a strike for 60 days.
Five operating unions representing about 200,000 railroad workers view the dispute as a question whether their members will be able to continue working at the only jobs they know.
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Under changes the companies propose, between 65,000 and 80,000 jobs would be eliminated.
MIDDLE1OWN, Conn. — (UPI)
Leonard Adelberg, 47, was arrested yesterday on a charge of using mutilated coins in a parking meter.
829 Entries Listed For Music Festival
The Northeast Kansas district music festival will be held at KU Friday and Saturday with 829 group and individual entries scheduled to perform.
Thomas Gorton, dean of the School of Fine Arts, and E. A. McFarland of University Extension are managing the festival for the Kansas State High School Activities Association. All events will be in Murphy Hall except some large vocal groups in Hoch Auditorium Friday.
Cities Exhibit Now On Display
The collection, which is sponsored by the Smithsonian Institution Traveling Exhibition Services, provides a look at the industrial and commercial architecture which evolved in America during the Industrial Revolution. It will be on display until April 9.
"The American City in the nineteenth century." That is the title given to a collection of 50 color lithographic prints and water color paintings now on display in Marvin Hall.
The collection shows interior and exterior views of early plants and commercial establishments where iron, rubber, glass, furniture, matches, gun powder, straw hats, and watches were produced and marketed.
DAVID HERMANSEN, assistant professor of architecture, said the collection gives a cross section of urban and rural patterns of the period.
Hermansen explained that, although the artists sometimes took liberties with the reproductions, the pictures are good.
He said one of the outstanding architects of nineteenth century America was H. H. Richardson.
Artists such as Currier and Ives, J. C. Wild, and J. H. Bufford are represented.
Thursday, April 4. 1963
Describing Richardson as a romanticist, Prof. Hermansen said the architect brought color, vibrancy, and masculinity to the previously pale pallid, neo-classical buildings of the early nineteenth century.
SOME OF the lithographs include Leavenworth City, Kansas Territory; San Francisco taken from Telegraph Hill; New Orleans; a view of the public garden and Boston Common; Broadway, New York; Virginia City, Va.; Milwaukee Water Works, and Frederick Female Seminary, Frederick City, Md.
Prof. Hermanssen said the display provides an insight into American heritage and an object for aesthetic and architectural appreciation.
The parade will begin at 10 a.m. following a route from 11th street north on Massachusetts to seventh street.
India Arms Offer ThreattoRedUnity
Disclosure of the offer from President Tito was considered certain by political observers here to trigger a fresh outcry from Peking and to aggravate further the strained relations between Communist China and Russia.
NEW DELHI, India — (UPI) — A Yugoslav offer of arms to India for use against Red China posed a new threat to Communist camp unity today.
The Indian Foreign Office disclosed the Yugoslav offer of arms and military equipment last night. It said the material was intended for defense against Red Chinese aggression.
COMMUNIST CHINA has heaped scorn on Yugoslavia as "revisionist" and a traitor to the Communist cause in pursuing an independent path to communism. But Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev has defended Tito's regime.
The Kremlin's growing friendship with Tito has been one of the chief points of dispute between Peking and Moscow.
Five floats have been entered in the KU Relays parade April 20.
Five Floats Entered In Relays Parade
The Lawrence Chamber of Commerce will award a $50 gift certificate to each of the two sponsoring living groups of the first place float.
After the parade, the floats will be displayed in the parking lot behind the Kansas Union, Zone X.
The theme for this year's parade is "Legendary Characters."
Joseph R. Pearson Hall and Hashinger Hall are entering a float on the theme "Zeus' Champion." Lambda Chi Alpha and Alpha Phi are using "The Tortoise and the Hare" as their theme. Templin Hall and Lewis Hall will enter a float built around "Casey Jones."
The second place winners will receive plaques.
Tau Kappa Epsilon and Delta Delta have not yet decided upon a theme. Phi Kappa Sigma will enter a theme about "Sadie Hawkins Day." However, the co-sponsor has not been announced.
A SPOKESMAN said the offer from Belgrade was in response to an Indian request to "friendly countries" for military resistance.
The request was sent out last October during a massive Communist Chinese offensive in the Ladakh and Northeast Frontier Agency sections of India's northern frontier with China.
"Details of the Yugoslav offer presently are being worked out," the spokesman said.
India and Red China have been locked in a dispute over portions of border territory. Fighting in the mountains has stopped, but the two governments so far have failed to agree on terms for negotiation of a settlement despite mediation efforts by several neutral countries.
IN RESPONSE to India's request for help, the United States and Britain have provided military equipment and have discussed plans with Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru's government for air protection in the future.
Russia, which long has wooed India with large-scale economic aid, decided to go ahead with an agreement to set up a jet fighter factory in India despite Nehru's dispute with Peking. Some Soviet Migs have been sent here as part of the deal.
The Peking regime has protested o Moscow about the Mig deal and is denounced the Anglo-American military help as an "imperialist plot" o penetrate into Asia.
THE CHINESE REDS repeatedly have chastised Yugoslavia for its widespread trade with the West, its frequent alignment with the neutralist countries, and its historical enmity towards Albania, Peking's tiny Balkan ally.
Khrushchev has rejected Peking's charges against Tito in the growing ideological and political split of the Communist world. A Soviet note which suggested Tuesday that Peking send a high-level delegation to Moscow to talk over differences made it clear that the Russians would not change their tone on Yugoslavia.
The Soviet News Agency Tass reported yesterday that Khrushchev had made a new gesture of friendship toward Yugoslavia. The premier cordially received the head of a Yugoslav trade union delegation at his Black Sea retreat, the agency said.
The Kremlin's argument is that Yugoslavia is a socialist country and efforts should be made to keep it in the Communist fold.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 4,1963
Strassenburg Sees No Need For Physics, Engineering Split
There is no reason for the dichotomy between physics and engineering, A. A. Strassenburg, associate professor of physics, said yesterday at the Faculty Forum.
Strassenburg, speaking on "The Role of Physics in Modern Society," discussed primarily the relationship between physics and engineering.
HE FIRST mentioned two points made by Ross McKinney, professor of civil engineering, at the preceding Faculty Forum:
- Engineering has fallen behind in relation to science, has become too conservative. It needs to be revitalized by making use of recent knowledge. (Strassenburg agreed with this point.)
- Engineers, in the process of revitalization, need to maintain a distinct identity by finding and inductinating those dedicated to an "engineering approach."
Strassenburg disagreed with the second point, saying that it is good that the distinction between science and engineering is disappearing.
"It PROMISES better future technological progress as the boundary between finding and using facts vanishes. The role of the physicist, then, is not only to provide an understanding of the physical world, but also to provide leadership in our technological growth," he said.
He pointed out that physicists are increasingly needing engineering skills and knowledge of what is feasible, and that engineers are increasingly finding that to keep abreast of modern practice, they must know more modern science.
ENGINEERING as a major profession, Strassenburg said, was developed during the industrial revolution. The theories then used by engineers were already known — most of the important facts of classical physics had been discovered.
This knowledge included Newton's laws of mechanics, Young's laws of optics, Dalton's molecular theory, the knowledge of heat and energy worked out by Mayer and Joule, Gibbs' work with thermodynamics, and the work of Faraday and Maxwell on electricity and magnetism, Strassenen said.
THEN CAME A short fallow period for physicists at the end of the nineteenth century, when they became smug. They thought they knew almost all there was to know about the world and that all they had to do was tie up the loose ends, Strassenburg said. Meanwhile, engineers were developing their skills rapidly.
Humanities Forum Set For April 16
Wilson Martins, visiting associate professor of Brazilian and French literatures, will speak on "French-Brazilian Cultural Relations" at the Humanities Forum April 16.
Prof. Martins, who is the author of three books on literary criticism and history, is a professor of French literature at the Universidade de Parana, Curitiba, Brazil. He is also a literary critic for Brazil's leading newspaper, O Estado de S Paule.
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Then, while engineers rested on their successes, physicists discovered many new, unexplainable phenomena. Here came the distinction between classical and modern physics. (Classical physics describes the properties and principles of microscopic interactions: modern physics describes sub-atomic activities.)
IN HIS NOTES, Strassenburg said, "At first it may have seemed that the new physics was too far removed from practical problems to be useful. Atomic power and other recent developments such as application of solid state principles to development of the transistor and other devices have proved otherwise."
When engineers realized the implications of modern physics for engineering, they wished to use principles which were not all thoroughly understood. They then began to take part in fact finding and theory construction themselves.
Simultaneously, physicists found an increased need for engineering skills for manipulation of large equipment and for designing complex equipment.
"BECAUSE OF the things physicists want to do, engineers are involved in unusual projects . . . the physicists have actually led the engineers into this activity." Strassenburg said. "... Physicists are urged to become engineers. . . ."
The kinds of people needed for systems engineering, or systems control, are people who have been trained broadly, who can see the over-all picture. "It seems physicists . . . are drawn more and more to be engineers, and on the other side of the coin, engineers are drawn more and more to be psysicists," he said.
"I see more and more engineers in physical sciences, and more and more physical scientists in engineering, and I see this as a benefit to both."
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Council to Study Sex Education
Problems of sex education in the schools will be studied at a public conference of the Kansas School Health Advisory Council April 25 in Emporia.
Cloy S. Hobson, professor of education at KU and council chairman, said school administrators, supervisors, teachers, parents, school board members and others responsible for making and accepting curriculum are invited to attend the meeting.
"MANY FACTORS, some of long duration and some of recent origin, have combined to create situations which make the offering of sex education in the schools particularly urgent today," Prof. Hobson said. These situations will be reviewed at the conference in order to understand the need for sex education, he said.
Descriptions of some "relatively successful experiences" with sex
education in the schools also will constitute part of the conference, Prof. Hobson continued.
The meeting is open to all interested persons. It will be held on the campus of Kansas State Teachers College at Emporia.
THE KANSAS School Health Advisory Council, is made up of 30 state organizations and agencies interested in school health.
Besides Prof. Hobson, program planning committee members are Dr. Evalyn Gendel of the State Board of Health, Topeka; Dr. Carl Knox, of Lawrence, representing the Kansas Association of School Administrators, and Carl Haney of the State Department of Public Instruction, Topeka.
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Thursday, April 4, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
on
Ad-
of 30
s in-
Spring Is Spring Is Spring Is Spring As He Sees It As She Sees It
By Blaine King
This spring is different.
The trees that always turn pink are still turning pink, of course. And the elms, true to form, are turning a sort of washed-out green and starting to drip on cars.
The air is much milder, naturally.
And the humidity, predictably, is about double that recommended by the American Medical Association.
BUT THIS spring is still different.
It is the last at KU for a lot of seniors.
Well, last springs for KU seniors have come every year since 1869, when the first class was graduated in stuffy, then-new, Fraser Theater.
But for each senior class, "their" spring is different.
THE SANDBAR parties are just as much fun. The afternoon sojourns at Lone Star Lake are no less pleasant.
But the attitude of most seniors has changed. Now it goes something like:
"Only two more months and I'll be out of this place."
SOME SENIORS study, of course. And some won't even make it "out of this place" in two months.
The English Proficiency exam or the Western Civ test or a two-hour course have seen to that.
But for most seniors, this spring is a time to relax and enjoy what is commonly called the "senior slump."
In two more months, Graduation.
AND THEN to jobs, the Army, marriage, home and family.
All of which scare hell out of the senior who is just now beginning to enjoy "his spring."
That is part of what makes a senior's spring a little different. Another part is a total inability to communicate with freshmen who have just gotten a running start at college.
ANOTHER PART might be called senior clutch, when the graduating senior suddenly realizes he or she doesn't have a suitable mate yet.
A lot of short and traumatic pinnings happen that way.
Another part is that the senior realizes that wherever he goes, he will have to get on a first-name basis with a completely new set of bartenders, filling station attendants, clothing salesmen, and whathave-you.
But, to quote a friend, it certainly will be nice to leave the cradle.
Study Group Hears Bertrand Russell Tape
Persons attending a KU-Y Great Men Study Group last night heard a recording in which Bertrand Russell proposes a world organization for the control of nuclear weapons, and ultimately, war.
Joseph Russell, visiting professor of philosophy from Glasgow, Scotland, was originally scheduled to speak at the meeting. However he left earlier in the evening on an emergency trip to Kentucky.
The recording was of a press conference in July of 1955, the same day the Big Four nations were meeting in Geneva. Bertrand Russell had just sent petitions, endorsed by eight leading scientists, to the United States, England, Canada, France and China, requesting that they make all efforts to avoid war.
Russell said the perils of war were that neither side could win and a nuclear war would mean the extinction of the human race.
"The only hope for mankind is the avoidance of war." Russell said.
Russell said the development of the "bikini" bomb had made the H-bomb and atomic bomb "ancient history."
He urged scientists to make the
People-to-People To Publish Booklet
KU People-to-People will publish a booklet entitled "KU, an International Campus" shortly after the spring vacation.
The booklet will attempt to describe various study programs of the University like the Summer Language Institute, the junior year abroad program to Costa Rica and several others. It will also cover the descriptions and functions of several organizations on the campus. Different scholarship programs for the foreign students will be explained in the booklet.
Miss Joan Wohlgemuth, Cummings junior, and chairman of the booklet committee, said the main purpose of the booklet will be to give insight of the various activities of the University and different campus organizations to the visitors.
public aware of the dangers of a nuclear war.
Russell said seven of the signers of the petition were Nobel prize winners, among them Albert Einstein.
An Editorial
Spring is a season. Spring is the season when everything seems wonderful in one way or another. Spring is doing nothing, yet doing something — anything.
Spring . . . . .
Spring is when the snow disappears, the clouds are few, and the temperature just right. Spring is as great as the whole outdoors. Spring is outdoors.
SPRING IS WHEN young people's fancies turn to almost everything, requiring little energy and a lot of fun. Spring is eating, drinking, and sleeping. Spring is great.
Spring is when the 10-year-old attacks the storereorm closet and emerges with the old glove and thrice-broken bat. Spring is when older people (not much older) exercise a well-developed, but winterworn elbow. Spring is fun and drink.
SPRING IS when many older people sit and amuse themselves watching the younger people have fun and drink. Spring is fun.
Spring is love. Spring is when a lovely, unwashed sweatshirt becomes adorned with a pin. Spring is day-dreaming about him or her. Spring is being with him or her. Spring is love. Spring is great.
Spring is going home. Spring is going to Fort Lauderdale, Palm Springs, or Aspen. Spring is going somewhere — anywhere.
SPRING IS Good Friday, Easter, and the end of Lent. Spring is sad. Spring is happy.
Spring is wearing the new suit or the new hat. Spring is wearing bermuda shorts. Spring is wearing a swimming suit. Spring is cool.
Spring is not school. Spring is not studying. Spring is gazing out the open window or romping in the sun — lazily. Spring is final exam time. Spring is not all fun.
SPRING IS graduation time.
Spring is looking for a job. Spring means no more school. Spring is not all fun.
Spring means rain — nice rain.
Even in Kansas spring means nice rain.
Even in Kansas spring is nice — period.
Spring is bright. Spring is colorful. Spring is new. Spring is doing foolish things. Spring is fun.
Spring is all this and more. Spring is everything. Most of all, spring is here. Spring is spring is spring is spring. . . . . .
To pin down the fleeting beauty, follow the rules, but cool. Stay in the shade of an h.i.s Suit that feels like buttoning on a breeze. Flash a well-cut profile that starts at natural shoulders and narrows down to lean, lithe Post-Grad slacks. Keen-eyed buck-watchers can spot these flapped pocket, muted authentics at hip shops . . . $19.95 to $39.95
bird-and-babe-watchers wear n.i.s suits
By Kav Jarvis
"Sure, Spring is great—great for everything but classes!"
This has been the sentiment around campus for the past several weeks, and starting this weekend approximately 11,000 students will get their chance to test out this hypothesis.
SPRING VACATION will begin with the end of this week's classes and the annual trek to "anywhere but here," as one student put it, will begin.
The campus is lovely in spring, blossoming out in flower and leaf. But even the most conscientious student must admit that all that loveliness does nothing to enhance his powers of concentration.
It sounds ideal, sprawled out under a tree with a book, enjoying the soft warm breezes, and it sure beats going to class. But how many of those books are ever read?
**HOW MUCH** more often is the temptation to just lay there and day-dream or merely fall asleep too strong to be ignored?
Any sunny afternoon, the casual observer may see around the women's living groups that more women are outside sunbathing than are in any class.
It may be great to get a head-start on a good tan, but it's a little difficult to write a term paper and keep your tan from being splobyte.
During this magic season, even the sandbars which line the banks of the Kaw River take on a new meaning—parties, parties, parties.
STUDENTS congregate on them every afternoon and evening lacking any intention to study.
Some students are going to trade in these makeshift beaches for the real thing.
One man is planning to go to California during vacation.
"I'm just going to lie in the sun and sleep for the entire week," he proclaimed.
OTHERS ARE planning trips to New Orleans or Chicago with the intention of forgetting for a week that Kansas University and its classrooms ever existed.
Other students are going to have to use this week to catch up on the studies they have already neglected because of Spring.
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 4, 1963
University Daily Kansan SPORTS Ruth, Foxx Praised By Hall of Famer
MIAMI —(UPI)— Neither Mickey Mantle nor any of the other current stars of baseball can match Babe Ruth or Jimmy Foxx with glove or bat, says Hall of Famer Paul Waner, although the overall calibre is "about the same."
No man sells his own era short, quite naturally. But when Waner speaks out for the superstars of the baseball past it must be admitted that the record books strongly support him.
WANER, although only 59, is a bowed, fragile seeming man who has had a long bout with illness. At his best, he was no giant physically, standing only five feet, seven and one-half inches and weighing a mere 148 pounds.
But at the plate and afield he was a tower of strength during a 20-year career in the major leagues.
He weighs only 125 pounds now, but a hint of the old steel toughness shows through when he steps out onto the golf course. The little man who batted .334 during his career and snoote the ball at a .380 clip for Pittsburgh in 1927, shoots in the high 70's.
"IM STILL a line drive hitter," he smiles slowly.
Such a one, during his playing career, who would have made a fancy salary in this day and age. But the best Waner ever earned was $16,500.
"Don't knock it," he said. "That
was a lot of money in those days. I guess if I was playing now I'd be taking down a pretty fancy salary, but I've no kicks in that department."
The new enlarged strike zone, which has been getting a lot of gripes, particularly from the hitters who have the happy faculty of judging an express train fast ball within a fraction of an inch, gets Waner's approval.
"THE SMALLER strike zone was all in favor of the hitters and they already have more than enough going for them," he asserted. "Personally, I like the pitch up high, around my shoulders. But the bigger strike zone has to help the pitchers and everybody knows how badly they needed help."
Waner's inference was that guys are hitting home runs who should have to pay their way into the ball parks.
"Roger Maris was only a one-year man," he said simply of the Yankee outfielder who in the expanded 1961 season exceeded Ruth's greatest record of 60 home runs by one. "But nobody hits like Ruth and you'll wait a long time to see one like him."
IT WAS obvious that Paul never expected to live that long.
In other words, the game may have improved. But to the man from the Hall of Fame, the players haven't.
OU Pitcher To Face KU With Arm in Cast
NORMAN — Jerry Haddock, Oklahoma's big right-hander who will face the KU Jayhawkers tomorrow, had to learn to pitch with his left arm in a cast, or quit.
And since quitting meant his collegiate career would be over (he's a senior in the business school and the cast won't come off until May 23, one week after Oklahoma closes its 1963 season), Haddock didn't like that.
So the 6-foot 5-inch hurler has been pitching, fielding and batting with his left hand and forearm heavily encased in plaster. So far, he's doing okay.
A STARTER at forward for Coach Bob Stevens' Sooner basketball team last winter, Haddock broke his wrist Jan. 23 at Stillwater when he was spilled while driving for the basket, cracking a bone in his left wrist, which ruined his final season of basketball.
And when the wrist didn't heal, it looked like Haddock's senior season
of baseball was lost, too.
But Coach Jack Baer persuaded him to throw to keep him arm in shape. Then when the doctors told him he could pitch if he could learn to play in a cast, Haddock began practicing fielding and taking an occasional cut at the plate.
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Thursday, April 4, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 11
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 Kansas Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 pm on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion.
FOR SALE
S&W .28 special, Walther P-38, Collectors
German Luger, 32 H&R revolver, 22
Ruger automatic, 22 Remington auto-
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Mobile home, 45'x8', 2 bedrooms with new air conditioner and outside storage building. Excellent condition. Call VI 3-5157. 4-17
Hairdryers! Hair dryer's! The ideal Easter gift! Largest stock in Lawrence. Innous brands at low discount prices—as low as $8.00! Ray Stoneback on Mass. 4-17
1857 T.W.N. Motorcycle 125 cc 2 cycle
Diver Shriveer of Don Wilkins. V-4
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Registered "Pek" puppies. Call VI 2-1817 4-16
PRE-MED SENIORS: 46' mobile home
3 blocks from Medical Center in Kansas
and will study with student
Contact Roy Hartley, 3610 Rainbow Bld.
K.C., Kansas. JO 2-0851.
MOBILE HOMES. Students! We our big
Homes! issue Todd Morn
Homes! 738 N. 2nd. 4-5
1956 Buick convertible, radio, heater, power. 1961 Volkswagen, like new. Would consider trade for older car. See at 1244 Louisiana. 4-5
Mercedes 190 SL, 1957 model — white
car. Model number not provided.
C$250.000. Phone VI 3-0267. 4-4
Barbell and weights, 110 lb set, $18.00
Barbell and weights, $45.00 Call V17-
$709 after 8:00 p.m.
1961 Tru Tone stereo Hi-Fi automatic
Davis - 725 Mass
David - 4-4
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-Ir Pet Center—most complete shop Modern, self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days.
New and used portables, standards and electronics. Royal, Olympia, Smith Corona, Bont typing papers. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. Phone VI 3-3644.
1962 M.G.A. Mark II 1600. Like new, only $195.00. Low mileage, white walls, wire wheels, radio and tanneau. After 5 p.m. call V1 3-5860. 4-15
Transistor radio clearance! New 6 trans.
G.E. Radio cut to $13.00, 8 trans. radio
and G.E. radio models last week. Stay
back's, the 929 Mass., Headquarters for
discount prices. 4-5
Printed Biology Study Notes: 70 pages complete outline of lecture; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta Notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50. tt
"YPING PAPER BARGAINS; Pink typing paper 85c per ream, Yellow paper 85c per ream, Per pound. The Lawrence Outlook 1005 Massachusetts, open all day Saturday. ff
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. tf
FOR RENT
Rooms for women graduate students. Call VI 2-1689. 4-5
BIKE RENTALS — New lightweight — $1.00 per day (1 week minimum rental).
Deposit required on week $30.00 deposit required on all rentals. Stoneback's — 929 Mass. 4-18
Air-cond. furnished apartments centrally
for the student and the researcher and stove. CALL YI 3-2380. 4-5
Duplex two bedroom with stove and re-
laxation. Bald except elec tricity. Call VI 3-2281
Close to KU as 1st floor, 5 room apartment. Unfurnished. Pay utilities except water. Req. $78. McGrew Agency. v.3-12655. After hours phone M.Dicker at VI 3-7451
Crescent Heights Apartments, 25th & Redbud: Rear entrances - Large utility room - Balconies - Sun decks - Concrete off street parking - Built in rangers Refrigerators - 2 Bdrms. - 840 sq. ft. living area - Individual Controlled Heating - Air-conditioned Traped Garbage disposals - Air-conditioned Showers - Competitive Rents - Discount for 1 year's Lease. Manager, 2436 Redbud Lane, Ph. VI 2-3711. 4-19
Free Bumper Stickers; "Not Bombs but Brotherhood" or "Speak Up for Peace." Write Jim Masters, $840_{12}$ Ky.—No objection 4-5
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Need a ride to the East Coast for Spring
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TYPING
TYPIST—experienced in term papers and theses. Prompt service, reasonable rates, electric typewriter. Mrs. Floyd—VI 2-1582. 4-4
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machines tape transcriptions. Office hours: 7 a.m. 12 p.m.-1021₂ MacBook Phone VI 3-5920
Will do neat and accurate typing in my home. Experienced in themes, theses, and term papers. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Adcock. VI 2-1795. tt
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EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses. Use of the book with an electric typewriter, reasonable ability. Car Mrs. Charles Pattis, VI 3-8379.
Former secretary and English major Will do next typing — term papers theses, reports, etc. Reasonable rates Mrs. Crompton—1311 N.H. tf
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, reports. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Mclean. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Eldowney. 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8688. tt
Good typist. Would like to do term papers, and theses. Mrs. Oxford. VI 2-0673. tf
Efficient typist. Would like typing in her home. Special attention to term reports. theses, letters. Call anytime at VI 3-2651.
English major and former secretary will type themes and theses on electric type-writer. For neat and accurate work call Mrs. Mellisand Jones, VI 3-5267. t
Prompt neat accurate work on wide carriage electric typewriter. Journalism-Business secretary experience. Charlotte Weber, VI 3-3495. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type
theses, term papers, and themes, neatly
on new electric typewriter. Call Miss.
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Secretary will do typing in home. Fast accurate, neat work. reasonable rates Familier with legal terms. Marsha Goff VI 2-1749 tt
Transportation plus parking convenience and an opportunity to earn extra money, ride a new motor scooter of your choice, demonstrate and sell in your spare time. Get our deal—Blevin's Bike Shop, 7th and Michigan. tf
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center, 1218
John. Personal service—sectionalize
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guinea pets etc., plus complete list
pet supplies.
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. VI 3-1267.
DRESS MAKING and alterations. Formals, wedding gowns, etc. Ola Smith $ 939_{1/2} $ Mass. Call VI 3-5283. t
Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing
Grease Jobs . . $1.00
Brake Adj. . . . 98c
STUDENTS
7 a.m.-11 p.m
HELP WANTED
Consideration is being given to applicants for the position of psychiatric social worker in the KU Psychological Clinic. Graduate training and experience in the field of social work are required. If interested, call VI 3-2700, Ext. 332. 4-5
PAGE CREIGHTON
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd
Lost-Pair of glasses, black frames in brown burlap case. Lost between Murphy and Watson. If found please call Marie Geisler, VI 3-8255. 4-4
Lost—Gold Cameo Stick-pin lost Monday, April 1, on sidewalk of Jawhawk Blvd. between Spooner Museum & Strong Hall, or in Strong Hall, Reward, contact Spooner Art Museum Office or Nancy Corwin — VI 2-1354. 4-5
LOST
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Shop Evenings
Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 4, 1963
Titus Puts Theory Into New Practice
By Kay Jarvis
James E. Titus, assistant professor of political science had his initial taste of first-hand political competition this week.
Prof. Titus was one of six candidates in Tuesday's election for Lawrence City Commissioners, in which Ernest Pulliam, housing manager for the dormitory department; James Schubert, owner and manager of a women's ready to wear store, and Fred Cooper, mortitian, were elected.
"I feel it was a fairly successful election, even though I lost," he said. "I didn't do too badly for a 'Hill man.'"
"MY RUNNING HAS had the effect of letting the people in Law-rence know that we on the 'Hill' have a genuine interest in the city. We have as much interest in the development and growth of the city as anyone else who lives and works here," he said.
Prof. Titus has had a long standing interest in politics, earning his B.A. and M.A. degrees in political science at the University of Oklahoma and his Ph.D. in the same subject at the University of Wisconsin.
He came to KU in 1957 after teaching three years at the University of Texas and devoting one year each to government service and private industry.
Besides his duties in the political science department at KU, Prof. Titus has been connected with the City Managers Training Program in the graduate school.
"I AM A STAUNCH supporter of the city manager form of government. Lawrence has used this system for the past 12 years with a very good record and a top-notch city manager." he said.
Prof. Titus has been appointed chairman of the Lawrence Human Relations Commission for the coming year, after having served on the commission since it was founded in Sept. 1961.
"I am very proud of this position and believe very strongly in human rights," he said when asked about its function.
"It is a reflection of the moral conscience of the city. Problems exist which must be solved to maintain the city's fair reputation."
Prof. Titus said he decided to seek public office because he has had a long-term interest in government and "there are many who feel it would be nice to have a University man on the city commission. It would also be excellent practical experience." he said.
"It might even improve my teaching somewhat," he said with a grin.
He said the campaign turned out to be about what he had expected.
"THIS TYPE OF campaign can be very frustrating because when you really have no opponent, it's hard to calculate how you're doing." Prof. Titus explained.
"The goal is to run at least third," he said as he casually munched on a kernel of candy corn he took from a jar on his desk.
Because he was running on a non-partisan ballot, there was no organization behind him and it was necessary to do all his own campaign work.
During the interview, several friends and other faculty members stopped by his open door to discuss the campaign and offer help or encouragement.
PROF. TITUS said politics was nothing new to his wife either, who was also helping in the campaign, and their three daughters.
"My mother's been in politics for 30 years," he said when asked if his campaign had made much difference to his family.
He said every city has a unique problem. Lawrence's problem is the 11,000 temporary residents it acquires each fall.
"Lawrence is a sort of provincial town with an international complex — the University — right in the middle of it," he said.
HE FEELS the problems involved are not serious because everyone concerned knows the situation and adjusts and compensates to meet it.
"The relationship between KU and Lawrence has always been good and we've had close cooperation on problems," he said.
Foreign Students: The invitations for the International Festival are now avail-
able. Foreign Students should come by the office before the invitation
begins to pick up needed invitations.
International Students interested in sitting up to April 25 should see the secretary in the office of the Foreign Student Association Strong. The trip will be from 3-11 p.m.
Official Bulletin
Christian Science Organization, 7.30
pass. Danforth Chapel. Everyone welcome.
TODAY
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses 7:00 a.m. 11:40 a.m.
Shown by Catholic Chapel, 1910
Stratford Road.
SCHEDULED INTERVIEWS
If you are interested in a teaching position for September, 1963, in any of these areas, please sign up for an interview in 117 Bailey Hall.
April 4—117 Bailey—Northview Public Schools, Grand Rapids, Michigan.
Rapids, Michigan.
April 5, 117 Bailey, Midlothian, Illinois.
Pollutants.
native Public Schools (Coos County),
Bailey-Ramay Base
School, Puerto Rico
Wichita University's entry into the state school system will not affect KU's policy concerning transfer of credit hours from WU.
KU, WU Maintain Same Credit Policy
Wichita is accredited by the North Central Association, the association of colleges and universities in this area, James K. Hitt, registrar, said
Therefore, KU accepts all credits earned at WU, but not all WU credits may apply toward a KU degree.
The applicability of WU courses toward a KU degree is determined by the dean of the school in which the student plans to major. Hitt said,
FOR EXAMPLE, a course in mathematics taught at WU would be acceptable at KU as credit-hours. But the dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences and the chairman of the Department of Mathematics would decide whether or not the course fulfilled a requirement for a KU degree in mathematics.
The only courses which are not accepted at KU are courses which could not apply toward any KU degree.
Agricultural courses and courses which include religious doctrine are examples of courses which KU cannot accept, Hitt said.
A KU STUDENT may take his last six hours of college work at WU and still get a KU degree, Hitt said.
But if the student requires more than six hours to meet KU's requirements, he must obtain special permission from KU.
Vandals Attacked Vox Populi Vehicle
The bus being used in the Vox Populi car pool may be more trouble than it's worth.
Tuesday night a partially successful attack was made on the bus's tires, and yesterday morning the Lawrence Bus Co. threatened to take legal action to prevent the use of the bus, Sam Evans Jr., whose father donated the bus, said last night.
The two-man raid on the bus came while it was parked in back of a West Campus fraternity house. Members of the fraternity saw the vandals at work and chased them away, but not before a valve-stem on one tire had been broken.
The raiders were recognized, but neither Vox nor Evans cared to file charges. Evans declined to identify the two men and the fraternity to which they belong.
Jerry Dickson, student body president, termed the affair an "inopportune political incident." Dickson said the two men belonged to a fraternity which is affiliated with University Party, but stressed that the action was not condoned by either the fraternity or UP.
Evans said the difficulty with the bus company was unexpected, since the bus was used last year without incident. He said the company complained the bus was depriving them of revenue, and threatened to take legal action.
The Salina sophomore said he checked with a lawyer after meeting with an "indignant" representative of the company yesterday morning. He said he was told the bus company has "no grounds" for any action.
Evans said he was "willing to cooperate" but it was necessary to continue running the bus. He said he anticipates no more trouble.
Legislators Pass Medical Measure
TOPEKA —(UPI)— The Kansas House today passed 83-22 and sent to Gov. John Anderson a bill to implement the Kerr-Mills medical aid for the aged program.
The bill provides for 50 per cent federal participation in the medical plan for senior citizens. The state will pay 25 per cent and counties will put up another 25 per cent.
In other action today the House killed, by a vote of 58-38, the bill that would require the teaching of 10 clock hours of "Americanism Vs. Communism" in Kansas public schools.
The measure, which had the support of the American Legion and the Daughters of the American Revolution, had already been approved by the Senate.
BOWLING is FUN!
Try It This Weekend at Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa
32 AUTOMATIC LANES
Web-Footed Friend Potted In Potter Lake
What would you do if someone called and asked you to rescue an injured duck on Potter Lake?
"We didn't do anything. We couldn't get to the duck. He was in the middle of the lake." Harry Buchholz, supervisor of the physical plant in the buildings and grounds department, said yesterday.
He explained that students were throwing rocks at one of five ducks abandoned here last summer when the call came.
Buildings and Grounds has received other requests for snake removal.
"Eventually all were killed or scared off," he said.
Duck-rescue is only one of several unusual tasks which buildings and grounds employees are called upon to perform. Mr. Buchholz said
"He was supposed to clean a room, but there were two snakes loose in it," Mr. Buchholz related.
"A janitor called up one time and asked us what to do."
"We tell them, 'It's your problem,'" Mr. Buchholz said. "If they know where the snake is, they can get it with a net."
In the summer, calls come in to remove birds from classrooms.
Yesterday morning, the department received two calls within 10 minutes concerning room temperature.
All of Buildings and Grounds' assignments, however, do not concern animals.
"We get so wrapped up in our work that we don't think of it as funny until months later," Mr. Buchholz said.
While the weather is changing, some offices ask for heat in the morning, and then, air-conditioning later in the day.
One campus office wanted air-conditioning immediately.
"Usually we have more work to do than we can possibly get done.
"That's a feature of maintenance work," he said.
The other requested heat.
"It sets its own routine."
BIRD TV-RADIO
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908 Mass.
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STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES invites you to another
It's Tube Time
Thursday, April 4
T.V. PARTY
at
7:30 P.M.
in the South Lounge of the Union Building. HALLMARK HALL OF FAME presents
"THE INVINCIBLE MR. DISRAELI"
in color.
Refreshments will be served and
and
DR. ALDON BELL of
the History Department will speak at 9:00 P.M. immediately following the program.
Daily hansan
60th Year, No.119
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Friday, April 5, 1963
McCormack Wins By 521
All Schools To Have Vote On New Council
The Elections Committee has decided that all University schools will be represented on the All Student Council, regardless of the vote total in the districts.
The representation issue developed yesterday when it appeared that at least three University schools — journalism, pharmacy, and the graduate school — would not have the necessary 75 votes for a seat on the ASC.
THE ELECTIONS Committee's decision will entitle the schools to a seat on the council.
Bob Tiesen, McPherson junior who is the committee chairman, said all statements by him or other members of the committee which conflict with that decision are not valid.
Tieszen said the decision of the committee was based on four factors. One was what the committee termed a contradiction in the ASC Constitution.
The ASC Constitution requirement for an academic district to have a representative on the council is a minimum of 75 votes cast within that district.
IN SUCH CASES, two-thirds of the students enrolled in the school must cast ballots if the school is to be represented on the ASC.
The only exception to this rule applies to schools which do not have a total enrollment of more than 75 persons.
Another section of the ASC Constitution says each school shall have a representative. The schools involved in the dispute are entitled to one representative on the Council, according to the interpretation of the Committee.
The second reason for the Election Committee's decision is that the candidates ran without knowledge of the contradiction in the Constitution.
The third reason, Tieszen said, is that the subsection of the Constitution requiring a minimum number of votes has not been given precedence in past years.
THE FINAL REASON is that the subsection is "facetious," since it would require a school with 76 members to cast 75 votes, but, under the Constitution, a school with 75 members would need to cast only 50 ballots to have a representative.
In 1958, representatives of the Schools of Pharmacy and Journalism were denied voting rights on the Council because they failed to receive the required number of votes. The representatives were granted speaking privileges on the Council.
In the past, decisions concerning seating of representatives have apparently been left to the interpretation of the Elections Committee.
From 1959 to 1962, ASC representatives from the two schools were elected with the vote total in their districts ranging from 34 to 63. En-
(Continued on page 8)
Weather
Generally fair and warmer weather was predicted today with afternoon highs ranging from 65 to 70 degrees with tonight's lows in the 35-45 degree bracket.
Weather forecasters said thin cloudiness probably would move out of the area by tomorrow, bringing a further increase in temperatures and the prospect of clear weather during the weekend.
1942-58
JUBILANT OVER HIS party's sweep of the ASC elections, Reuben McCornack celebrates his first moments as Student Body President-elect.
Nails, Ashtrays Needed at Count
By Patti Behen
Smoke got a little thicker and nails a little shorter as the evening wore on at election headquarters last night in Bailey Hall.
The hours went slowly for the candidates, political party members and friends who waited just outside the statistics office where ballots were sorted and counted.
WHILE THOSE OUTSIDE WAITED, THE elections committee worked. Ballots had to be sorted before they could be counted, and for the first few hours the word was, "They haven't starting counting vet."
At the beginning of the long vigil, candidates were calm and quiet, but when the first results were posted, at 10:30 p.m., the excitement rose.
STUDENTS SAT ON THE FLOOR or leaned against the wall, smoking much, talking little, and waiting. Anyone who emerged from "the depths," as one student termed the counting room, was instantaneously faced with anxious faces and a barrage of questions.
Many candidates came prepared for the long wait and read or played bridge. Others simply waited.
Shortly after the polls were closed at 6 p.m., the telephone at election headquarters began to ring and someone would ask, "Do you know who got student body president yet?" Seven hours later, shortly after 1 a.m., the question was finally answered.
"It will be a sort of a 'post-election letdown'." he said.
About midnight students began to joke and complain. Bets were laid as to whether results for student body president would be out by 6 or 7 a.m.
Dave Stinson, Lawrence junior and newly elected treasurer of the senior class, said that after two weeks of hard work vacation was just the thing he needed.
Inside, the scene was just as tense. Members of the elections committee waited, while the IBM machines sorted and counted, sorted and counted. Results were shouted above the roar of the machines and the ringing of the telephone.
At the end of the evening, some were victorious, some defeated. Everybody was tired.
Reuben McCornack is the new student body president.
The Abilene junior and his running mate, John Underwood, Parsons junior. headed the Vox Populi ticket which won seven of the ten All Student Council academic district positions. Vox lost three seats by a total of 12 votes.
McCORNACK AND UNDERWOOD defeated the University Party candidates, Charles Whitman, Shawnee Mission junior, and Douglas Hall, Raytown, Mo., sophomore, by a margin of 521 votes.
Neither of the candidates was available for comment.
MOST OF THE contests for the ASC seats were close. Carolyn Power (Vox), Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, won the College women's position by a 15-vote margin over Carole Clancy (UP), Lawrence junior.
Vote Tabulations Appear On Page 8.
John Stuckey (Vox), Pittsburgh junior, had a 40-vote margin over Jay Roberts (UP), Des Moines, Iowa, junior, in the race for the College men's seat on the Council.
Terry Ball (UP), Atchison junior, edged Paula Mausolf (Vox), Hoisington senior, by three votes for the School of Pharmacy seat.
STEVE CLARK (UP), Coffeyville junior, won the School of Journalism seat. He defeated Jaclyn Stern (Vox), Clovis, N.M., junior, by six votes.
UP's only other victory came in the Graduate School race. Bob Steffen, Staten Island, N.Y., defeated Tonya Kurt (Vox), by three votes.
Marshall Crowther (Vox), Lawrence, won the Law School seat by 20 votes over Jim Lawing (UP), Okmulgee, Okla.
Janet Pepper (Vox), Newton junior, won the position from the School of Fine Arts. She had a margin of 80 votes over Jane Lutton (UP), Bartlesville, Okla., junior.
CHARLES PORTWOOD Vox), Shawnee Mission junior, defeated Don Pelow (UP), Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, by 15 votes for the School of Engineering and Architecture seat.
Larry Gamble (Vox), Pittsburg junior, won the School of Business seat over Lester Childers (UP), Muncie junior, by 32 votes.
In the School of Education, Barbara Edwards (Vox), Fort Leavenworth junior, edged Wendy Wilkerson (UP), Wichita junior, by 21 votes.
(Continued on page 8)
Cockcroft Explains Nuclear Power Use
One of the greatest scientific achievements in recent years has been the application of nuclear power to the production of electricity, a Nobel Prize-winning scientist said here last night.
Sir John Cockercroft, master of Churchill College at Cambridge, spoke at the first Spencer Memorial Lecture. He said efforts to apply nuclear fission for producing electricity began in England in 1940.
"A SMALL GROUP demonstrated the theoretical feasibility of the atomic bomb and this had an important effect in late 1941 in influencing the decision of England to launch a large scale war effort," the British scientist said.
Cockcroft said this start was slow because of a "great diversion of physicists to the urgent problem of developing radar for the defense of Britain."
Additional progress was made in Canada beginning in 1843, he said. Work on the establishment of a heavy water reactor there was aided by "reinforcements of scientists who could by then be diverted from
radar," Cockcroft said.
AN AGREEMENT between President Roosevelt and Sir Winston Churchill, which re-established cooperation in military and civil aspects of atomic energy, also boosted the program, according to Cockcroft.
Cooperating with a metallurgical laboratory in Chicago directed by Arthur Compton, the developer of nuclear chain reaction, two heavy water reactors were built at Chalk River. Canada by 1946.
"The powerful heavy water research reactor at Chalk River played a major part in giving us our first (Continued on page 4).
Final Edition
This is the final edition of the Kansan until classes resume Monday, April 15. News items and announcements which are to appear in the April 15th edition should be turned in to the newsroom at Flint Hall before Sunday, April 14.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 5, 196
Anything for a Winner
The great American dragon god, Success, has reared its head in college football ranks and devoured Fair Maiden Ethics.
The dialogue that has accompanied the mess in the Southeast Conference is not unlike the Stan Freberg parody, "Saint George and the Dragon," which follows the Jack Webb-Dragnet format of "all I want is the facts."
IT WOULD appear that Wally Butts, the former athletic director at the University of Georgia, used a hot line to Alabama football coach Bear Bryant to relay some strategic information which may have affected a football game last fall.
As in the Freberg record, the present cast of characters seems more disturbed about the dragon devouring maidens out of season than they are about smashing dragon eggs.
Official investigative bodies in both Georgia and Alabama have set out to get "just the facts, ma'am."
With an incredible display of nearsightedness, the dragon slayers are concentrating on stamping out brush fires without looking for the pyromaniacs who are setting them.
IT IS understandable. Going to the source of the trouble would step on some very highly-placed toes. It would involve alumni.
The alumni are the builders of the shrines where the Fair Maiden Ethics is sacrificed with wholesale enthusiasm. The alums want winners at the old alma mater and, being knowledgeable procurers of success, they know where to go.
The handbook for shrine-building alumni is the coach's won-lost record. It is every bit as reliable as Dun & Bradstreet.
The proud sons of the Alabama Crimson Tide wanted a change from the still harbor waters of mediocrity. The Tide must rise to sweep all before it!
WELL, WHEN you want to make a big splash, you look for a man experienced and successful in swimming through deep and troubled waters.
The High Priest of High Priests in the Temple of Football Success has been, for years, one notso mystical Bear Bryant.
At the University of Kentucky he put sharp claws in the Wildcats' football paw to match the basketball scratch. Down at Texas A & M, where he next reigned, Bryant soon put the Aggies atop the heap.
He was the logical choice to raise the Crimson Tide from its status as a ripple. He did; a national champ pleases even the most lethargic alum.
BEAR BRYANT was hired to produce winners. This business of weaving strong moral fiber in the players is left to them that care not a whit for resounding success. The cloth of victory is not high in moral fiber content.
Well now, even the most avid Disciple of Football Success is wondering about the High Priest. They loved him in November, but the frost of scandal has nipped the romance.
The irony of it all is that now after the hired Dragon has devoured the Fair Maiden, the responsible parties are standing in shock.
NOT IN shock that the Fair Maiden Ethics was devoured, but in shock that their Dragon was caught wiping his chin in public.
Well, I agree with them. Maiden devouring should be done in seclusion.
But let's hope that they don't kid themselves into believing that Maiden Devouring will end when they slay an occasional Dragon.
If they want to stop this business of Devouring Maidens out of season, they must tear down the Temple of Football Success, and scatter the worshippers from the Holy Land.
the took world
— Terry Murphy
CHEAPER BY THE DOZEN, by Frank B. Gilbreth Jr. and Ernestine Gilbroth Carey (Bantam, 40 cents).
Contrary to popular opinion, this is not about Clifton Webb and Myrna Lov. It is about a famous efficiency expert (he really was), his big family, and the good old days. A dozen or so years ago it was a big seller, and there probably is still a market for its nostalgic recollections.
SOMETHING IN COMMON, AND OTHER STORIES, by Langston Hughes (American Century, $1.75 paperback; $3.95 cloth).
For two or three decades Langston Hughes has been known as one of the leading Negro figures in American literature, with his poetry, his short stories, his plays, and his lyrics for the Rice-Weill musical. "Street Scene." Now here in a handsome edition is a collection of his short stories.
There are 37 of them in this volume,11 of them appearing in book form for the first time.Hughes selected them himself,and they are widely different in subject matter,though all contain the common theme of human compassion.
Especially revealing is Hughes' marvelous feeling for language, which has revealed itself in his poetry. The stories appeared in such publications as the New Yorker, Esquire, Story, American Mercury and the African, and the titles include "Rock, Church," "Who's Passing for Who?," "African Morning," "Heaven to Hell," "Father and Son," "Powder-White Faces," "Sorrow for a Midget," "Mysterious Madame Shanghai," "Trouble with the Angels" and "Breakfast in Virginia."
THE MOONLIGHT, by Joyce Cary (Doubleday Anchor, $1.25).
* *
Though this is one of Joyce Cary's lesser-known novels it deserves considerable attention for its handling of a controversial theme. It is strong in character development, like Cary's other novels, but unlike some of them it has what the movie-makers might call a message.
Cary wrote the book in an attempt to rebut Tolstoy's "The Kreutzer Sonata," with its story of the evils of sex and the need for repressing the sexual instinct. Cary certainly does not call here for absolute freedom, but he recognizes sex as being so basic that careful regulation of it becomes necessary for society.
His leading characters are women, and the situation involves the spinsterish Amanda, 32 and leading a sheltered and Victorian existence. That existence is complicated by the courtship of two young men, and she comes into conflict with her aunts who have run her life so many years.
Cary selected his title, "The Moonlight." in opposition to Tolstoy's "Kreutzer." Here is a revealing and disturbing novel, serious and somewhat heavier than such books as "Herself Surprised" and "The Horse's Mouth."
Short Ones
He is the greatest artist who has embodied, in the sum of his works, the greatest number of the greatest ideas. — John Ruskin
***
In order that people may be happy in their work, these three things are needed: They must be fit for it: They must not do too much of it: And they must have a sense of success in it. — John Ruskin
The advantage of doing one's praising for oneself is that one can lay it on so thick and exactly in the right places. — Samuel Butler
***
**
Work consists of whatever a body is obliged to do. . . Play consists of whatever a body is not obliged to do.—Mark Twain
When angry, count four; when very angry, swear.—Mark Twain
---
Daily Hansan
Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service. Excited to work with 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. Accepts examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904,
triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Telephone Vikking 3-2700
Extension 711, news room
Extension 376, business office
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Fred Zimmerman Managing Editor
Ben, Marshall, Bill, Sheldon
Mike Miller, Art Miller, Margaret
Cathecart Assistant Managing Editors
Scott Payne City Editor
Stacy Clark Sports Editor
Trudy Meserve and
Judie Stern Co-Society Editors
Murrel Bland Photograph Editor
SORIORIAL DEPARTMENT Demis Braun Murphy Editorial Editor Terry Murphy Asst. Editorial Editor
L DEPARTMENT
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Jack Cannon Business Manager;
Jim Stevens, Asst. Business Mgr;
Jim Advertising, Mgr;
Jane Zabornikl Circulation Mgr;
Brooks Harrison, Classified Mgr; Bob Brooks, National Ad Mgr; Charles Hayward Promotion Mgr; Bill Finley,
Merchandising Mgr.
Looking Beyond The N.Y. Strike
(Editor's Note: Melvin Mencher, who wrote the following article, is on the faculty of the Graduate School of Journalism at Columbia University. Until last June, he was an assistant professor of journalism at KU.)
New York-A good deal of hogwash has been dished out about how the newspaper strike here proves that people need and miss their newspapers.
The truth is, as a study the Columbia journalism school is making indicates, readers don't miss their papers much and apparently what they say they need in their newspapers is nothing that would motivate a man to choose newspapering as a career—unless he were a gossip columnist, an advertising salesman, or a police reporter.
THE GENERALIZATION that this strike proves radio and television are not substitutes for newspapers is, like any other vague statement, meaningless.
It is true that radio and television do not display advertisements as well as newspapers. It's hard to advertise lamb chops, celery, pickles, and doughnuts on radio and TV. And it is equally true that the radio newscast with its 10 items in five minutes cannot really give the news.
But the truth is that most people are completely satisfied with radio or TV news and feel it adequately informs them. Most newspaper readers would be content if their newspapers carried the news in abbreviated form as do the radio stations.
ITHINK the newspapers will have to seek their role in extensive local coverage, leaving the national and international field to such giants as the New York Times and a few other big newspapers. Eventually, our provincial press will be supplemented by these few huge regional and national dailies. The electronic revolution has eliminated the obstacles we once thought made such developments impossible.
The local papers should be thinking of how to amplify their local coverage. For the last 15 years or so, editors and publishers have been told the opposite: to come out of their isolation, to take world news to their readers.
Well, that was good advice and it was welcomed, especially by those publishers whose major concern is the balance sheet. It opened a clear path to newspaper heaven: Instead of hiring two or three more reporters to cover their communities, these publishers—at an expenditure so minor it would deprive them only of a couple of cigars a week—started filling their pages with world news. And all the while nobody minded the store.
SOME OF the eastern dailies are now re-emphasizing local coverage, and their towns and readers are all the better for it. They've moved their pundits out of the office and into the school board meetings, for example. And they have found readers are fascinated by the knowledge of what is happening to their tax dollars. They have found schools are surprisingly ill-equipped to educate children, that too many teachers are incompetent, that the curriculum is inadequate.
If readers then want to know what is happening in the world and most are happy with little more than radio news—let them go to the national dailies for extensive coverage, as most perceptive people are now doing.
If there is a major weakness in the American press, it is in local coverage.
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS by Dick Bibler
C-74 ROBIN BERT MONTRÉEVAL
YOU'LL FIND COACH ANTH' BOYS HAVE A NEW RESPECT FOR THE
ACADEMIC PROFESSORS AROUND HOMECOMING TIME.
KU Political Clubs Grapple With Declining Enthusiasm
(This is the third in a three-part series on KU political clubs.)
By Roy Miller
The year is 1938. The Great Depression has nearly passed. World War II is yet to come.
Page 3
Franklin Roosevelt is in the White House. Walter Huxman, a Democrat, is in the governor's mansion at Topeka.
THE ENROLLMENT ON McOread is 4,000. Of this 4,000, about 1,000 students have membership cards for Young Republicans Club.
It has been two years since Republican presidential candidate Alfred M. Landon, former governor of Kansas, was caught in the Democratic landslide and beaten soundly in his own state.
That was 1338. The Republicans were fighting to regain their perennial control of the state and their former grip on the nation.
This is 1963. A Democrat is in the White House. A Republican is in the governor's mansion at Topeka.
But although enrollment at KU's Lawrence campus is nearly 10,000, the Young Republicans Club today has about 800 members.
"STATE OFFICE HOLDERS and candidates depended on collegiate clubs then," a KU alum and a member of the Young Republicans in 1938, said. "Attention was given to the Young Republicans at the collegiate level."
Why has enthusiasm for KU political clubs declined since 1928?
The alum, now a legislative counsel, believes part of the fault for an apparent decline in activity in the political clubs rests with state politicians. Campus clubs have value as the "best source for young talent, but politicians are overlooking this source today," he said.
He got the support, and, according to the alum, collegiate support and absentee votes cast by college students was a "deciding factor" in Ratner's election.
"Rather kept up his contact with students," the alum said. "He'd invite a group of KU students over to the governor's mansion on a Sunday evening for dinner and discussion."
"RATNER MAY HAVE had some shortcomings as a governor, but I think he had better relations with the collegiate groups than any governor since then."
The alum said 200 of the 1,000 members of the club in 1938 were active ones.
Asked if he thought other activities limited participation in a political club when he was here (1935-1941), the alum said:
"I didn't think so until I started looking over a list of activities at KU
then. Yes, I suppose so. It must also be remembered that this was a time when it was easy to get into activities that didn't cost very much."
Today, an influx of student activities has hurt interest and participation in the Young Republicans, President Reuben McCormack believes.
"THIS DECLINE OF ACTIVITY is true of the campus as a whole," McCornack, Abilene junior, said. "I'm not trying to rationalize for this decline, but I think there are so many other things that take up people's time."
Because of this, McCornack said he sees value only in monthly meetings, especially in off years.
Meetings preceding the 1938 state election were often held weekly, according to the alum.
"National politics, as far as the college student is concerned, is not something you participate in every week or two weeks," McCornack said.
John Young, vice-president of the Young Democrats Club, disagrees with McCornack on the effect of competing activities on the political clubs.
"Every group has this problem," said Young, a first-year law student from Salina. "They all interfere with each other. But that isn't the point. They complement each other, too."
YOUNG BELIEVES at least three steps are necessary to maintain enthusiasm for campus political clubs:
- Secure better speaker
- Plan further ahead
- Provoke more controversy.
"I look more controversy.
"It's hard to plan and execute a program that will get the people out," Young said. "It's hard to find time for proper planning. And it's hard to get good speakers, because there aren't many good speakers around. The people that are good speakers are usually too busy. I think we should make better use of campus personalities."
Young believes that discussions of issues could increase activity in the political clubs.
For example, Young thinks the Young Democrats should support state re-apportionment and the election of non-partisan judges, and should oppose the sales tax. On the national level, he thinks Cuba, Medicine, college aid and civil rights would make good discussion topics.
MAX LOGAN, Young Democrats president, believes his club's primary need is a purpose. Although noting that his club has been in desperate need of unity in the past, he feels the organizational problems of the Young Democrats have now passed.
Logan feels some sort of club service project should be undertaken. "Such a project gives your members something to identify themselves with," he said.
Young Democrats and Young Republicans officers feel assured that each club will attract increased interest and participation as the national election approaches.
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University Daily Kansan
Dr. F.S.C. Northrop, Sterling professor of philosophy and law at Yale University since 1947, will give the next Humanities Lecture April 23.
Prof. Northrop will speak on "The Unique Character of the American Legal and Political System" at 8 p.m. in Fraser theater.
Last year Prof. Northrop was awarded a $10,000 prize by the American council of Learned Societies as recognition of his distinguished accomplishments in humanistic scholarship.
During his three-day visit, he will speak at a Law School convocation and will be a luncheon speaker at a convocation at the School of Religion. His subject at the law school will be "The Importance of the Great Living Religions in the Education of the Modern American."
Yale Scholar Will Speak
Meanwhile, the leaders believe they must continue to educate future voters, and provides services and forums for political discussion. Above all, they feel, they must remember the primary purpose suggested by their names—that of assisting the two major political parties.
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East Asian Studies To Sponsor Film
The conflicts that arise within a group of men under the stress of wartime is the theme of the Japanese film to be shown at 7:30 p.m. April 18 in Bailey Auditorium.
The film, "The Burmese Harp," will be the fourth in a series. The Japanese Film Festival, sponsored by the KU Committee on East Asian Studies.
Friday, April 5, 1963
Professor Grant Goodman, visiting professor of history, is chairman of the film series. There is no admission.
The film won the 1958 San Giorgio Prize, which is awarded for the film which best shows "man's capacity to live with one another."
It was also awarded first prize at the Japanese Film Festival.
Law Students to Attend Meet
Five KU law students will attend the ninth annual conference of law reviews. April 5-6. in Dallas. Tex.
Representatives of more than 90 schools and universities will attend the conference.
KU, which publishes the quarterly Kansas Law Review, is one of the few schools in the nation having an entirely student-operated law review.
Third year law students who will attend the conference include Bruce Wingerd, Marion and Edward Bailey, Atchison.
Second year students who will attend include Jerry Elliott, Hutchinson; Tom Triplett, St. Joseph, Mo., and Robert Driscoll, Lawrence.
Winegard and Elliott will lead seminar discussions during the convention.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 5, 1963
Cockcroft Explains-
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1) experience of reactor technology, Cockercroft said.
"THE EXPERIENCE we gained at Chalk River was invaluable in founding the United Kingdom Atomic Energy program when we returned in 1946 to build the Atomic Energy Research Establishment at Harwell," he said.
Cockcroft was awarded the Nobel prize for his atom-splitting work. He became widely known when he and Dr. E.T.S. Walton succeeded in transmuting lithium and boron by high energy protons in 1932.
Fred B.
Sir John Cockcroft
THE LECTURE was the first held at KU in memory of Kenneth E. Spencer, Kansas City industrialist and founder of the Spencer Chemical Co. Spencer was a KU graduate and a generous KU benefactor.
Last night's lecture and a private lecture held last Wednesday in Kansas City were sponsored by the KU Endowment Association.
Cockcroft referred to the late Spencer as "a great industrialist interested in the application of science to industry."
Cockcroft said the different types of producers of nuclear power were studied in 1950. He said a graphite-moderated gas cooled reactor was chosen as the best for England because of the availability of graphite.
The first nuclear power station of this type was operational in England by 1956. Since then, three similar power stations have been built, with an annual output of 2.5 billion units of electricity.
EIGHT OTHER power stations, on a larger scale than those constructed by the United Kingdom Atomic Energy Administration, have been built by England's Electricity Generating Boards, a nationalized industry.
Cockroft listed two classes of technological problems in nuclear power development.
"The first are the problems common to most new technological developments of reducing capital costs per unit output by simplifying construction and increasing efficiencies and ratings," he said. He showed a slide of the decline in the cost of internal combustion engines as an example.
"The second class of problems are the technological problems.
"In developing the gas-cooled reactor, the most important problem has been the development of fuel elements of great reliability."
COCKCROFT SAID the British reactors would be using natural uranium metal fuel until 1968.
He said the main technical problems of uranium fuel were its distortion and irradiation or temperature cycling which could cause the uranium to leak and cause "contamination of the reactor circuit."
The master at Cambridge, a position equal to chancellor in the United States, said 12 European countries, under the auspices of the European Nuclear Energy Agency, are working cooperatively to solve some of the problems in producing nuclear electricity.
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Cockcroft pointed out that the main difference between nuclear power programs in the United States and Canada with those in Great Britain was that those in North America are based on water moderated reactors instead of the graphite reactors in England.
"The advantages of the ordinary water moderated reactors is their small size requiring pressure vessels of only about 12 feet in diameter so that power densities are about 60 kilowatts per litre — about an order of magnitude higher than the graphite moderated reactors," Cockcroft said.
HE NOTED that six power stations, with an output about equal with England's, were in operation in the United States at present.
The British scientist discussed a power station about to be built at Bodega Bay in California and called this "one of the high cost fuel areas where nuclear power should be competitive."
Beau Kay Hi-Rickety, mascot of Sigma Nu fraternity and grand champion Great Pyrenees, won the distinction with 814 out of 1,051 votes cast.
Beau Kay Hi-Rickety 'Ugly Man' Winner
In a landslide vote, a large white, furry dog was elected "Ugliest Man on Campus."
ACCORDING TO members of the fraternity, Beau was unable to attend the presentation ceremonies of the traveling trophy because he was out chasing cats.
"He took the honor gracefully. He was unperturbed by the whole affair," said Danny Hopper, Wichita senior.
The contest was sponsored by Alpha Phi Omega, service fraternity, to raise money for the campus chest. Votes were sold at a nickel a vote and $52.55 was collected.
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The People-to-People Job Placement Committee will help foreign students obtain Summer employment.
P-t-P to Locate Summer Jobs
Foreign students interested in summer jobs should fill out application blanks at the People-to-People office in the Kansas Union before noon tomorrow.
According to Raymond Edwards, chairman of the committee, it is difficult to obtain jobs for foreign students because many employers want to hire their home town people.
"Students from other countries should not expect jobs in areas of their studies," Edwards said, "because most of the available summer jobs involve manual labor."
Foreign students must obtain permission from the United State Immigration and Naturalization Service to work during the summer months. This permission can also be obtained from Clark Coan, foreign student adviser and assistant to the dean of students.
The Placement Committee members will interview students to ascertain their abilities and interests. The committee will try to provide jobs according to the student's capabilities.
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Yost Looms as Jayhawkers Chief Contender at Austin
KU's 32-year-old shot-putter appears to be the Jayhawker track team's best chance for a first place ribbon in the Texas Relays this weekend at Austin.
Yul Yost, who didn't begin shot-putting seriously until he was 30, goes into the Texas carnival with the best pre-meet toss in the event.
But Yost will have to be in top form if he is to gain a first for KU, something Coach Bill Easton's team haven't missed capturing since 1949 at Austin.
YOST, WHO is undefeated for the year, set a career mark of 57-6 at the Kansas State Indoor Invitational March. 23.
Three other top contenders for the spot put title in the 36th Texas Relays are within a foot of Yost.
George Woods of Southern Illinois holds the next best heave to Yost's. Yost beat Woods by a yard when the two schools met in a triangular meet here, but Woods hit 57-134 to win the Arkansas Relays and set a new career high last Saturday.
WOODS IS still throwing with a left foot he wounded when a shotgun he was carrying discharged last November. In fact, pellets from the accident remain in the Saluki's foot.
Danny Roberts of Texas A & M is close to the 57-foot range, too. Roberts had a 56-11 toss in the San Angelo Relays last Saturday.
Frank Mazza of Baylor has thrown the sphere 56-6. Jim Lancaster, his teammate, has a 56-1 effort to his credit.
DAVE MAGRANE of Drake, who sets a school record nearly every time he competes, hit a new high of 56-2 for second place behind Woods at the Arkansas Relays.
In the event at the Texas Relays last year, Roberts was third on $55-41^{\frac{2}{3}}$ and Mazza placed fifth with
A New Angle To 'Fix' Story
ATLANTA — (UPI) — The first person informed of a controversial telephone conversation between former Georgia Athletic Director Wallace Butts and Alabama Coach Paul (Bear) Bryant considered it routine coaches' chit-chat, a previously undisclosed document showed today.
John Carmichael said the conversation as related to him by associate George Burnett, who said he accidentally overheard it, differed completely from the version that appeared in a Saturday Evening Post article.
The magazine story, based on Burnett's account of the telephone talk, accused Butts of giving away Georgia team secrets to Bryant nine days before the 1962 Alabama-Georgia football game. Alabama, a 17-point favorite, defeated Georgia, 35-0. Butts and Bryant denied it.
"The conversation quoted to me that morning, when it was fresh in his mind, was not important enough to impress me that anybody was throwing a football game," Carmichael said.
"It sounds like just basic conversation between coaches," Carmichael said in one of 16 documents gathered by State Atty. Gen. Eugene Cook during a two-week investigation of the Post accusation. The document, however, was not released with the other 15 last Tuesday but was obtained yesterday by United Press International.
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a 53-6 toss. Dick Inman of Oklahoma, defending Big Eight outdoor champ, placed fourth at 54-8.
Inman, however, has not reached that figure yet this year while making a comeback from a knee operation.
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CALL VL 3-1086
Al Oerter was the last KU winner in the event at Austin. The twoweat Olympic discus champion swept both the shot and discus in 1958, his mark in the former a 56-1.
YOST DID NOT even compete in the meet last year. He has improved his career high more than a yard since he placed fourth in last year's conference outdoor meet at 54-2%.
Pete Talbott, who placed fifth in the javelin last year, has a lame back and will not make the trip this weekend.
Only other Jayhawk individual entries in the meet will be Doug Stoner or Barry Hanratty in the discus and Floyd Manning in the pole vault.
ONCE CONSIDERED threats, two KU high jumpers are not making the rip because of injuries. Ron Swanson has a lame knee, and Charlie Twiss has a bruised heel.
The loss of Ted Riesinger in the relays is expected to affect the success of KU relay units at Austin. Riesinger has been out since the conference indoor meet with a thigh pull.
CALL VI 3-1086
KU HAS won 26 relay races while Bill Easton has been KU coach. Three teams will enter this year's meet.
The best of these squads may be the two-mile. KU won that event in the record time of 7:27.7 last year.
But only Tonnie Coane is back from last year's team. Others who will run this year will be Kirk Hagan, Bill Cottle and Paul Taylor.
Slated to run in the four-mile relay are Paul Acevedo, George Cabrera, Herald Hadley and Chick Fero.
The Jayhawkers' distance medley crew of Bill Stoddart, Coane, Hagan and Cottle or Taylor will see action tonight in the early event.
Riesinger ran in the No. 3 position in the record-setting two-mile relay
team last year with a 1:49.7 carry. In the conference indoor meet, the veteran miler placed third in the mile in 4:23.2, and fifth in the 1,000-yard run.
TRACK TIDBITS — Two sophomores — Hadley and Cottle — will be seeing their first relays action this weekend. . Competing in the university division of a major relays meet for the first time will be junior college transfers Fero, Manning and Taylor. .
Yost, a Yugoslavian refugee, places a high value on intercollegiate sports. . . Yost claims that people in Latin America are the world's best sports fans (he has a brother there). . .
Look for Texas Southern and Emporia State to be the big names in the college division of the major relays meets this season. . An interesting fight between the two schools is in view for the 38th Kansas Relays here April 19-20. .
Spring Sports Teams Travel
All four of KU's spring sports teams are on the road this weekend — three of them in Oklahoma and the other in Texas.
The track team will compete in the 36th Texas Relays which begins tonight and continues tomorrow at Austin.
Coach Floyd Temple's baseball team will battle in a three-game series beginning today at Norman with a doubleheader and ending tomorrow with a single game.
The Jayhawkers go into the series with a 3-2 record.
The KU golfers will compete in the Oklahoma Invitational at Shawnee, Okla.
Coach Dick Reason's squad lost 11-4 to defending Big Eight champion Oklahoma State in its opener last weekend.
The Jayhawker tennis team is at Stillwater today battling Oklahoma State.
The Hawk netmen won 9-0 over Washburn last weekend.
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Newly elected officers of the KU Cricket Club are Lalit Kothari, Bombay, India, senior, president and captain; Ramesh Gandhi, Bombay, India, junior, vice-president and vice-captain; and Pravin Kothari, Bombay, India, sophomore, acting secretary.
KUCricketClubElectsOfficers
Gerhardt Zuther, assistant professor of English, has been selected as faculty adviser to the club.
The Club will begin its season shortly after the spring vacation. Matches will be held with the University of Missouri, Kansas State
University, Fort Leavenworth Cricket Club, Kansas City Cricket Club and St. Louis Cricket Club. The club is also planning to go to Canada in summer to play several games there.
Woman to Wed Eighth Time
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University Daily Kansan
Friday. April 5. 1963
Aldon Bell Speaks At SUA TV Party
In squeezing the three-act play into a television program, too much historical data and too many vital scenes were lost, a KU professor of history said last night at the Student Union Activities television party.
This is the opinion of Aldon Bell, assistant professor of history, who spoke last night at the television party which featured "The Invincible Mr. Disraeli."
Benjamin Disraeli (1804-1881) was the first Earl of Beaconsfield and was a Prime Minister of England.
THE TELEVISION party was held in the South lounge of the Kansas Union. The 90-minute live drama was shown in color.
"Disraeli" is the life story of a politician who struggles to get to the top in politics. Benjamin Disraeli was a Jew but he was born in England.
His being a Jew causes many of his hardships in his lifetime. In the story, a twenty-year sequence of events is sandwiched in to show a proud man who was witty and sharp-tongued but still warm in his domestic life.
IN HIS REVIEW, Prof. Bell said the characters are well-played. For example, he said, Disneel was not depicted simply as a devout politician, but "we are shown both sides of his personality."
Disraeli, though a witty man, Prof. Bell said, eventually became a careful thinker. He learned that he could not solve the problems of Europe, Prof. Bell said.
Miss Lawrence Field Narrowed
Eight KU women are among the 10 finalists in the preliminary Miss Lawrence contest.
They are Loretta Marcoux, Havenville junior; Joan Burger, Prairie Village sophomore; Carol Synovec, Morrowville freshman; Sharon Richmond, Louisburg freshman; Sherry Wickliff, Mission senior; Bonnie Ward, Topeka junior; Peggy Dewey, Bethel freshman, and Mary Todd, Arkansas City junior.
They will compete in the final Miss Lawrence Pageant April 19 at Lawrence High School. The winner will enter the Miss Kansas Pageant in Pratt June 7-9.
THEY were chosen after talent and swim suit competition. They had been informally introduced to the judges.
Miss Marcoux, in a red and blue cow-girl costume, sang "I Can't Say No" from Rodgers and Hammerstein's "Oklahoma."
WEARING A BLACK cat costume,
Miss Synovee played and sang "The
Pussy Cat Song" by Dick Manning.
Miss Ward, in costume, sang an aria, "In Quelle Trine Morbidle," from the opera "Manon Lescaut."
Miss Todd played a flute solo,
"Pen," from "Pleasures of Pan."
FLANKED BY FIVE of her paintings, Miss Burger spoke on modern art as a revelation of the artist's feelings and thoughts.
Miss Dewey did a calypso dance to the "St. Louis Blues Mambo."
Miss Wickliff performed a trampoline routine preceded by demonstration of the five basic trampoline positions.
Miss Richmond orally interpreted "The Cremation of Sam McGee," by Robert Service.
Portraits of
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STUDIO
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
Commenting on Disraeli as a novelist, Prof. Bell said that he "romanticizes the working class." He had a constant emphasis on the working party, he said, just as he did as prime minister.
Prof. Bell said that though some historical essence was lost by the television production, the most famous quotes were left in. As a character, he said, Disraeli is well-done. "He knew there was a prejudice against him," Prof. Bell said.
A
"He was a champion of the Jews in England." Prof. Bell pointed out that Disraeli knew that being a Jew hurt him politically.
HE SAID DISRAELI was proud but not ambitious as the critics evaluate him. During his wife's old age illness, Disraeli remained at her side even during political issues.
Speaking again of the historical aspect, Prof. Bell said there was no Russian-Turkey war, as was shown in the picture, nor did Queen Victoria fear and hate Russia in 1840.
Prof. Bell attributed Disraeli's political success to "luck" and his ability as a debater. Had the party not divided in 1846, Prof. Bell said, Disraeli's 20-year wait may have been different.
About 75 high school senior men will visit the campus during Men's Residence Hall Association Visitation Weekend, April 27 and 28.
High School Men To Sample KU Life
The purpose of the program is to acquaint high school men with the campus and its facilities and especially the residence halls. A. Fred McElhenie, assistant to the dean of students, said.
Three halls will accommodate the men. They are Joseph R. Pearson, Templin and Carruth-O'Leary. McElhenie said the men will stay with residents at the dormitories.
He said the men will participate in guided tours of the campus and will have consultations with staff members and student leaders.
On Sunday, April 28, the men will attend a banquet at Templin Hall. The men will come from all parts of Kansas.
International Students interested in travel must sign an intershipality form of April 29 should see the secretary in the office of the Foreign Student Bureau. Strong. The trip will be from 3-11 p.m.
Official Bulletin
International Students: Turn in the form of the Foreign Student, Advisen 228 Strong Hall, by Friday evening The form is due in April International Campus newsletter.
Foreign Students: The invitations for the International Festival are now available and would come by the office before spring vacation begins to pick up needed invitations.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Dunforth Chapel.
TODAY
U.R.H. weekly open house and mixer,
9 a.m.-p.m. Lewis - The Whateahamaca-
tell
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses, 7:00 a.m., 11:40 a.m.
Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910
Stratford Church
SUNDAY
Catholic Masses. 8:00 a.m. in St. Lawn
Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road. 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. Fraser Auditorium.
SCHEDULED INTERVIEWS
If you are interested in a teaching position for September, 1963, in any of these areas, please sign up for an interview in 117 Bailey Hall.
April 5—117 Bailey-Midlothian, Illinois Public Schools (Cook County)
April 8—117 Bailey—Ramey Base Schools, Puerto Rico.
AWS Plans Events To Honor Women
The Associated Women Students (AWS) is making plans for its annual project when KU women are recognized on All Women's Day.
The theme will be "Lucky to be a Lady." In addition to the official All Women's Day activities April 29, the AWS committee has planned events on the preceding days.
An exchange dinner will be held among all the organized women's living groups on April 24.
A discussion group concerning the role of women is planned for April 25 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Junior and senior women will be guests at a brunch at 9 a.m., April 28, in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Later in the evening there will be a sophomore picnic at Potter's Lake
JOSEPH E. LEVINE presents
On April 29 the art work of KU women will be on display in front of Hoch Auditorium.
Honors night banquet, the highlight of All Women's Day, will be held in the Kansas Union Ballroom. During the banquet, the freshmen counselors, Cwens, and members of Mortar Board will be announced. The AWS Senate also will be installed, the AWS Memorial Scholarship presented, and the outstanding woman from each living group announced.
A STORY OF CHRISTIANITY WHEN BLOOD FLOWED SO THAT A FAITH MIGHT LIVE!
CONSTANTINE AND THE CROSS EASTMANCOLOR TOTALSCOPE A JOHN FILM A BEAVER CHAMPION PICTURE AN EMBASSY PICTURES RELEASE STARTS SUNDAY!
STARTS SUNDAY!
• CONTINUOUS SUNDAY FROM 2:30
Ends Saturday!
"FIVE FINGER
EXERCISE"
Varsity Art Attraction
VARSITY
MOTHRA
[THEATRE ... Telchampo VENUE 3 - BOSS]
CHUBBY CHECKER in a Big New role! DON'T KNOCK THE Twist
TONITE and SATURDAY... AT DUSK!
Two Bonus Features Saturday
★ "BELLE SOMMERS" ★ "THIRD OF A MAN"
FLOW LET PRODUCTION • A COLUMBIA PICTURES RELEASE 895
STARTS SUNDAY!
Spencer Tracy Burt Lancaster Richard Widmark
Mariene Dietrich Judy Garland Maximillian Schell
AND
Montgomery Cliff
AS HOKIE NOSMAN
Sunset
GIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 60
JUDGMENT
AT
NUREMBERG
Released three UNITED ARTISTS
Sunset
DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 40
KU Males Indifferent To Easter Bonnet Fad
Women, if you're all excited about a new Easter hat, save your strength.
By Joanne Prim
You probably won't get a very enthusiastic response from the men.
enthusiastic response from the men. Recent interviews show that the KU male couldn't care less if you wear a new hat (or any hat) on Easter.
Apparently the traditional, romanticized Easter bonnet bit the dust.
"I DON'T PAY any attention to them," one student said languidly. "You're not going to get too many answers from boys who say they look at girls' hats."
One man said:
One man said:
"Eggghhyyt."
"AS LONG AS they're small and not flowery, they're OK. But when they're large, gaudy, and flower,$g$, they're hideous."
Even more discouraging was a saleswoman in a downtown hat shop.
"Women don't like hats, They hate them. They won't wear them," she said.
"A GREAT MANY college girls put a lot of work and care in on the outrageous hairdos, and they don't want to spoil them."
"It's a case of hat or hair. They don't want to sacrifice the hair to wear the hat," she said.
Commenting on styles, she said,
"Little flimsy hats are a thing of the past."
She recommended lots of flowers, big ones.
A SALESMAN at another store also referred to the decrease in hat sales.
"You buy one if you just have to have one," he said.
In spite of everything, however,
several women hat-buyers persist.
One woman suggests that you let your inner emotions come out in your hat selection.
"THE ONLY way to buy a hat is to fall madly in love with it. It has to be wild," she said.
ONE SUNNY philosopher said;
"I love just hats," she said. "They complete an outfit."
One woman is determined to shop for and find the hat she wants — "with pink flowers and a veil and green leaves and things."
"To me, a new hat signifies spring. Hats are the first really colorful and feminine thing you see in spring. They sort of whet your taste for other spring clothing."
JIM'S CAFE
838 Mass.
OPEN
24 hrs. a day
BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY
AUTO TOPS AND SEAT COVERS Seat covers tailor-made as low as $16.50
For ready-made tops and seat covers, shop our wide selection. Whatever your choice...see us first!
JACK'S SEAT COVERS
545 Minn.
VI 3-4242
THREE AIRLINE HOSTESSES ON A
S&W Germ Rugematic 30-06 30-06 8, or
PRE- 3 bloc City. Conti K.C..
V
Regi:
ROMANTIC ROUND THE WORLD MANHUNT! METRO GOLDWYN MAYER presents COME FLY WITH ME
DOLORES HUGH KARL PAMELA KARL HART O'BRIAN BOEHM TIFFIN MALDEN
Screen Story and Screen Disc
LUIS Screen Play by Directed by Produced by NETTLFTON WILLIAM ROBERTS · HENRY LEVIN · ANATOLE DE GRUNWALD PANAVISION .NET
STARTS SATURDAY
★ Evenings at 7:00 & 9:00 ★ Matinee Saturday at 2:00
★ Continuous Showings Sunday from 2:30
New elect Olive typir Mass
Hurry, Ends Tonight Glenn Ford in "THE COURTSHIP OF THEEDIE'S FATHER"
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI3-5728
Friday, April 5, 1963
University Daily Kansan
Page 7
store hat
ve to
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
ever. st.
u let it in
hat it. It
shop ts and
One day, $1.00; three days, $1.50; five days, $1.75. Terms cash. All ads must be called or brought to the University Dally Kansan Business Once in Fint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion.
They
d:
oering,
oorful
e in
taste
FOR SALE
S&W . 38 special, Walther P-38, Collectors
German Luger, 32 H&R revolver, 22
Ruger automatic, 22 Remington automatic rifle, AMMO: 40, 30 carbine, 9mm,
65 round, so have some 22 and 30-66 hitches, 6 Stouffer 6, apurpurine,
8, or call VI 3-1110.
4-17
Mobile home, 45'x8', 2 bedrooms with new air conditioner and outside storage building. Excellent condition. Call VI 3-5137. 4-17
Hairdryers! Hair drier's! The ideal Easter gift! Largest stock in Lawrence. All famous brands at low discount prices flow as $8.00! Ray Stoneback 3-47 Mass.
1957 T.W.N. Motorcycle 125 cc 2 cycle.
Dave Shraer or Don Wilkins. V-4-
2044
Registered "Pek" puppies. Call VI 2-1817 4-16
PRE-MED SENIORS. 46' mobile home
3 blocks from Medical Center in Kansas
with study with study
Contact Roy Hortley, 3610 Rainbow Bld.
K.C., Kansas J-2 09315.
MOBILE HOMES. Students! We our big
issues! issue Todd M Homes
Homes, 138 N. 2nd, 4-5
1956 Buick convertible, radio, heater,
power. 1961 Volkswagen, like new. Would
consider trade for older car. See at 1244
Louisiana.
4-45
Baebell and weights, 110 lb set, $18.00
Baebell and weights, $45.00 Call V
8709 at 8.00 p.m.
4-55
new and used portables, standards and
electronics. Royal, Olympia, Smith Corona,
typing papers, Lawrence Portable portables. Bond
typing papers, Lawrence Typewriter, T
Mass. Phone VI 3-3644.
1962 M.G.A. Mark II 1600. Like new, only $195.00. Low mileage, white walls, wire wheels, radio and tanneau. After 5 p.m. call VI 3-5860. 4-15
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop near me. Pet phone VT 872-365-9100 Modern, self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days.
Transistor radio clearance! New 6 trans.
G.E Radio cut to $13.00, 8 trans. radio
529 Mass models last Ruy Sieb
back's, 929 Mass. Headquarters for
count prices. 4-5
All kinds of house plants. Potted . .
Including philodendron to be used for
room dividers and in picture windows.
Phone VI 3-4207. tf
Printed Biology Study Notes: 70 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta Notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50. t
"YPING PAPER BARGAINS: Pink typing paper. 85c per yellow. Rainy days. Only one per pound. The Lawrence Outlook. 1003 Massachusetts, open all day Saturday. If you are interested in a copy."
Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extensively comprehensive mimeographed and bound for $4.00 per copy. Call V1 2-190 for free delivery t
TRAVEL
Travel Arrangements Home
Contact
Maupintour Associates
Mall Shopping Center
VI 3-1211
TRAVEL — make your airline reservations for Easter early so you won't miss any time at home.
First National Travel Agency 746 Mass. YI 3-0152
American copper, silver and gold coins,
metal tokens, campaign badges and in-
tertainment tickets. American Coat Mart 1025 Mass.
Hours 9:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. 4-25
WANTED
Used cars—highest prices paid. Call VI 3-
9811. 601 Vermont. **U**
**t**
MISCELLANEOUS
Free Bumper Stickers: "Not Bombs but Brotherhood" or "Speak Up for Peace." Write Jim Masters, $840_{12}$ Ky.-No objection. 4-5
LOST
Consideration is being given to applicants for the position of psychiatric social worker in the KU Psychological Clinic. Graduate training and experience in the field of social work are required. If interested, call VI 3-2700. Ext. 332. 4-5
HELP WANTED
Lost-Gold Carneo Stick-pin lost Monday, April 1, on sidewalk of Jawahk Blvd, between Spooner Museum & Strong Hall, or in强盛 Hall, Reward, contact Spooner Art Museum Office or Nancy Corwin -- VI 2-1354. 4-5
TYPING
MILIKENES SOS — always first quality typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines.
tape transcriptions. Office hours: 7 a.m., 12 p.m.-12 o'clock.
Phone VI 3-5920. Maitff
Will do neat and accurate typing in my home. Experienced in themes, theses, and term papers. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Adcock, VI 2-1795. tf
"GOOD TYPING CREATES a favorable impression with instructors." For excellent typing of theses and term papers, call Miss Louise Pope, VI 3-1097. tf
Dissertations, theses, manuscripts and term papers typed on new electric typewriter keys. Experience in education and sciences. Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. VI 2-1546. fc
Theses, term papers, reports, typed quickly and accurately. Experienced typist; electric typewriter. Marian Graham. 1619 Del. — VI 3-0483. tf
Experienced typist does term papers.
Experienced electric typewriter. Special symbols and signs. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs. Book at 200 Rhode Island Pho. VI 3-7485
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, research papers. An electric typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patts, VI 3-8379.
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, reports. Electric typewriter. Mrs. ElmDewney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-868. tf
Former secretary and English major.
Will do next typing — term papers,
theses, reports, etc. Reasonable rates.
Mrs. Compton—1311 N.H. **tf**
Good typist. Would like to do term papers, and theses. Mrs. Oxford VI 2-0647.
Prompt neat accurate work on wide carriage electric typewriter, Journalism-Business secretary experience. Charlotte Weber, VI 3-3495. tf
Efficient typist. Would like typing in her
thoughts, letters. Call anytime at V1 3-2631
English major and former secretary will type themes and theses on electric typewriter. For neat and accurate work call Mrs. Melsand Jones, VI 3-5267. tt
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
accurate, neat work, reasonable rates
Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff,
VI 2-1749. tt
EXPERIENCED TYPIST Will type
theses, term papers, and themes, neatly
on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs.
Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. t
BUSINESS SERVICES
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center, 1218
Conn. Personal service—sectionsalized
birds, teachers, chameleons, turtles,
pigs, etc., plus complete list of
pet supplies.
Transportation plus parking conveniences and an opportunity to earn extra money, ride a new motor scooter of your choice, demonstrate and sell in your spare time. Get our deal—Blevin's Bike Shop, 7th and Michigan.
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
ware, 32-8160, Ola Smith
939'919; Mass. Call VI 3-5263.
BENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. IV 3-1287. t
FOR RENT
Graduate men and older undergraduates;
A few studio apartments will be available
reserve your comfort. Now is the time to res-
erved apartment for the summer school.
One and a half beds from Union Prie-
nciary Idea Collection.
Apartment Call I V-8343 - 4-18
BIKE RENTALS — New lightweights — $1.00 per day (1 week minimum rental),
— 2 weeks per week, $3.00 per week,
deposit required on all rentals,
Stonehack's — 922 Mass. 4-18
Rooms for women graduate students. Call VI 2-1689. 4-5
Close to KU as 1st floor, 5 room apartment. Unfurnished. Pay utilities except water. Charge $75. McGrew Agent MI-3-2055. After hours phone Mr. Dickler MI-3-7481.
Dunley two bedrooms with stove and re-
cretory. Calls VI 1-2281. eir
tt
Air-cond, furnished apartments centrally located. See size rooms. Large refinishes.
Crescent Heights Apartments, 25th &
Redbud: Rear entrances. Large utility room.
Office suite. Garage off street parking -- Built in ranges
-- Refrigerators -- 2 Berms. 840 sq.
ft. -- Refrigators -- 2 Berms. 840 sq.
ft. -- Refrigators -- 2 Berms. 840 sq.
ft. -- Fully Carpeted and Draped
Garbage disposal. -- Air-conditioned
Showers. -- Competitive Rents. -- Do-
n’t Waste. Redundant Lanes. Ph. VI 2-3711. 4-19
Redundant Lane, Ph. VI 2-3711. 4-19
TRANSPORTATION
Need a ride to the East Coast for Spring
Call Kenneth C Leone 1-800-
[200] V-4-5
CHAMPAGNE GLASSES
$ 1 $
Peggy's Gifts
ON THE MALL SHOPPING CENTER
Vacation Hours For The Kansas Union Food Service
Cafeteria: (Starting Sunday, April 7
7:00-8:30 Breakfast
11:00-1:15 Lunch
5:00-6:30 Dinner
Sun: 8:30-9:15 Breakfast
11:30-1:30 Lunch
5:00-6:30 Dinner
Hawk's Nest: Closed 5:00 Saturday, April 6 Open 1:30 Sunday April 14
Prairie Room: Closed 9:00 Friday, April 5 Open 12:00 Noon,Sunday, April 14
Hawklet: Closed 3:00 Friday, April 5 Open 8:30 a.m. Monday, April 15
Kansas
Union
Food Service
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 5, 1963
RELAYS QUEEN—Marjorie Fischer, Lawrence sophomore, was named 1963 KU Relays Queen yesterday afternoon. She will reign over the Relays to be held in Memorial Stadium April 19-20.
Vox Takes-
Outline from page 1
IN THE TITLEI CLASS
president, Jerry Pullins. Council Grove, defeated Bruce Hall, Coffeyville.
(Continued from page 1)
Phil Harrison, Colby, defeated Max Logan, Holliday, and George Cabrera, Kansas City, Mo., for vice-president of the senior class.
The other newly elected officers of next year's senior class are Dave Stinson, Lawrence, treasurer, and Merry Moore, Raytown, Mo., secretary.
THE PRESIDENT of next year's junior class is Bob Ritter, Kirkwood, Mo. Ritter defeated Ken Robb, Mission, by 81 votes. Charles Hyter, Hutchinson, was elected vice-president. Hyter beat Jack Kennedy, Leawood, by 51 votes.
Other junior class officers are Connie Kosfeld, East St. Louis, Ill., secretary, and Cindy Snyder, Bethesda, Md., treasurer.
IN A TIGHT contest, Mike Brizendine, Kansas City, was elected president of the sophomore class. He defeated Dick King, Kansas City, 467-463. Bruce Bikales, Prairie Village, was third with 224 votes. Nine void and 33 blank ballots could have given the victory to King.
Don Duff, Topeka, was elected vice-president of the sophomore class. He defeated Dean Wolfe, Garden City, by 355 votes.
Gretchen Lawrence, Wichita, was elected secretary, and Donna Florup, Leawood, was chosen as treasurer. Susan Easterly, Shawnee Mission, a write-in candidate, ran second in both contests.
Car Key Foils Thieves' Plan
HOUSTON, Tex. — (UPI) — Mrs.
Lena S. Doyle, 72, chased off three
would-be purse snatchers last night
with a car key.
Mrs. Doyle told the police she was walking to her auto when the youths jumped from an alley and told her to drop her purse. They fled when she jabbed one in the face with her car key.
Results of Vote
STUDENT BODY PRESIDENT
AND VICE-PRESIDENT:
Reuben McCornack, John
Underwood (Vox) ... 2,214
Charles Whitman, Douglas
Hall (UP) ... 1,693
COLLEGE MEN:
John Stuckey (Vox) ... 648
Jay Roberts (UP) ... 608
COLLEGE WOMEN:
Carolyn Power (Vox) ... 533
Carole Clancy (UP) ... 518
JOURNALISM:
Jaclyn Stern (Vox) ... 38
Steve Clark (UP) ... 36
LAW:
Marshall Crowther (Vox) ... 58
Jim Lawing (UP) ... 38
GRADUATE:
Tonya Kurt (Vox) ... 50
Bob Steffen (UP) ... 53
FINE ARTS:
FINE ARTS:
Janet Pepper (Vox) ... 165
Jane Lutton (UP) ... 83
ENGINEERING:
Charles Portwood (Vox) ... 222
Don Pellow (UP) ... 207
EDUCATION:
Barbara Edwards (Vox) ... 223
Wendy Wilkerson (UP) ... 202
BUSINESS:
Larry Gamble (Vox) ... 115
Lester Childers (UP) ... 84
**PHARMACY:**
Paula Mausolf (Vox) ... 46
Terry Ball (UP) ... 49
REFERENDUMS
No. 1 — For 3,136
Against 610
No. 2 — For ... Against ... No. 3 — For ... Against ...
SENIOR CLASS OFFICERS:
Kav Cash ... 435
Merry Moore ... 628
Treasurer
Vice-president
Farrer Mary Meissel 370
Dave Stusson 655
JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS:
JUNIOR CLASS OFFICERS:
**Secretary**
Connie Kosfeld ... 536
Georgia Lonnecker ... 396
**Treasurer**
Cindy Snyder ... 510
Larry Winn ... 399
**Vice-president**
Charles Hyter ... 482
Jack Kennedy ... 429
**President**
Bob Ritter ... 504
Ken Robb ... 423
George Cabrera 211
Max Logan 290
Phil Harrison 549
President
Bruce Hall 502
Jerry Pullins 557
ALL OF THE three referendums offered to the student body in this election passed by large margins
SOPHOMORE CLASS OFFICERS;
Gretchen Lawrence 1,046
Susan Easterly (write-in) 62
Treasurer
Treasurer
Donna Florup 1,037
Susan Easterly (write-in) 5
The first amendment, to allow at least one voting ASC representative from each living or academic district passed 3136-610.
Vice-president
President
The second amendment, "to allow at least one voting ASC representative per complete 1,000 students in each living district." passed 2,203-1,446.
PRESENT
Bruce Bikales 224
Mike Brizendine 467
Dick King 463
president
Don Duff 699
Dean Wolfe 344
The third amendment, to allow the ASC to fill ASC vacancies, "provided that the person filling the vacancy is from the same district as that in which the vacancy exists," passed 2,509-1,162.
Campus Chest Falls Below Goal
The Kansas University Campus Chest officially ended Thursday and at the latest report, only 1.2 per cent of the $10,000 goal has been met.
the treasury showed only $115.70 in the latest count.
The task of sorting, punching and counting the ballots began shortly after the close of the polls at 6 p.m. yesterday, but no results were available until after 10 p.m.
STUDENTS
The treasurer says he is not worried yet.
April 17, the Wednesday after spring vacation is the final date the Chest can accept donations.
Grease Jobs . . $1.00
Brake Adj. . . . 98c
7 a.m.-11 p.m.
Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing
PAGE CREIGHTON
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd
Badges, Rings, Novelties
Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles
Cups, Trophies, Medals
All Schools-
Balfour
(Continued from page 1)
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
(Continued from page 1) rollment figures in the Registrar's office showed that the necessary number of votes were not cast in each election.
Both political parties and the two candidates from the school agreed that the person with the majority vote should be allowed to represent the school on the ASC. Steve Clark, Coffeyville junior who was the University Party candidate, was elected by a six-vote margin.
THE ONLY SCHOOL affected by the decision this year is the School of Journalism. Only 66 votes were cast in that district during the election. The School of Pharmacy and the Graduate School cast more than 75 votes.
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER
Fraternity Jewelry
NEW APARTMENTS
One or Two Bedrooms
$75.00
and $85.00
We are presently decorating these units. Tenants renting now may select wall colors. .drapes. .etc.
All Units Are Air Conditioned, Carpeted and Have Disposals. Provincial Furniture Available. Swimming Pool Available.
PARK PLAZA SOUTH
Ph. V12-3416 1912 W. 25th Day or Night
JOE'S BAKERY
Open 24 Hours
Night Deliveries
412 W. 9th VI 3-4720
QUALITY CRAFTSMANSHIP at
BUSH BODY WORKS formerly University Ford Body Shop
"We Repair ALL Makes & Models"
East 23rd St. VI 3-3006
Sandwich Shop
Taking a Break or Just Out For a Drive SANDY'S
THRIFT AND SWIFT DRIVE IN
THE PLACE TO GO!
ACROSS FROM HILLCREST
Dickson Candidate For Top YR Post
Jerry Dickson, outgoing student body president, has announced that he will be a candidate for chairman of the National Federation of College Republican Clubs.
The only other announced candidate for the national position is also a Kansan. He is Ward White of Russell, a student at Cornell University.
By Roy Miller
Monday. April 15. 1963
There is a possibility that a third candidate, a student at the University of Texas, will also enter the contest.
Election of the national collegiate club chairman will be held at the national Young Republicans convention at San Francisco, June 25-26-27.
Dickson, Newton senior who was chairman of the KU Young Republicans last year, made the announcement in an interview last week in St. Louis. He was attending the Midwest Federation of College Republican Clubs convention being held at the Statler-Hilton Hotel there.
The term of national chairman is two years. If elected, Dickson would serve during the national election year of 1964.
DICKSON WILL BE representing the Midwest for the position. White, presumably, will be running as a candidate from the East.
1957-63
Jerry Dickson
"I CERTAINLY WANT to insure the election of a capable, conservative successor."
The present chairman is Jim Harff, a student at Northwestern University. Although he declined to say whether he supported Dickson or White for the position, the present chairman said:
Dickson was a member of the State Executive Committee for the St. Louis convention, and was elected chairman of Region VII of the Midwest Federation at the convention. Region VII is composed of Kansas, Missouri, Oklahoma, Nebraska and Iowa.
Dickson made his intentions known publicly following the election of Andrew Hickam as chairman of the 13-state Midwest Federation.
HICKAM, ADMINISTRATIVE assistant to Oklahoma Gov. Harry Bellmon, was supported by the Kansas delegation over a native son candidate for the position.
Hickam, a student at Oklahoma City University, endorsed Dickson for the national position. "I personally believe Jerry's principles are more in line with Midwesterners' than other candidates," he said.
Hickam said Dickson is assured of two-thirds support of the Midwest Federation at the national convention.
MIAMI — (UFI) — The Cuban Revolutionary Council meets here today to decide whether to reveal a document it says will "embarrass" the Kennedy Administration and to plan the future of Jose Miro Cardona, council president.
(Continued on page 8)
BUT STATE DEPARTMENT officials insisted today that Miro's resignation followed the administration's rejection of his ultimatum to resign unless the United States supplied him with $50 million to develop invasion plans.
Cuban Exiles to Meet; May "Embarrass" JFK
One member of the council, the
Daily hansan
largest Cuban exile organization in Miami, said that if Miro's letter were made public "it would prove very embarrassing for the Kennedy Administration." But he said he will ask the entire council to endorse the letter before releasing it.
A council spokesman here has termed this report "false and tendentious."
The officials said Miro's demands amounted to dictating what U.S. policies should be and that an untenable situation had developed between him and the U.S.
ACCORDING TO OFFICIAL reports, Miro accused top administration officials of having "misled" him and giving "false assurances" of support to exile attempts to infiltrate the island.
U. S. officials, making no attempt to hide their anger over Miro's attitude, are holding fast to their story that Miro came to Washington on April 5 and presented his demands in a highly emotional state.
"Miro certainly came (to Washington) with the intention of dictating terms to us, and if he denies it he is not telling the truth," one official who attended the meeting said.
In Washington, however, high state department officials said that any charges made publicly that President Kennedy had secretly promised the exiles support to overthrow the Castro regime and then had reneged on his pledge would be challenged forcefully.
Miro's resignation letter reportedly outlines President Kennedy's public and private assertions to him about the eventual liberation of Communist Cuba.
Miro resigned from the council last week in protest against Cuban policies. The exile group backed Miro's criticisms, but rejected the resignation.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
The official defended the administration's action in giving newsmen its account of Miro's visit saying this was done to prevent a one-sided account of what happened.
The jeering, nose-thumbing demonstrators taunted police by crying: "Get your official secrets here!" This referred to distribution over the weekend of thousands of pamphlets that—to the shock of government—gave locations of top secret hideaways from which Britain would be run in event of nuclear attack.
Peace Marchers Clash With Police in London
60th Year. No.120
LONDON — (UPI)—An estimated 35,000 young ban-the-bomb b merchers, many chanting the location of a secret government hideaway, batted police today in a noisy invasion of London. The marchers stormed right to the walls of Buckingham Palace and surged past Parliament.
Fists flew and police helmets topped to the streets in dozens of skirmishes as the marchers broke through police cordons outside Buckingham Palace and along Regent Street, one of London's smartest shopping districts.
THE DEMONSTRATORS pushed on, breaking through cordon after cordon of reinforced police, to reach the area of Parliament and the Whitehall government buildings.
her to the ground. A man was kicked by a police horse and was taken to a hospital
At least two persons were reported injured. One girl suffered facial bruises when a policeman threw
By late afternoon police said they had made 73 arrests and expected the total number taken into custody to approach 100.
Police tried to halt distribution by marchers of some 20,000 pamphlets revealing details of the nation's preparations for war. Prime Minister Harold Macmillan broke off his Easter weekend in the country to confer with key cabinet ministers on the security leak.
Two youths were swept away by policemen when they unfurled a small banner giving the location of an underground "regional seat of government."
But the marchers made sure the now-public "secrets" got out. In addition to shouting "get your official secrets here" to Londoners lining the route of march, they chanted the location of the hideaway. Some youths had chalked the location on their black leather jackets.
THE INVASION of London eliminated a four-day, 60-mile march from the government's nuclear weapons establishment at Aldermaston, northwest of London.
Mysterious Ship Clouds Sub Probe
The 3rd Congressional District comprises the following counties:
Anderson, Douglas, Franklin, Jefferson, Johnson, Linn, Miami and the eastern one-half of Wyandotte County.
PORTSMOUTH, N. H. — (UPI) — A naval officer testified today that an object at first believed to be a submarine was seen a few hours after the Thresher sank. He said the object disappeared and it may have been a fishing boat.
Lt. Cmdr. Stanley Hecker, 36, skipper of the escort vessel Skylark which was nearby when the Thresher sank Wednesday in the Atlantic with 129 men aboard, testified at a Naval court of inquiry.
He said that during the search for the Thresher Wednesday afternoon the Skylark spotted an object which was believed to be a submarine "sail" or fin.
Max Logan, chairman of the KU Young Democrats, was elected vice-chairman of the 3rd Congressional District for the Kansas Young Democrats organization.
"WE WERE ANXIOUS and possibly hoping it was the Thresher." Hecker said.
Logan, Holliday junior, was unopposed for the position. He succeeds Mrs. Marsha Gerig of Lawrence.
Hecker said the Skylark moved in closer and challenged the object. It refused to answer the challenge, he said. At one point, he said, the Skylark was within 6,000 yards of the object when it disappeared.
Asked if the ship or object carried any identifying numbers, Hecker said, "No, it might have been grey at one time. It was a dirty color. I don't know what happened to it."
"It was lying to." he said. "Maybe it was a fisherman." He said the Skylark did not pursue the object.
CMDR. HECKER testified that because of the deep depths in which the Thresher apparently plunged, his vessel, the Skylark, was in no position to offer any assistance.
YD Leader Elected Area Vice-Chairman
Hecker earlier described the
Thresher's death throes and said he was concerned the submarine might surface beneath the Skylark.
Hecker read off to the inquiry board the Skylark's log of the Thresher's last minutes in water one and one-half mile deep, 220 miles east of Cape Cod.
With one or two exceptions, his testimony was about the same as that of Skylark officers who testified Saturday.
BE SAID THAT at 9:12 a.m. on Wednesday, the logged message from the Thresher was "have positive up angle—attempting to blow (straighten out by blowing water out of the ballast tanks)."
He said he thought the message from the Thresher began with "ex-piercing minor problems" though these words were not in the log. He testified he heard the word "minor" and not "major."
While the court was investigating the tragedy ashore, the navy was trying to locate the Thresher at sea.
Hecker said the waters were fairly calm though the Skylark rolls even in a quiet ocean. Asked if the rolls could disturb a man making entries in the log, he said "possibly but probably not."
HE SAID THAT at 9:14 a.m. the Skylark advised the Thresher that there were no other surface vessels in the area.
He said, "I thought he (the Thresher's skipper) was becoming heavy in his depth and wanted to blow and give the ship positive buovance."
Hecker said he asked the Thresher for its range and bearing from the Skylark. He said he took the microphone and asked, "Are you in control." There was no answer.
Hecker said that at that time, "I was concerned he would come up underneath me."
At 9:17 a.m., he testified, "I heard what sounded to me like tanks being blown." He described the sound as a "muffled rush of air." He said he heard the noise for 20 to 30 seconds.
Hecker was asked if the air being blown seemed like a normal emission. He said it was indeed normal, but that he heard noises in the background "like a microphone being dropped or something falling in the vicinity of the telephone."
As they neared London, the marchers broke into three groups—two of them composed of members of the campaign for nuclear disarmament, various peace groups, union delegations, national groups and members of Communist and Socialist parties.
Between the two groups marched a band of about 3,000 youths, most of the members of the pacifist "committee of 100" and anarchist bodies.
When police tried to channel them to one side of the road, the marchers howled, "on, on, on," "we want peace," and "we shall not be moved."
WITH A BUGLER in the lead, the marchers—many bearded and the vast majority in their teens—spread across the road, blocking traffic and straining time and again at police cordons.
The marchers and police pushed and shoved each other. White police horses snorted through the crowd. One youth was hauled off by his heels his head bumping on the pavement.
THE CROWD fell back, screaming, "fascist pigs," and "it's worse than America."
London police helmets knocked off by the marchers, rolled in the streets as the demonstrators surged against police lines. No serious casualties were reported.
The marchers, often skirmishing with police in the suburbs, penetrated into the heart of London, and broke through line after line of police reinforcements.
When mounted police rushed in to try to restore control, the crowd booed and smashed more helmets from the heads of the "bobbies." One marcher threw an apple which knocked off a policeman's hat.
Traffic in central London was paralyzed as the marching columns moved determinedly to the White-hall area, seat of the British government, and parliament.
A moist flow of southern air triggered showers over a large section of Eastern Kansas early today, and weathersm predicted occasional rain would continue through tonight.
Sun, Easter Gone; Rain, Cold Ahead
Measurable amounts of precipitation recorded by midmorning were .17 inch at Chantelle and .13 in Emporia.
A cold front pressing eastward from the Rocky Mountains was expected to set off showers over Western Kansas later today and move across the state during the night.
Afternoon highs were predicted to range from near 70 in the east to the 80's west. Tonight's lows were anticipated between 55 and 65.
Mild, sunny weather continued throughout the state during the Easter weekend. The Weather Bureau said yesterday was the first Easter Sunday in Northeast Kansas since 1956 to pass without a threat of rain or cold weather.
Top readings ranged from 82 at Garden City to 72 at Topeka and Olathe. Overnight lows were from 49 at Emporia to 60 at Garden City.
Arrest Spring Vacationers
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. —(UPI)—Police said today they arrested about 200 vacationing students during Easter weekend carousing, but there was no property damage or major incidents.
Police Capt. C. W. Carr of the student squad said the arrests were mainly for drunkenness, drinking on the streets, possession of liquor by minors and disorderly conduct.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Monday, April 15, 1
Nasser's New UAR
The recent political upheavals in Syria and Iraq have given a new push to Arab unity.
Although the latest Syrian revolt was openly a move toward union with Nasser's Egypt, the Iraqi revolt was supposed to be primarily anticoommunist housecleaning. It now appears that the drive against Iraqi communists was secondary, at least in consequence.
THE NEW United Arab Republic looks like a re-run of the one that collapsed in 1961. Once again, Nasser will be top man in the regime, and the capital will be at Cairo. There is little surprise in seeing Nasser on top. The crackup of the Egyptian-Syrian UAR was in part a reflection of fear of Nasser's dominance. This is the same dominance that offers the best possibility for achieving real Arab unity.
The new UAR is not just a loose federation of independent states but actually one nation, at least where external matters are concerned. The new central government at Cairo will control foreign affairs, defense, economic planning, currency, foreign trade, customs and taxes. The three "regions," as the member nations will be called, will give up their separate seats in the UN and hold just one seat.
That Egypt has no common border with Syria and Iraq could create some problems for the new republic, but apparently Arab leaders are not too worried about this detail. The most likely additions to the new UAR are even further from Cairo than Syria and Iraq. Although Yemen is not too far away, it hardly is a geographical part of anything except Saudi Arabia. And Algeria,
another candidate for membership in the UAR is even farther from Cairo than Yemen is.
IT IS unlikely that Nasser has overlooked the problems that might arise from the scattered positions of the Arab nations he wants to unify. This probably is a situation he would have avoided if possible, but Nasser he would take whatever countries he can get. And Syria and Iraq, with the possible addition of Yemen and Algeria, were the countries available at the moment. No doubt Nasser hopes to fill in the gaps before the scattered geographical locations can become a great enough problem to cause a split.
Geographical disunity could lead indirectly to political disunity. The geographical disunity creates administrative problems, and the administrative problems could lead to dissatisfaction and political unrest, which in turn could split the union into its original parts.
The key to political unity will be military unity, for politics within the member "regions" traditionally depend on support from the military for survival. In this respect, Nasser may have the key to holding the UAR together.
NASSER'S NEW German-designed rockets could become the key to military unity. Nasser's rocket force should be very attractive to the militarists of all Arab nations. These rockets, small by comparison with the giant ICBM's of Russia and the United States, nonetheless are a symbol of the military strength longed for by Arab army chieftains.
Nasser and rockets could be just the right combination to hold the new UAR together.
— Dennis Branstiter
the took world
THE LINCOLN NOBODY KNOWS, by Richard N. Current (American Century, $1.95).
Richard N. Current, a professor of history at Wisconsin, tells us that his title was inspired by Bruce Barton, who in "The Man Nobody Knows" told us some years ago that Jesus was a good advertising man. Current also tells us that he still finds much mysterious about Lincoln, and that he doesn't find him as simplified for posterity as Barton found Jesus.
So, as we continue to plow through the Civil War centennial, we have more illuminating reading matter about the Great Emancipator. This is some of the best. Current studies Lincoln as "the most shut-mouthed man," as family man, as man either greatly influenced or little influenced by organized religion, as opponent of slavery and wartime president, as military leader, as compassionate savior, as Republican politician, as uniter of the sections.
And finally, a chapter called "The Martyr and the Myth." Almost 100 years after his assassination, Lincoln remains an enigma. In his very remaining an enigma he also remains our most beloved national figure.
* *
THE DISINHERITED, by Jack Conroy (American Century, $1.95 paperback).
It is not purely proletarian, for Conroy was too interested in writing to turn his novel into a polemic. It is basically a story of life in the depression, with episode after episode detailing the grim life being lived by so many in the pre-New Deal days.
In his introduction, Daniel Aaron says: "The casual laborers who appear and disappear in its pages are precisely the men one might have met in the early thirties working in the mines and railroad shops and rubber plants, digging pipelines, hustling bags of beet pulp, paving roads, or scrambling to keep up with the speed-ups in the Detroit assembly lines."
MADE IN AMERICA, by John A. Kouwenhoven (Doubleday Anchor, $1.45).
* *
Though not nearly so well known as Steinbeck's "In Dubious Battle" or Farell's "Studs Lonigan," to mention two books of the thirties, Jack Conroy's "The Disinherited" deserves a special position in literary history. In its day, though it was never a tremendous bestseller, it was a vivid description of class conflict, and was widely hailed by many critics.
By this tradition Kouwenhoven refers to the unself-conscious efforts of Americans to create satisfying patterns out of their environment. So he deals with technology, architecture, the fine arts, movies, literature, and jazz. These, he maintains, are intrinsically American, and the examples he includes prove the point.
Fascinating, entertaining and perceptive is this little book, which is almost a standard in American studies. Kouwenhoven's central thesis is that America has a culture worthy of analysis by any scholar and any other civilization—in its "vernacular tradition."
The machine, early American buildings, the work of the Pennsylvania Dutch, the skyscraper, the penny newspaper, the cotton gin, the writings of Mark Twain—all of these are cited by Kouwenhoven. The book is consistently readable and challenging.
Letters
Car Pools
I noticed with some annoyance Thursday, April 3, that the many cars racing about the campus, and particularly one red jeep, constituted both a definite menace to safety and an irritant to those more profitably engaged, as a result of various and noisy honking contests.
Can't someplace besides a university campus be provided for these people to play their games?
James F. Girard
Wichita freshman
Short Ones
Adam was but human — this explains it all. He did not want the apple for the apple's sake, he wanted it only because it was forbidden. — Mark Twain.
- * *
Every man of genius sees the world at a different angle from his fellows, and there is his tragedy. —Havelock Ellis
Man is the Only Animal that blushes. Or needs to.—Mark Twain
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Sound and Fury
Disarmament To Cut Distrust
Certain arguments would lead you to believe that unilateral initiatives entail immediate destruction of our entire weapons complex; thus leaving ourselves defenseless. This is simply not true. Unilateral initiatives do not mean unilateral disarmament. Mr. Peter Allen's initiatives are precisely what would lessen Mr. Robert Ash's "... distrust that ranges itself along the world's borders..."
The communists distrust the U.S. in part because the U.S. has "several thousand" nuclear weapons in Europe alone. Forty-two "nasty" nuclear missiles in Cuba distressed the Americans deeply, but they calmly expect the people of the world to accept U.S. missiles as messengers of peace.
DESPITE THE militarists' screams for more and better missiles, I for one will be hard to convince that a nation which possesses nuclear capability for some 20 times over-kill, worth some 10 tons of TNT for every human being on earth, is going to impair its defense capability by removing two or three bases from foreign shores. Disengagement of this kind would be acts of good faith, attempts to convince others that your intentions to lessen world tension are sincere and legitimate.
Maintaining that after four or five such actions Mr. K. & Co. would not take some comparable action belittles certain facts: Mr. K. & Co. are continuously attempting to cast themselves as the agents of peace; the emerging and non-aligned nations, whose favor Russia so hopes to curry, are continually bringing up resolutions, explicit in their demands for peace, in the UN; the Russian people prefer peace; these people have some influence over their system; the Russian communists would like immediately to enlarge their consumer economic sphere; the communists can be talked, as in the past, into alternative courses of action. The point is, we have nothing to lose and something to gain by taking unprecedented steps to resolve unprecedented situations. A small step away from war, taken by Russia and America, is of more value than large steps toward war.
LONG TERM nuclear commitment has pushed the "battle for men's minds" into a poor second place, and refuses to face the inevitability of war when in the future 20 or 30 nations have "independent" nuclear deterrents. Purporting that communism can be beaten by exporting "bombs and dollars" rather than freedom and justice is saying that "containment" has worked. Nuclear weapons should have been only a method of buying time, but because of the lack of positive action by the people and the government, nuclear weapons have become the rationale behind our foreign policy.
Contrary to public opinion, the majority of the people in the world do not see the U.S. as a pure, benevolent nation. Actions are what people want and judge by, not images manufactured from half-truths. You decry a people's intelligence when you speak to them of freedom while at the same time you finance their dictator. When communism pops up, you're amazed, you rebuke them for not having the education you could have supplied. America is "the showcase of freedom and democracy," but because of the plethora of entry rules and a lack of funds that you could provide people can't come to look. The people in this country are so self-righteous about what they have done they cannot see the tremendous things they could do. If we do not act, cozy naive chauvinism will bury us so fast the communists will hardly have time to dig the grave.
A few contend that a majority of people do not passively support the peace movement. In disregarding the impact that Christianity has had on our culture you have to disregard reality itself, and reality, once disregarded, leaves imagination, the possible, without reason, the probable, to guide thoughts and actions. A dangerous course indeed.
BY BECOMING more aware of the dynamics of social machinery, of discrepancies between ideologies and practices, of alternate courses of action, people the world over will come to realize that there is only one desirable world condition—freedom and peace.
Public frustration and inaction exist in part because bureaucracies tend to ignore or discourage ideas and actions that do not apply to their current definitions of reality. Few institutions keep pace with and adapt to a rapidly changing world. Institutions and their policies must be brought up to date. By stimulating them with political action. The inability of nations to elaborate viable alternatives to the arms race and the cold war has prompted many individuals, such as myself, to join the peace movement.
James I. Masters
840 $ ^{1/2} $ Kentucky
Kansas City sophomore
Worth Repeating
Far better it is to do mighty things, to win glorious triumphs, even though checkered by failure, than to take rank with those poor spirits who neither enjoy much nor suffer much, because they live in a gray twilight that knows not victory or defeat.—Theodore Roosevelt
...
Estestobe SentencedToday; Lawyer to Ask for New Trial
Page 3
BULLETIN
EL PASO, Tex. —(UPD)— Billie Sol Estes was sentenced to 15 years in federal prison today for breaking the federal mail fraud and conspiracy laws in a scheme to bilk finance companies out of millions of dollars. He was previously sentenced to eight years by a state court for swindling.
EL PASO, Tex. —(UPI)— Billie Sol Estes, convicted of mail fraud and conspiracy, comes before U.S. District Judge R. Ewing Thomason for formal sentencing today. Estes' lawyer disclosed he will ask for both an arrest of judgment and a new trial.
Lawyer John Cofer said both requests will be based on objections he made during the trial. Asking for arrest of verdict means he will ask Thomason not to pass sentence upon Estes today.
Estes, 38, could be sentenced to as much as 25 years for the four counts of mail fraud and one count of conspiracy.
NO MATTER WHAT decision Thomason reaches, the 38-year-old bankrupt financier will remain free
on bond. He currently is on $100,000 bond, which has been continued from a hearing one year ago shortly after Estes' arrest in his hometown of Pecos.
His son and law partner, Hume Cofer, has been in El Paso since Thursday questioning the 10 men and two women on the jury that convicted Estes. Cofer apparently wanted to determine whether coercion by the court could be used as grounds for a new trial.
THE JURY reported itself hopelessly deadlocked before Thomason sent them back to deliberate further. He sent in a copy of the charge he made at the close of the trial. The jury came back the next day with the verdict. One of the jurors, Jack Walters, told United Press International that they were sure of a verdict as soon as they got the charge. He said the case was too complicated without it.
Estes' sentencing does not end the legal blocks facing him.
The first suits involving fertilizer tank transactions by Estes were scheduled this weekend for court trial in Pecos, Tex., July 8.
Angel
University Daily Kansan
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Alumni Association Names Secretaries
Quirk's Program
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Vincent J. Bilotta, a 1957 graduate of KU, has been named field secretary of the KU Alumni Association.
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Bilotta is a native of East Orange, N.J.
Bilotta has taught English and journalism at Roy Wasson High School in Colorado Springs the last two years. He previously taught at Washington High School in Bethel, Kansas, and at a Colorado Springs junior high school.
Bilotta, 27, will succeed Dick Wintermote, who becomes secretary of the Alumni Association when Fred Ellsworth retires. Bilotta and Wintermote will assume their new duties May 1.
Monday, April 15, 1963
WHITTIER, Calif. — (UPI) — An armed, would-be bandit came out second best yesterday under a barrage of soft drink bottles.
Pop Bottles Save Liquor Shop
William Hayes, 60, owner of Mills Liquor Store, and his clerk, Hal Wilson, 62, took evasive action when they were met by the masked gunman after arriving to open the store. They launched their bottle barrage from behind the counters—and claimed at least two direct hits.
The gunman, wearing a black stocking over his face, fired twice with an automatic—and missed—before fleeing through a hole he had cut in a wall to enter the store.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 15, 1963
U.S. Steel May Sway Industry Prices Today
PITTSBURGH — (UPI) — The giant U.S. Steel Corp. today may disclose its position on the sensitive question of price increases in the industry. Two smaller firms already have announced price hikes.
Lukens Steel Co., of Coatesville, Pa., stirred the watchfulness of President Kennedy and the rest of the industry yesterday when it announced increases ranging from $5 to $7 a ton. Wheeling Steel Corp. had announced hikes last Tuesday.
U. S. Steel, the nation's No.1 producer and the leader of the industry, will influence the rest of the steel firms whichever way it moves.
IF IT RAISES prices, the rest of the industry may follow suit. This probably would precipitate new wage demands from the steelworkers Union, which is free to reopen talks for pay and fringe benefit increases on May 1.
If U.S. Steel stands pat, Lukens and Wheeling may have to back down on their increases, under threat of losing business from customers who would turn to cheaper sources of supply.
U. S. Steel refrained from comment on the Wheeling and Lukens price increases. It was U.S. Steel that aroused the administration when it announced a price hike of $6 a ton. An angry President Kennedy forced the big firm to rescind the increase.
What U.S. Steel—and the rest of the industry—was studying was the Presidential reaction to the Lukens and Wheeling hikes.
THE WHITE HOUSE commentary was cautious following the Lukens announcement yesterday. A Presidential spokesman reiterated a statement made by Kennedy last week
Campus Life Offers A Few Advantages During Vacation
Spring vacation for most students means loading clothes into cars or onto trains or buses to head home for ten days of leisure before the big push into final week.
But many foreign students, most Lawrence students, and a few others stay.
IF THE CAMPUS seemed desolate, those who stayed enjoyed some rare advantages:
- Driving on campus was permitted and parking space was plentiful.
- Good seats at the movies were easy to find, even if good movies weren't.
- The grocery stores weren't jammed aisle to aisle, but the socially oriented student found most of the favorite watering spots closed for want of customers.
- The bowling lanes and pool tables were open to ready use without waiting, and for the conscientious there was no waiting line at the library—when it was open.
BUT SHORTLY after noon Sunday, KU showed signs of returning to normal.
Taxicabs and autos disorged girls at the doors of sororities and dormitories; fraternity and dormitory men drove into the parking areas, the back of their cars loaded with freshly-launered clothes and unopened books.
And about ten o'clock Sunday night the most reliable barometer of student population registered "full house"-the drive-in restaurants on West 23rd Street were packed.
Things have returned to normal.
STUDENTS
Grease Jobs . . $1.00
Brake Adj. . . . 98c
when Wheeling raised its prices an average of $6 per ton.
Automotive Service Motor Tune-Ups, Wheel Balancing
Recognizing the needs of the industry, the President endorsed "selective" increases, but said it was important "for the industry and the country that overall price stability should be maintained."
Kennedy made it clear that he again would oppose an across-the-board increase, such as U.S. Steel precipitated last year.
It was not clear just how "selective" the Lukens hike was. The company said less than half its sales would be affected by the increase. But White House economic experts studying the move were said to feel that "quite a majority" of Lukens' products would be involved.
THE LUKENS INCREASE, effective today, would affect plate and steel alloy plates. The company is the country's third largest producer of steel.
7 a.m.-11 p.m.
Waiting in the wings to see what Kennedy and U.S. Steel would do were at least three other giant producers — National, Jones & Laughlin and Republic.
Bethlehem Steel, the second ranked producer, had no comment on the Lukens increase. But last Tuesday, just before the Wheeling announcement, Bethlehem board chairman Arthur B. Homer told the firm's stockholders he did not feel a price hike was timely now.
The million-member steelworkers union was more cautious than the big steel firms in the present touchy situation. It made no comment on the Wheeling and Lukens announcements.
PRESIDENT KENEDY has vigorously urged labor to do its part in maintaining price stability and preventing an upward spiral of costs and wages in the industry.
PAGE CREIGHTON
FINA SERVICE
1819 W. 23rd
A price hike would trigger new wage demands only if it was felt the market could support them. The market now is good; steel output last week was 2,450,000 tons, and next week's may be the highest since March of 1960.
KU Student Killed While Visiting Wife
A KU student was killed during the spring vacation while home visiting his wife and three children.
Fitzpatrick had planned to move his wife and children to Lawrence this summer.
He was Richard Fitzpatrick, 25 of Hardin, Mont. He was a sophomore in the College.
York's Condition Listed as Critical
Fitzpatrick had attended KU from 1957-1959. He then joined the military before returning to KU in February.
The car Fitzpatrick was driving collided with the rear of another car, according to Everett Bullis, a coroner. The accident occurred on U.S. 87, four miles south of Hardin.
NASHVILLE, Tenn. — (UPI) — Sgt. Alvin York, one of America's mightiest fighting men, lay in critical condition today with both heart and lung trouble.
The 75-year-old World War I hero was brought to the St. Thomas Hospital here Saturday by ambulance from his Pall Mall, Tenn., home.
The hospital last night said that York's condition was still critical but noted that his blood pressure, which had been fluctuating, was back to normal.
York has been paralyzed from the waist down for the past eight years. He had been brought to St. Thomas in March this year when he had chest pains and it was feared he may have cracked a rib in falling out of his bed at home.
Doctors were to get the results of tests this afternoon to determine whether the old soldier suffered permanent heart damage and to pinpoint other troubles.
York won the nation's highest military honor—the Medal of Honor—for his World War I exploits. A mountain man who didn't want to fight, York was credited with single-handedly killing 25 Germans and taking 132 prisoners in a battle in the Argonne Forest 45 years ago.
OTTAWA — (UPI) — Prime Minister John Diefenbaker and Liberal Leader Lester B. Pearson meet today to talk about switching jobs.
Diefenbaker, Pearson Plan Transfer of Power
A GOVERNMENT spokesman said no date for the transfer of power would be known until after the meeting, but it was expected that Pearson would become Prime Minister and Diefenbaker opposition leader sometime this week.
The 130-seats, including the two picked up Saturday with the armed forces vote results, the Liberals won in the election left the party only three seats short of a majority in the 265-seat House. But the elections left Dieffenbaker's Conservative Party with only 94 seats and with no alternative but to hand over the reins of power to Pearson.
Diefenbaker, Prime Minister for nearly six years, and Pearson, opposition leader since 1957, were scheduled to meet in Diefenbaker's office to discuss "the date of the change-over of government."
To outvote the Liberals in the Commons, Diefenbaker would have needed the constant support of two parties which repudiated him in February when his government was topped—the 24-member right-wing Social Credit Party and the 17-
After the meeting Diefenbaker's next step would be to submit his resignation to Governor General George Vanier, the queen's representative in Canada.
The 67-year-old Prime Minister telegraphed Pearson on Saturday that he was conceding defeat in last Monday's national elections which saw his Conservative Party end up with fewer House of Commons seats than the Liberals.
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member left-wing New Democrat Party.
MEANWHILE three of six Social Credit members-elect from Quebec have repudiated a notarized pledge of support for a liberal government, which was sent to Governor-General Vanier yesterday.
Yesterday, the party's House of Commons whip, Dr. Guy Marcoux, said Robert Beaule, Lucien Plourde, and Fierre Andre Boutin, all members-elect for Quebec City area ridings, had been "tricked" into signing the document. Marcoux said the three members signed the pledge of support in the presence of a notary, on the understanding it was for a party caucus and would not be made public.
All six, however, said they would remain as members of the Social Credit Party and would support Pearson only in the interests of a stable government.
Fraternity Jewelry
Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals
Balfour
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
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Monday, April 15, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 15, 1963
University Daily Kansan SPORTS
KU Teams Lose Many Over Break
Athletically, the spring vacation was far from productive for Kansas Jayhawker aggregations.
The KU baseball crew dropped its first four games, three to Oklahoma on April 5 and 6 and one to Nebraska Friday. In Friday's second game, the Jayhawkers took advantage of a single, a walk, and two errors to defeat the Cornhuskers 3-2 in 10 innings.
IN FRIDAY'S opener Carl Nelson lost a heartbreaker. Although allowing only one hit, a fourth-inning triple resulted in a 1-0 victory by Nebraska. The Jayhawkers accounted for seven hits but left eight men on base in defeat. KU won Saturday's game 4-3.
Today, the Jayhawkers meet Washkurn in a non-league affair at Onigley Field.
The tennis team did not fare much better. The Jayhawkers lost matches to Oklahoma State and Oklahoma over the spring break. The Sooners won 4-3, and the Cowboys 6-1. Barry McGrath was the only Jayhawker winner in the OSU match defeating Dick Cates 6-2, 6-0.
THE JAYHAWKERS golf team finished fifth in the Oklahoma Invitational Golf tournament at Shawnee. North Texas won the match and Oklahoma State and Oklahoma finished third and fourth respectively.
The golf team won a duel meet Saturday over Iowa State 8-7 at Lawrence. John Hanna shot two under par 70 to spearhead the Jayhawker's victory.
The golfers are in Wichita today competing against the Wheatshockers.
STOP
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Frosh Baseball Prospects to Moet
Coach Floyd Temple has announced there will be a meeting for freshman baseball prospects at 4 p.m. Tuesday in the K-Room of Allen Field House.
Spring Football Drills Commence
KU spring football drills begin today at the practice field west of Allen Field House.
Head Coach Jack Mitchell will have 75 prospects which includes 23 of 26 returning lettermen participating in the drills.
The Jayhawkers will practice on Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday of each week in preparation for the annual Varsity-Alumni game to be held May 18.
Prominent shifts include slotback Tony Leiker to end and fullback Armand Baughman to Leiker's position with Ken Coleman running at fullback.
Biq 8 Baseball
Oklahoma 6-0. Colorado 6-0. Missouri 5-1. Nebraska 3-3. Kansas 2-4.
Oklahoma State 1-5. Kansas State 1-5. Iowa State 0-6.
Fire Engine Not Too Racy
WISBECH, England — (UPI) — This Cambridgeshire village has announced plans to replace an ancient fire engine named "Vivien" which was confined to operating at speeds of less than 30 miles per hour no matter how serious the blaze.
Portraits of Distinction
摄影
HIXON STUDIO
International Festival Planned for April 20
HIXON STUDIO
"Happy Fella Around the World is the theme of the 1963 International Festival to be held April 20 in Hoch Auditorium.
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
The KU People-to-People and Peace Corps Committees and 11 nations or groups of nations have already applied for exhibit space.
The festival will feature exhibits from 5 to 10:30 p.m., with a 90-minute talent show at 7:30.
Vinod Patel, Baroda, India, special student, is chairman of the eightmember committee planning the festival.
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University Daily Kansan
Paze 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 Kansas Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before publication.
BUSINESS SERVICES
Transportation plus parking convenience ride a new motor scooter of your choice, demonstrate and sell in your spare time. Blevin's Bike Shop, 74th and Michigan.
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center, 1218
Conn. Personal service - sectionalized
baths, masters, chameleons, turtles,
guinea pigs, etc., plus complete kit
pet supplies. **lf**
RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267.
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
more details, Ola Smith 919-3255; Mass.
Call VI 3-5263.
S&W .38 special, Walther P-38, Collectors German Luger, 32 H&R revolver, 22 Ruger automatic, 22 Remington automatic rifle, AMMO 48, 30 carbine, 9mm, 30-06 tracer, All must have some 29-30-06 tracer. See at Stoffler 6, or call V1 3-1110. 4-17
FOR SALE
Hairdryers! Hair dryer'! The ideal Easter gift! Largest stock in Lawrence. At famous brands at low discount prices as low as $8.00! Ray Stoneback on Mass. 4-17
Mobile home, 45"x8", 2 bedrooms with new air conditioner and outside storage building. Excellent condition. Call VI 3-5157. 4-17
1957 T.W.N. Motorcycle 125 cc 2 cycle.
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1962 M.G.A. Mark II 1600 Like new, only $1955. Low mileage, white walls, wire wheels, radio and tanneau. After 5 p.m. call VI 3-5860. 4-15
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop Pet phone VT 3-242-8000 Modern, self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. weekdays.
All kinds of house plants. Potted . .
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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
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Printed Biology Study Notes: 70 pages.
Provides intensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formally known as the de lavery. Call VI 2-3701. Free de lavery. $4.50.
"YPING PAPER BARGAINS: Pink typing paper .85c per sheet. Yellow paper 1.25c per sheet. Per pound. The Lawrence Outlook. 1005 Massachusetts, open all day Saturday. ft
FOR RENT
- JEWELRY REPAIR
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Graduate men and older undergraduates:
A few studio apartments will be available
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Attendance from Union. Vate parking ideal study space.
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Close to KU as 1st floor, 5 room apartment. Unfurnished. Pay utilities except cleaning. Attend 75 McGrew Agency, cly 3-2055. After hours phone Mrs Dicker at VI 3-7431.
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TYPING
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Will do neat and accurate typing in my home. Experienced in themes, theses, and term papers. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Adcock. VI 2-1795. tt
"GOOD TYPING CREATES a favorable impression with instructors." For excellent typing of theses and term papers, call Miss Louise Pope, VI 3-1097. tt
Dissertations, theses, manuscripts and term papers typed on new electric typewriter computers. Keys. Experience in education and sciences. Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. VI 2-1546. fc
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, these. Create an animated graphic typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Pattt, VI 3-8379.
Good typist. Would like to do term papers and theses. Mrs. Oxford. I-2 0673-7
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TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, and course materials. Electric typewriter, Mrs. McEldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI-38568. Tefl
Efficient typist. Would like typing in her home. Special attention to term reports, theses, letters. Call anytime at VI 3-2651.
experienced typist does term papers. experienced typist does special symbols and signs. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs. Brennan at 200 Rhode Island Phon I V 3-7485
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English major and former secretary will type themes and those on electric type-writer. For neat and accurate work call Mrs. Melsall Jones, VI 3-5267. tf
American copper, silver and gold coins,
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many foreign Hours 9:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 15, 1963
Dickson-
(Continued from page 1)
The Midwest Federation, with 20 of 85 votes, will have the most voting power of any of the regional organizations in the national convention at San Francisco.
Dickson also has the support of the Kansas collegiate Republican clubs.
White, reportedly, helped in the Congressional campaign of Bob Dole in western Kansas last summer.
DICKSON IS MAJORING in economics and political science. He plans to attend the KU Law School next fall.
- * *
The highlight of the Midwest Federation convention was the battle between Hickam and Keith Greiner for chairman of the 13-state federation.
Hickam defeated Greiner, who is a student at Emporia State College, by a vote of 791-226.
The Kansas delegation, voting under the unit rule, cast its 139 votes for the Oklahoma City University student.
THIS MOVE WAS loudly protested by delegates from Washburn University and Emporia State clubs. A Washburn student asked for a poll of the Kansas clubs which showed 83 delegates for Hickam and 56 for Greiner.
Following Hickam's election, the Emporia and Washburn clubs walked off the convention floor along with clubs from South Dakota, North Dakota, Wisconsin and Ohio.
PALM BEACH, Fla. — (UPI) — "He liked our boat much more than the boat he has," an exuberant 20-year-old coed said with reference to a seagoing hitchhiker — President Kennedy.
JFK Hitches Ride On Coeds' Catamaran
Rita Tedder, a sophomore at Palm Beach Junior College, told United Press International about Kennedy's enthusiasm over a swift, twin-hulled sailing craft he flagged down in midstream.
Kennedy, a sailing enthusiast since boyhood, had watched from his 92-foot motor yacht, Honey Fitz, while the 27-foot Camatamar-style slope sliced through Lake Worth, on the intra-coastal waterway.
The startled "Pattycat" group moved alongside the "Honey Fitz." The three girls, including Miss Tedder, climbed into the President's yacht to make room on the sailboat for Kennedy and a friend, Navy Under Secretary Paul (Red) Fav.
"Any chance of getting a ride," he shouted to the three young men and three young women aboard the sailboat, named "Pattycat."
Kennedy told Charles Graves, a 22-year-old Palm Beach Junior College student, that he considered his 15 minute ride back and forth across half-mile wide Lake Worth "sensational."
"He's a pretty good old boy;" Graves told newsmen.
Miss Tedder and the other girls had a few words with the President after he climbed from the "Pattycat" at a pier and waited for passengers on the Honey Fitz to debark.
Among them was Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy, who offered the unexpected three female guests coffee and soft drinks while they chatted with members of the Presidential yachting party.
Kennedy took the tiller of the "Pattycat" through one of its sweeps across the lake. Miss Tedder said he told her group he thought the boat was better than his own sailing racer, Victura II.
The other two young women on the "Pattycat" were Miss Christine Greer, 19, a fellow student of Miss Tedder's, and Miss Tony Briant, 24, a dental assistant. The men were Graves, boating contractor, Paul
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Lindenberg, 28, and Dr. Ivan Schmidt, a surgeon. All are from West Palm Beach.
From the Castle to the Court
WINCHESTER, England — (UPI)
— David J. Payne, 29, who worked for the royal family for over 18 months, was put on three years probation yesterday for stealing $112 from another employer.
A probation officer told the court Payne probably still would be in royal service if he had not been talked into writing articles about the Queen's family.
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Slim Books Key To Columbia's Open Door Policy
NEW YORK — (UPI) Columbia University undergraduates are searching for the perfect book—one that won't keep the door open too much.
The unusual literary problem arose yesterday when, for the first time in 209 years, women were allowed to visit the male students' dormitories.
The new policy allows visiting every other Sunday, from 2 to 5 p.m. One rule must be followed: the students are required to keep their doors open "a space comparable to the width of a book."
Soon after about 100 Columbia men signed in with their dates as trail-blazing hosts, strategy for privacy was noted along the corridors
The door-holding books ranged from a slim volume by Lenin, apparently signifying the revolution in dormitory life, to a paperback appropriately titled "Problems in American Ethics."
One girl laughed and said she and her date decided on "a match book."
Across the street from one dormitory, the brothers of Phi Sigma Delta hung a banner to warn: "Don't do anything we haven't done in the last 209 years."
Sneeze Disrupts Rifle Match
BISLEY, England —(UPI)— A member of the Grenadier Guards yesterday sneezed during a rifle match and accidentally wounded guardsman Ewen Brodie.
The bullet nicked Brodie's ear. He was treated on the spot and was reported in good condition. The other guardsman was not identified.
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Just under 13 feet long—weight, 1544 pounds, 400 to 700 pounds less than comparable models of popular imported sports jobs—the Mustang is representative of the interesting design challenges at Ford Motor Company. Unique ways of reducing weight without sacrificing strength, to improve performance and economy, may stem from its design.
For example, seats are an integral part of the Mustang's body, adding structural rigidity. Brake, clutch and accelerator are mounted on a movable cluster which can be adjusted fore and aft (as can the steering wheel) to suit varying sizes of drivers.
Other important features: low-drag, aerodynamic shape proven in the wind tunnel; independent front and rear suspension; disc front brakes; roll bar built as an integral part of the body/frame structure; hot V-4 engine mounted forward of the rear axle in unit with a 4-speed manual transmission.
The Mustang is another example of how challenging assignments met by our engineers and stylists help Ford Motor Company maintain engineering leadership and provide new ideas for the American Road.
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De Pugh To Talk At SUA Forum
Robert Bolivar De Pugh, head of the controversial "Minutenem," will be the speaker at the SUA Minority Opinion Forum Thursday.
De Pugh will talk at 4:30 p.m., in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
The "Minutemen," a secret organization of civilians who train for guerrilla warfare to combat Communist infiltration in the United States, was formed by De Pugh and nine others in June, 1960.
DE PUGH, WHO lives in Norborne, Mo., is national coordinator and chief spokesman of the group.
Two years ago the "Minutemen" was one of the organizations denounced by President Kennedy as an extremist group. De Pugh has repeatedly insisted that "Minutemen" are "patrotic" citizens preparing for a last-minute fight against the Communists and not a private army.
(1)
"If the time ever comes when the people feel their government no longer represents them as a true constitutional] form of government, then I look for open rebellion. It's almost inevitable." De Pugh has said.
Many "Minutemen" feel the U.S. may collapse internally or be invaded in the near future.
TITAN FOR KU—Edward Abbot, Lawrence senior, and Ammom Andes, professor of aerospace engineering, inspect the second stage of a Titan I intercontinental ballistic missile acquired by KU as part of $2 million worth of surplus space age hardware. The 10-foot, one-ton, liquid-fuel rocket engine will be used by Prof. Andes as a teaching aid in the propulsion laboratory. KU paid only the transportation cost in obtaining the equipment through surplus.
As to who will decide when the government no longer represents the American people under the Constitution, De Pugh has said the Minutemen believe the nation has a "built-in alarm system" to alert the citizens against the formation of a totalitarian government.
THE EXPRESSED objectives of the "Minutemen" are to "abandon wasteful, useless efforts and begin immediately to prepare for the day when Americans will once again fight in the streets for their lives and their liberty."
"Minutemen" have said their main task has been combating the infiltration of U.S. schools.
"MINUTEMEN FEEL," De Pugh said, "if their identities are unknown they will be in a better position to obtain information on the infiltration of school systems by Communists and subversives."
"Minutemen" have dealt with this project through a careful study of school textbooks and the ways in which they are selected.
De Fugh said a large portion of the U.S. school system has been penetrated by these subversive factions.
The organization expects a membership of one million by this year.
12 to Study In Finland
Twelve KU students are among chosen to study Russian in Finland this summer at an institute sponsored by KU and the University of Colorado.
The group will study intermediate and advanced levels of Russian in Jarvenpaa, Finland, a center for Russian-speaking people.
Studies will be supplemented with cultural events in Helsinki, tours of Finland and two trips to Russia.
The Carnegie Corporation of New York has given KU and the University of Colorado a $67,000 grant for the program.
The 12 KU students selected for the program are:
Harold Baker, Osborne junior; Joy Bullis, Davenport, Iowa, sophomore; Joseph Cerniglia, Lawrence senior; Roger Findlay, Prairie Village senior; John Finger, Topeka graduate student; Linda Hannaford, Lawrence junior; Donna Hanneman, Junction City freshman; Stephen Klemp, Lawrence freshman; E. David Seal III, Independence, Mo., junior; Karl von Loewe, Minneapolis, Minn., graduate student; Irene Zaluski, Lawrence junior, and Barbara Backus, Lawrence graduate student.
Students Selected For Foreign Study
More than 100 students have been selected to study foreign languages in Europe under the KU Summer Language Institute program.
Three groups of the students will be in Paris, Barcelona and Weynay, Germany. The program is sponsored by the KU Committee on International Educational Affairs.
Accompanying the students abroad will be Arnold Weiss, associate professor of romance languages, who will accompany the
Phi Beta Kappa Honors Go To Seven Juniors
Seven KU juniors have been elected to Phi Beta Kappa, national liberal arts honor society.
Each of the seven juniors has a cumulative grade point average of 2.8 or better out of a possible 3.0.
The seven will be initiated on May 7 with a larger group from the senior class.
The new Phi Beta Kappas are:
PHI BETA KAPPA was the first Greek letter organization in the United States. The first chapter was established at William and Mary college, Williamsburg, Va., Dec. 5, 1776.
GARY H. GOSSEN, Wichita, anthropology, Latin America area and Spanish; Robert I. Guenthern, Augusta, economics and English; Bruce D. Hall, Coffeyville, economies and humanities; Barry L. Isaac, Mankato, anthropology; Bert Breon Mitchell, Salina, art history, German humanities and philosophy; Carolyn M. Nelson, Clifton, English and French; Frank W. Thompson, Jr., Iola, liberal arts and sciences.
Phi Beta Kappa introduced the characteristics of secret societies—a badge, Greek and Latin mottoes,a constitution,initiation,token of salutation,and a seal.
In 1831 secrecy was relinquished. The society was transformed to an honor organization. In 1875 women were allowed membership.
THE FIRST NATIONAL Council of the united chapters of Phi Beta Kappa began its sessions in 1883.
Alpha chapter of Phi Beta Kappa was organized at KU in 1890. 36 years after the founding of the University. Alpha was the 29th chapter to be admitted.
Originally Phi Beta Kappa was to encourage patriotism, scholarship, and especially literature.
As a badge of membership Phi Beta Kappa members are given a gold watch key pin with emblems and inscription.
*Spanish group; J. Neale Carman, professor of romance languages, who will accompany the French group, and Helmut Huelsbergen, assistant professor of German, who will accompany the German group.
Students going to France are:
THE STUDENTS will leave New York June 4 and return Aug. 7.
Students going to France are:
Patricia Sue Barnes, Osage City sophomore; Ann Jeanine Barry, Topeka freshman; Bea Burnette Baxter, Little River freshman; Michael Ellsworth Berger, Springfield, Mo., freshman; Carolyn V. Bernekin, Lawrence sophomore; Bruce A. Bikales, Prairie Village freshman; Jane Lee Breckenridge, Louisburg sophomore; Lawrie Kathleen Cena, Arkansas City freshman, and Mary Jean Curtis, Leoti sophomore.
ELINOR ANN ELLIOTT, Clay Center sophomore; Gary Lynn Garrison, Chanute freshman; Mary Margaret Geiger, Topeka freshman; Vicki Allene Gillespie, Indianola, Iowa, freshman; Daniel Fair Houshoulder, Wichita freshman; Margaret Dale Hughes, Ottawa freshman; Margaret AnJeter, Hays junior; Mary Ella Kline, Wichita sophomore, and Rebecca Jane Larson, Tulaa, Okla., freshman.
Donald Lee Malone, Lawrence freshman; Mary Lynne Mangan, Dodge City freshman; Carolyn Lucia Marino, Salina freshman; Ellen Faye Mendenhall, Leoti sophomore; Michael Dean Milroy, Sophomore sophomore; Bert Breon Mitchell, Salina senior; Carolyn Ruth Penner, Wichita sophomore; Paul Edward Piper, Parsons freshman; Sharon Kay Popp, Russell freshman, and Claudia Gene Reeder, Overland Park freshman.
Sheila May Reynolds, Hutchinson freshman; Carol Marie Sibley, Prairie Village freshman; Cathy Speer, Wichita freshman; Sharon Lou Stalcup, Lawrence freshman; David Arthur White, Prairie Village junior, and Sharon O'Nan Young, Hutchinson sophomore.
STUDENTS GOING to Spain:
Martha Allen, Lawrence junior;
Marjorie Argersinger, Lawrence special student; Monti Belot, Lawrence sophomore; Robert Brewster, Prairie Village junior; Lou Brown, Atchison freshman; Sharon Budd, Skagway, Alaska, sophomore; Helen Bush, Lyons freshman; Nancy Cole, Wichita freshman; John Craig, Atchison junior; Richard Duwe, Lucas junior.
(Continued on page 8)
Today's Coed—Dizzy Blonde or Serious Student?
(The first of a three part series)
By Patti Behen
The modern college woman . . .
who is she?
She is your best friend, your sorority sister, your classmate, you. She is not just one of these, but all of them.
What is she like? She reads Keats, Kafka and Harper's Bazaar. She likes Beethoven and Brubeck. She joins campus organizations, goes to pep rallies and dances, and is always a good "fourth" for a bridge game. She wears bobby sox, loafers, short skirts and a boastful hair style.
HOW MANY jokes and cartoons we have seen which portray this contemporary college coed as the "dizzy blonde," with the campus as her "happy ground for husband-hunting."
She is descended from a long line of women students. In 1833 Oberlin College in Ohio gave the American woman her first opportunity to participate in the opportunities afforded by higher education.
But what is she really like?
THE MODERN college woman has come far from her sister coed of the 1830s. She is a comparatively different woman, in a much more complex society. She has evolved from cions of other women, each generation of which left a mark upon her.
Laurine E. Fitzgerald, keynote speaker at the 1963 national convention of the Intercollegiate Associated Women Students, said that in the first and second centuries of Rome, "Women studied philosophy, read and wrote books, dabbled in finance, occasionally demanded tax reforms, and were learned in poetry, mythology, history, rhetoric and religion."
Miss Bchen attended the 1563 National convention of Intercollegiate Associated Women Students (IAWS) in Norman, Okla. She was one of a nine-member delegation representing KU's Associated Women Students.
"Women of the Italian Renaissance became serious scholars and were active in astronomy and the sciences." Prof. Fitzgerald said. "Some actually received doctorates in the universities."
And yet the women of the United States did not enter the higher educational scene until the mid 1800s. Prof. Fitzgerald pointed out that, in general, women who took advantage of higher education came from the upper socio-economic groups and had little vocational or occupational orientation.
"The opportunities for female employment at the upper end of the educational ladder were too few to be of any significance," she said.
FROM THE mid-nineteenth century until about 1920, educational opportunities for both men and women flourished. Yet with these developments came many of the myths which still persist in the conception of the modern woman student.
"Within our cultural mythology," explained Prof. Fitzgerald, everyone 'knows' that man is intellectual and logical, while woman is emotional and less capable and competent."
SOCIOLOGISTS mark 1920 as a special date in regard to education. It is interesting to point out that in the 1920s,47 per cent of all college students in the United States were women.Current statistics indicate, however, that women now comprise only 35 per cent of all college students, despite the fact that there are now more women in the population than men.
"It is not true that too many women are crowding our colleges, when in fact women are less well represented than in 1820," said Prof. Fitzgerald.
WHY DOES the contemporary woman go to college? This question would be answered easily of European women, but it is more complex in America.
Some interesting implications are found in the comparison of Russian and American women. For example, 51 per cent of the students in institutions of higher learning in Russia are women. The comparable figure in the United States is 35.2 per cent.
"Only a small proportion of women in America go to college because they intend to follow a career," says Harold Taylor, president of Sarah Lawrence College, in his essay "Education for Women."
IN RUSSIA, women comprise 60 per cent of the medical student body and 5.5 per cent in the United States In Russia 39 per cent of the engineering student body is made up o women, and in the United States the comparable figure is only 0.59 per cent.
"THE EDUCATED woman thus faces a society that leads her to flee into early marriage to prove her womanhood." savs Prof. Brown.
We might ask, do these professions require more ability and logical thought than the American college woman can expose?
Donald R. Brown, professor of psychology at Bryn Mawr College, tells us that "unlike boys, who see college as preparation for an occupation, girls are imbued by their families with the idea of family and motherhood. The manner of this persuasion leads young women to wonder whether intellectual and
the feminine role are not in direct conflict."
"We have long tended to equate intellectual activity with masculinity and femininity with intellectual passivity," says Prof. Brown, "so that recognition of intellectuality by a young woman as something she possesses is almost tantamount to questioning her sexual role."
This confused set of values, then, is what the modern college woman faces.
PROF. BROWN tells us, however, that the college senior woman is tending more and more to reject traditional feminine roles in favor of more broadly defined roles.
Today's college woman must face the complexity of her college society as well as the society in which she will live. She must learn to define her role in society. She must decide what she wants out of life and what part she will play in her community.
She has at least six full, rich, delightful decades to do with as she pleases. Yet she does not know what type of world she will have to cope with and what problems she will have to meet.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 16, 1963
A Girl Raids the Ranks
A good, close friend made a suggestion the other day that is loaded with merit.
"Why don't you quit writing about that stupid ASC," he suggested, "and write about something interesting—like the wages of sin?"
WELL, THERE are probably some devoted readers who doubt that the astute, austere editorial writers of the Kansan can break loose from the old formula. You know, the old formula: sit down, collect your thoughts, unscrew your head from your shoulders, set it on the table and start writing.
It's only being honest to admit that writing with head intact and brain engaged is a serious handicap, but the reading public must be served.
Since the idea of writing a non-ASC editorial, while still retaining contact between the frontal lobes and the motor nerve centers, came from my friend, it is only fitting that the column should be devoted to the subject he suggested.
THIS FRIEND is an advocate of swatting little, furry, hollow balls back and forth across a net, most desirably under a glaring, scorching sun. He plays tennis.
Naturally the topic he suggests involves tennis. But do not lose heart, fellow tennis-disdainers; the subject involves the fairer sex.
The subject, to be explicit, is one Carol Hanks.
The subject, to be esprited, is our Curly Hanks. Miss Hanks had the nerve, mind you, to invade the tight, manly circle of intercollegiate tennis competition. She plays for Washington University of St. Louis, Mo.
AS EXPECTED, her entry into this previously all-male calling has had a disquieting effect.
Fellow teammates quail at the thought of losing to her in intrasquad matches. At least one player quit the squad. It was never pinpointed exactly what he feared; some hinted Miss Hanks had more natural talent, others hinted at natural talents of another nature.
One opponent on the Washington U. schedule (a bastion of male supremacy), withdrew. Losing to Army. Southern California and Michigan State is one thing, but humiliation at the hands of a lass is too much.
IT IS PATENTLY ridiculous for men to fear losing to Miss Hanks; after all, she is only ranked No.12 among women tennis players in the United States.
There is a local angle to this story; Miss Hanks is coming to KU to do battle with a member of our raquet corps.
The date will be May 4. Then we will find out the status of physical fitness among the KU furry ball swatters.
— Terry Murphy
So far, Miss Hanks has held her own. A key question remains: What, if anything, do you say after a pretty young lady has drubbed you at tennis? Maybe carry her racquet home from school.
BOOK REVIEWS
EISENHOWER AS PRESIDENT, edited and with introduction by Dean Albertson (American Century, $1.65 paperback; $3.95 cloth).
The debate is on, and it will continue through countless generations. What kind of president was Eisenhower? What will be his place in history?
This excellent new volume attempts to assess, through the writings of several well known persons, Eisenhower the president. The writers include Sherman Adams, Samuel Lubell, Eric F. Goldman, Charles J. V. Murphy, Richard Rovere, Michael Straight, John Lear, Robert J. Donovan, James Tobin and Norman A. Graebner.
Some of these writings are predictable. Robert Donovan's novel is friendly, as he considers the 1955 heart attack and its aftermath. Michael Straight and Richard Rovere are discovering but cosmetics. Eric Goldman frames it all in the context of "the crucial decade." Sherman Adams tells about being what some critics called the acting president.
If there is a general theme it is that Eisenhower suited his times. The 1950s may have needed social and economic experimentation, and they may have needed more action in world affairs, but neither Eisenhower nor the millions who voted twice for him wanted anything different. If Eisenhower contributed little to the institution of the presidency it is because that is how he, and the voters, wanted things to be.
THE AFFAIRS OF GIDGET, by Frederick Kohner (Bantam, 40 cents).
The cover has a photograph of somebody who looks like Debbie Reynolds or one of those girls—a brunette Sandra Dee, maybe. Gidget is a sweet young thing known to many teen-age movie-goers, and this book is about her, of course. A must for all junior high students.
JFK Struggles To Broaden Welfare Program
By Larry Schmidt In his 1962 State of the Union message to Congress, President John F. Kennedy outlined his goals to realign the nation's public assistance programs in these terms:
"To help those least fortunate of all, I am recommending a new public welfare program, stressing services instead of support, rehabilitation instead of relief, and training for useful work instead of prolonged dependency."
ABRAHAM RIBICOFF, at that time Secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare, further explained that "We seek to prevent dependence; we seek to mount an attack on the problems that handicap the needy, while we take care of their most basic needs; and we seek to reduce the welfare rolls. Our chief purpose is a positive one: to move people off relief by renewing their spirit and creating economic and social opportunities for them."
This expression of policy was another step in the piece by piece construction of what has become our outlook on public welfare in the United States. Even the original Social Security Act was a statutory framework that has had to be amended time after time to make it the comprehensive social structure that most observers consider it today.
Similarly, here in 1963, more and more fragments are being considered as additions to the already broad federal approach to helping the citizens of our nation who, in Kennedy's words, "live on the outskirts of poverty."
IN HIS current State of the Union message, the President has said that to strengthen our society we need to invest in our youth, safeguard the health of all. protect the basic rights of every American, and make the best and most economical use of the resources and facilities at hand.
Following this four-point guide. Kennedy delivered to Congress earlier this year special messages addressing themselves to the areas he pointed to in the more all-inclusive reports.
There was the special youth message asking Congress for legislation and financing to create a "youth conservation corps" to work in parks and forests, a sort of home town youth corps, a domestic peace corps, and expansion of the existing Peace Corps. The President emphasized need for action on juvenile delinquency, family welfare, education and health and physical fitness.
A few days later, the President again addressed Congress, this time on the subject of health
Daily Transan
BEFORE THAT came another unprecedented message to the nation's lawmakers, this one on mental health. The President asked for an across-the-board program for new community health centers, more pre-natal care for mothers-to-be, more child health care, more trained personnel and facilities for training and rehabilitation of the mentally ill and retarded, and more research centers to get at the causes and, possibly the cures.
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in general. In this message he proposed an extension of the Hill-Burton Act permitting federal sharing of hospital building costs. He also went on record as proposing the encouragement and support of the training of more doctors, dentists and nurses, by helping build new and expand existing schools.
BESIDES HOPING that the hospital insurance plan would pass, Kennedy expressed concern for the income and housing of senior citizens and asked again for tax benefits for those beyond retirement age. In all, the President outlined 36 ways he hoped the lives of elderly Americans might be improved.
The battered plans for health care of the elderly were brought back for another fight on Capitol Hill with the reading of a special message on the problems of aging—the first ever by an American President.
And, in still another "first," Kennedy sent to Congress his annual manpower inventory with word that a nation as rich as the United States should be ashamed to tolerate 6 per cent unemployment. "With the issuance of this report," the President said, "we have committed ourselves to a national policy designed to provide all Americans with the opportunity to develop and use their talents and energies to the maximum of which they are capable."
This, then, is the Kennedy administration's approach to the ever-broadening field that may, with few exceptions, be labeled as social betterment or welfare.
OF COURSE, all this will cost money. In his budget message, President Kennedy asked for a $500 million increase in spending for health and welfare in the coming fiscal year. He said much of the additional welfare money would go to the increasing number of states taking part in the new program aimed at reducing dependency of persons on or likely to join welfare rolls.
The budget carried trust fund expenditures next year of more than 19 billion for social security, railroad retirement, or government employee retirement programs. This compares with expected expenditures of 18 billion dollars in the current year from the same funds.
Social security expenditures are expected to rise about one billion dollars to $16,650,000,000 in fiscal 1964, but Kennedy noted that receipts for the various retirement programs are expected to rise by 2.1 billion, mainly due to the increased social security payroll tax that went into effect on the first of January.
TODAY. PUBLIC assistance is the target of much criticism. According to the president of the National Conference on Social Welfare, Fedele F. Fauri, "Some of the critics seem to conclude that public welfare agencies are the cause of dependency, instead of recognizing the fact that public welfare agencies have been created to assist in meeting problems, resulting from such factors as unemployment, old age, disability, limited education, and broken homes, which society has failed to meet in other ways."
One of the bigger stumbling blocks was recently pointed up by Gov. George Romney of Michigan. He says that Michigan's quarrel with the Kennedy administration over a welfare program hinges on whether the federal government can "bring a state to heel for a federal handout."
Romney flew to Washington a few weeks ago for a conference with Anthony Celebrezze, secretary of Health, Education, and Welfare, after the cabinet official said a bill passed by the Legislature failed to meet the standards set to qualify a state for federal participation funds in the program. According to Romney, Celebrezze was trying to "dictate to Michigan how Michigan can define unemployment."
THE MATTER of compatibility between federal, state, county, and local welfare programs is highly important and these entities do not always agree in their interpretation of needs or the scope of their coverage. For instance, although the federal government has made available medical assistance for older people not receiving old-age assistance, as of this time last year two years after the legislation had been passed by Congress—only 27 of 54 eligible state and other jurisdictional administrations had voted to take advantage of the Kerr-Mills Law.
More states, Kansas included, are moving toward acceptance of this measure in 1963. As yet, no legislative count could be found to show the increase.
THE HEART of the Kennedy program, this year as last, is the medicare issue of hospital insurance for the elderly. Last year's administration bill — almost a twin of this year's — died in the hands of the House Ways and Means Committee. An attempt to move it through the Senate as an amendment to a welfare bill was defeated 52-48.
As in the earlier bill, the cost of the medical care would be borne largely by a boost in social security taxes. It would mean a minimum of $13 a year for each employee, and a like sum for his employer. It amounts to one-fourth of 1 per cent for the first $5,200 of the employee's income.
There are now, the President said, $ 7^{1/2} $ million American aged 65 or older — and that number will swell to 25 million by 1980. Nearly six million Americans are 75 or older, and more than 10,000 are over the age of 100, he added.
At present there seems to be some doubt as to exactly what new legislation will come out of this second session of the 88th Congress, but the bills designed to conform with the President's requests are still stymied in committee and there will be considerable debate on each if and when they emerge.
Page 3
Wescoe to Open Exposition Friday
Several Kansas legislators, and many unique projects will highlight the 43rd annual Engineering Exposition to be held Friday and Saturday.
HE WILL cut the ribbon at the entrance, constructed by the architectural engineering department and entitled "Discontinuous Compression Structures." The display is a 30 foot structure outside the field house.
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescos will officially open the program with a ribbon-cutting ceremony at 9 a.m. Friday at Allen Field House.
Guests expected for the ceremony and the entire exposition include Joseph Shea, representative from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA), Washington, D.C. Shea is working with America's manned flight to the moon, Project Apollo, which is the theme of this year's exposition.
Sen. Frank Carlson and Kansas legislators including Rep. William Avery are also expected to attend. Representatives from large industries will also be present.
THE MEN will ride in the Kansas Relays Parade which will be in progress the same day. The parade will start at 10 a.m. on Massachusetts Ave.
The various departments of the School of Engineering will vie for one of three trophies which will be presented at a banquet Saturday night.
Chancellor Wescoe will make the awards in two categories. The Engineering Council will award two trophies, one for the most original display and one for the most academic display.
A third trophy will be awarded by Tau Sigma, honorary engineering fraternity, for the best display.
The Engineering Banquet will be open to the public and will be in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
DOORS WILL remain open at the Field House from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.
Friday. Saturday's hours are 9-12 a.m.
Kirk Bond, Gladstone, Mo., senior and chairman of the exposition, said it will include a full-scale mock-up of the Mercury space capsule. It will include an escape tower and recovery package. The display will be 32 and a half feet high and will weight 2,000 pounds.
He said all projects will be directed toward the space program. For example, the industrial department will illustrate the instruments used in space capsules. The display will be in what appears to be a floating room, suspended five feet above floor level. One will reach it via black-painted steps, for further effect, and listen to stereo sound effects.
THE MECHANICAL engineers will present a display entitled "Moon Buggies," vehicles that use a cushion of air for locomotion. Bond explained that the vehicle "floats" on four cushions of air as might be imagined on a swivel chair. He said the display is a mode of transportation to be used on the planet Venus.
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"Radiation Hazards in Space" will be presented by the engineering physics department. The display will depict the radiation belts in outer space and the problems encountered in getting through them.
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The electrical engineering display will explain how computers on earth play a big part in controlling the attitude, pitch, and roll of vehicles in outer space.
International Students: Students interested in the Oskaloosa hospital visit on April 25 (3:00 to 11:00 p.m.) should sign up in Dean Coun's office.
Foreign Students; Pick up invitations for international Festival at 228 Strong Hall
Official Bulletin
People-to-People Industrial Tour; Foreign students interested in taking the tour should sign up now in the P-L-P-office. The tour will be on Wednesday afternoon, April 4 at 12:45 p.m. (from Tue to Wed) at U Medical Center, Kansas City, Kansas
Tan Sigma, 7 p.m. Robinson Gym.
Methodist Community Worship, 9-15
p.m.
TODAY
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses 11-40 a.m.
St. Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1810 Stratford.
If you are interested in a teaching position for September, 1963. In any of these areas, please sign up for an interview in 117 Bailey Hall.
Le Carcele Francais se reunit mercredi à 16 h. 30 dans la salle 11 de Fraser. Carcele de M. Admussen: "La Republique culturelle: Souvenirs de la Brouse."
SCHEDULED INTERVIEWS
April 19—117 Bailey—Antelope Valley High School, Lancaster, Calif.
Speaking Contest Set
April 30 has been selected as the date for the preliminary of the Delta Sigma Rho Public Affairs Speaking Contest.
This preliminary contest is the first step in the direction of winning a $400 set of Encyclopedia Americana.
THE ACCEPTANCE date for entries has been extended to April 27. Any interested student should submit his name and the title of his speech to the speech department office in 116 Strong Hall.
THE SPEECH MUST represent the speaker's own preparation and creative effort, although the speaker is expected to document his statements.
The final contest will be at 8 p.m. May 2 in Bailey Hall.
This speaking contest is one of the two remaining oratory contests on campus. The other, which is held in the fall semester, is the Campus Problems Speaking Contest.
Rules for the contest follow:
The speech should be approximately 10 minutes in length and not exceed 11 minutes. A type-written copy of the speech should be submitted on the night of the final contest. The speech should contain between 1,200 and 1,500 words.
Oration contests at one time were quite popular with KU students, Victory parades would travel the length of Massachusetts Street after a contest.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 16, 1963
Texas Team Enters Top Pole Vaulter
Last April when Texas Southern relay teams were cornering the silver market by winning 15 of 17 races offered on the Texas-Kansas-Drake Relays circuit, someone remarked to Coach Stan Wright it was too bad the Tigers didn't have any field men so they could cart home that hardware too.
"We do have some good ones,' smiled Wright. "We just didn't bring them along."
ONE OF THE "good ones" he'll bring into the 38th running of the Kansas Relays Friday and Saturday is Gerald Pratt, one of the recent additions to the swelling, but still elite class of 16-foot pole vaulters.
Fratt cleared $16 - \frac{1}{2}$ on his home lot at Houston to win the Texas Southern Relays three weeks ago. This scarcely was a surprise since Fratt had managed 15-7 a year ago while sitting out the one-year transfer rule. But his feat was significant for these reasons . . . (1) He became the 11th man in world history to write 16-0 on his fiberglass pole; (2) It was a new high for Texans (surpassed a week later by Rice's Fred Hansen, who climbed 16-1 in the Texas Relays); (3) The highest leap in history by a lefthander, and (4) The highest of all-time by a Negro.
Fratt does most of his vaulting off a runway of odd construction. Its most important ingredient is oyster shells. The shells . . . three inches of them . . . fit between six inches of sand and two-and-a-half of asphalt.
"SHELL SEEMS TO hold the asphalt better," Wright explains, "especially when it's hot weather. We think it gives more spring too. We buy them from a company in Houston that sells them commercially. They've used them down here a long time for street and driveway construction."
Lest all schools rush to build oyster shell runways for their vaulters, it should be noted that Pratt achieved his 16-½ off a plain asphalt surface. No shells.
"Getting this boy was just luck." Wright admits. "I met him at the 1961 California Relays when he was competing for Los Angeles City college. I knew he had relatives in Galveston and that gave us something to talk about.
"I GOT SOLD ON HIM when I found he'd paid his way from Los Angeles to New York to vault in the 1961 National AAU, riding a Grayhound bus all the way.
Jayhawks Defeat Wichita in Golf
Minus its number one golfer, the KU golf team defeated powerful Wichita University $11_{1/2}-9_{1/2}$ in dual competition at Wichita yesterday.
Sitting out the match was John Hanna, Lawrence junior, who did not make the trip because of a heavy Monday class schedule and tests.
Paul Carlson was the low scorer for the Jayhawkers with a 75. Former Kansas state amateur champion Johnny Stevens was low scorer for Wichita and the meet with a 70.
Stevens defeated Reid Holbrook, Kansas City junior, who played in the number one position yesterday. Holbrook shot an 82.
The Jayhawkers next action will be here Friday when they host Kansas State, Nebraska and Oklahoma at the Lawrence Country Club.
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University Daily Kansan SPORTS KU Nine Picks Up Third Straight Win
The Kansas Jayhawker baseball team picked up its third consecutive victory at the expense of Washburn 8-1 in a non-league encounter at Quigley Field yesterday.
Trailing 1-0 going into the second inning, the Jayhawkers scored four runs on three hits. Ralph Pagani's single with the bases loaded scored Keith Kimerer and Roger Brock, KU's winning pitcher.
The longest hit of the day was Dick Ruggles' triple which came in the sixth inning. Fanning, who had reached first on an infield error, scored on the play.
DON MILLER then scored on Keith Abercrombie's sacrifice fly ball. Pagani scored on Dick Fanning's single.
Kimerer's grounder to Frank Pickens, Washburn third baseman, accounted for two KU runs in the fifth inning. Ruggles and Jerry Brown scored when Pickens overthrew to first base. Kimerer advanced to third base on the error.
RUGGLES SCORED Miller in the eighth inning with a long fly ball to center field to conclude the Jayhawkers' scoring.
KU now has a 6-5 season record. Washburn's record is 3-3. The Jayhawkers next action will be a three game series at Manhattan Friday and Saturday.
The KU football team ran through light contact drills yesterday in the opening session of spring football drills.
Spring Football Begins
When the whistle blew, 84 candidates were ready for action. Of these, there were 23 of 26 returning lettermen. The three missing lettermen were center Larry Fairchild, who recently underwent a knee operation, fullback Willis Brooks, who is recovering from a shoulder operation, and slotback Lloyd Buzzi, who is not in school this semester but who will return for the fall semester.
Head Coach Jack Mitchell announced that there would be a scrimmage session at 9 a.m. Saturday. The Jayhawkers will also practice on Wednesday and Thursday.
"We're looking for our top 33 men regardless of position," Mitchell said. "If we can find 33 good ones, we might play three teams next fall."
There was one injury in practice yesterday. Sophomore fullback Kent Craft from Council Grove injured his knee. The extent of the injury is not known.
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Page 5
Around the Campus
Strassenburg to Request Leave
Arnold Strassenburg, associate professor of physics, will request leave without pay for 1963-64 to serve on the executive committee of the Commission on College Physics.
Prof. Strassenburg will work with the executive secretary on the small staff which is the commission's administrative center.
The one-year-old commission is composed of 10 or 12 well known physicists across the country who meet periodically to discuss and promote a variety of activities and innovations designed to improve the teaching of college physics.
The executive committee offices now are in Haverford, Pa., near the Bryn Mawr College campus. The commission's work is financed by a National Science Foundation grant which is administered by Bryn Mawr.
Seven seniors in the KU school of medicine have been elected to Alpha Omega Alpha, honorary medical fraternity, and join three seniors who had been chosen in their junior year.
Alpha Omega Alpha Picks Seven
The new members are Howard Ellfeldt, Prairie Village; John P. Feighner, Wellsville; Leroy Hunninghake, Corning; Lynn Kindred, Emporia; Gary Myers, Fort Scott; Leland Reitz, Manhattan; and Paul Rouse, Kansas City, Kansas.
The three holdover members are Herbert Hilgers, Plainville; Carolyn Huntley, Washington, and Robert Crist, Scott City.
Dean Heller, who has served the foundation four years, will work closely with representatives of educational institutions in Kansas Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma and South Dakota.
Heller Named Regional Chairman
Francis H. Heller, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, has been named chairman of Region 11 of the Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation for the coming year.
Two Scholarships to be Awarded
KU students associated with the Order of Eastern Star of the Masons of Kansas may apply for 1963-64 scholarships given through the Grand Chapter of the Kansas Order of the Eastern Star.
Two $300 scholarships will be awarded to juniors and will be earmarked for use during the recipients' senior years. Masons, members of the Order of the Eastern Star, or children of either are eligible to apply.
The awards will be made on merit alone. Applications are available in the Office of Aids and Awards, 222 Strong Hall, and must be filed before June 1.
Publications Executives Elected
The executives of the current University of Kansas Student Directory have been re-elected for the 1963-64 year and have been given the added duties of publishing the K-Date Book.
Again chosen by the Student Publication Board were Nicholas G. Stucky, Lawrence senior, editor; and Jerry L. Harper, Wichita junior, business manager.
The Date Book previously had been a joint project with the K-Book. However, the latter is being significantly enlarged and published by the University as part of the orientation of new students. It was felt that advertising, production and sales of the Date Book alone could be handled more effectively by the Student Directory staff than by the creation of a separate staff.
Two Law Loan Funds Established
The establishment of two loan funds for KU law students through bequests of KU alumni has been announced by Dean James K, Logan of the School of Law.
A loan fund of approximately $1,200, given as a memorial to the late Judge Clarence A. Burney of Kansas City, Mo., has been established through a bequest from the estate of Judge Burney's sister, Mrs. Nettie Burney Gibson of Ottawa.
The S. S. Alexander loan fund of $1,000 has been established through a bequest from the late Kingman attorney's estate.
Each fund will provide loans to approximately five law students a year.
READ and USE THE WANT ADS
New and Used Parts and Tires
Auto Wrecking and Junk
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Two KU professors are currently studying and lecturing in Russia while a third is in Poland studying the educational system of that country.
DANIEL'S JEWELRY
Three KU Profs Study Behind 'Iron Curtain'
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- GOLD-RHODIUM PLATING
MISS INGEMANN is spending most of her Russian visit at the University of Tashkent studying Mari, the language of the Mari Republic. The Mari Republic is a section of European Russia just east of the Ural Mountains.
John A. Weir, professor of zoology and director of the Hall Laboratory of Mammalian Genetics, and Miss Frances Ingemann, associate professor of English, are on an extended research visit to the Soviet Union.
Prof. Weir will lecture on genetics at several Soviet universities including Moscow State University, Tashkent and Rostov.
EXPERT WATCH REPAIR
University Daily Kansan
Kenneth E. Anderson, dean of the School of Education, is in Poland for a month-long study of its educational system. He is one of a 7-member team of college presidents and deans representing the American Association of Colleges for teacher education.
THE CHAIRMAN of the bacteriology department will leave about May 5 for Russia. David Paretsky, professor of bacteriology and department chairman, will explain his work on "Q fever," a disease related to typhus, while in the Soviet Union.
- JEWELRY REPAIR
- ENGRAVING
"Q fever," very prevalent in Russia, is found around large dairy industrial districts. Prof. Paretsky has been engaged in work with "Q fever" for more than ten years.
The Russian visits are sponsored by the Soviet Ministry of Higher Education. The KU professors are among 23 recipients chosen from 50 nominees submitted by 12 major U.S. universities.
'Waxed' Sophia Arrives
ONLY FOUR were invited for longer than two months, up to the maximum four months, and professors Weir and Ingemann are among those.
DANIEL'S
Several more KU faculty members may be invited to visit Russia under the US Soviet Cultural Exchange Treaty. The Interuniversity Committee on Travel Grants, with head-
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HOLLYWOOD — (UPI)— Sophia Loren flew into Los Angeles yesterday in a shipping crate.
The odd travel arrangement was because this particular Sophia is a life-size wax figure bound for the movieland wax museum.
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Eleven KU faculty and staff members, who will retire June 30, will be honored by their colleagues at the annual University Retirement dinner May 8 in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
The 11 whose 398 years of tenure averages 36.2 years per person arc.
Retirement Dinner to Honor 11
NO PRESCRIPTION NEEDED
Miss Cora Downs, bacteriology, 46 years; Ray Q. Brewster, chemistry, 44 years; Frederic H. Guild, political science, 39 years; Cloy S. Hobson, education, 16 years; Miss Ruth Lichen, University Extension, 41 years; Robert G. S. Mahieu, French languages and literatures, 45 years;
James C. Malin, history, 42 years; Miss Meribah Moore, voice, 36 years; Frederick James Moreau, law, 34 years; Emory B. Phillips, electrical engineering, 16 years, and Fred Ellsworth, secretary of the Alumni Association, 39 years.
Prof. Guild has been director of research for the Kansas Legislative Council. However, he continued to teach part-time in the KU political science department of which he was chairman before taking the Topeka position that was then the pioneering effort among the nation's state governments.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 16, 1963
MARCO MILANO
Edward Harrison Taylor:
Adventure Is His Calling Card
By Blaine King
Edward Harrison Taylor has never found adventure.
He has lived with headhunters in the Philippines and roomed with a boa constrictor. He has dined with the son of Leo Tolstoy and breakfasted with Theodore Roosevelt. He has survived a typhus epidemic in Western Siberia and four attacks of Dengue fever in the tropics.
But he still says he has never found adventure.
MOST OF THE things that have happened to him happened in strange places, he said.
"That's what makes them sound more remarkable than they really are."
But to Taylor, one of the world's leading herpetologists, extraordinary would be common place.
(A herpetologist is a zoologist specializing in the study of reptiles and amphibians.)
"I wouldn't even want to guess," he said.
HE HAS, by his own estimate,
collected more herpetological spec-
imens than any other man in the
world. How many?
HE IS ALSO, he said, the only man listed as a herpetologist in Who's Who.
AND HE WILL BE 74 this month.
"But I didn't pay my dues this year," he said. The most recent Who's Who contains only listing referring the reader to a previous issue.
Last year, Taylor visited every country in South America except Chile and Paraguay. In 1960 and 1961 he traipsed through Java, Sumatra, Borneo, Laos, Cambodia, India and the Philippines.
AND HE WILL BE 74 this month.
Asked if 70-plus wasn't a little old for a man to be wandering through Southeast Asia, Taylor grinned.
"I'm tough," he said.
Taylor's search for adventure be gan in 1912 when he received hi B.A. from KU.
HIS FIRST JOB: supervise a school at Bunawan in the Philippines for the sons of the chiefs of headhunting tribes.
"I was sort of a one-man Peace Corps," Taylor recalls. "I taught the boys to play baseball and hoc corn."
The governor was pleased with Taylor's work, but the secretary of the interior of the Philippines. Dean
Worcester, fired Taylor for inefficiency.
TRADITION DICTATED that the natives build an arch of bamboo and ferns to welcome the representative of the government, Taylor said. But when Worcester arrived at Bunawan, the boys were out hoeing corn. No arch had been built.
"I still think that's why Worcester fired me." Taylor said.
Shortly after Worcester fired Taylor, however, President Wilson fired Worcester, and the government in Manila rehired Taylor — at an increase in salary.
BUT IN THE WINTER of 1918-19, word came of a typhus epidemic in Siberia. Help was needed.
So Taylor, still looking for adventure, went to Omsk, Siberia. There he had dinner with Tolstoy's son, but remembers little of the meeting.
TAYLOR MET Theodore Roosevelt about 1909, after Roosevelt had returned from Africa.
Taylor, still an undergraduate, was living with the Stubbs family when Mr. Stubbs was governor of Kansas.
(The Stubbs mansion is now the Sigma Nu house.)
Roosevelt visited the Stubbs home, Taylor recalls, and during breakfast Roosevelt described the snakes he had seen in Africa.
MRS. STUBES mentioned the snakes Taylor kept in the conservatory of the Stubbs home, and the former president and the undergraduate went to look at snakes.
"A day's work," he calls many of the things that have happened.
But the housemother did not enjoy the snake as much as the boys did, Taylor recalls, and she called Taylor to ask if he would take.
Some fraternity men stole the baby snake from a carnival and took it home to scare their cook.
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He did, and for five years the snake shared Taylor's rooms on the top floor of the Museum of Natural History. Taylor was curator of herpetology and ichthyology at the museum then.
THE BOA CONSTRUCTOR Taylor found amusing.
"THAT SNAKE had a college education," Taylor said.
But the snake finally got about five feet long, and Taylor gave it to the son of the museum director in Philadelphia.
The first attack of Dengue fever he had was when he was at Bunawan. Taylor recalls. The fever attacks every joint in the body, he said, and completely destroys a man's appetite.
WORSE. THE natives will have nothing to do with a sick man, because of their memories of smallpox. He was left completely alone for almost a week.
When the fever breaks, Taylor said, recalling his second attack, the victim is ravenous. But at Negroes Occidental, the province in which he suffered his second attack of the fever, his cook ran off as soon as Taylor became ill.
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"So my first meal consisted of raw Bermuda onion."
"WHEN THE FEVER broke. I wanted something to eat. I crawled to the kitchen, but all there was to eat were some large Bermuda onions just shipped in from Manila.
Taylor retired from the faculty at KU in 1959, but still has an office in the basement of Snow Hall. He has been working under a grant from the National Science Foundation the last two years, and has held two Fulbright grants in the last four years.
Program Outlined For Students' Visit
Thirteen student leaders from the University of El Salvador will visit the KU campus from April 20 to 27. The stay will be part of the group's 30-day tour of the U.S. designed to equip Latin American student leaders with a broader knowledge of U.S. universities and students.
The visit is being sponsored by the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs of the U.S. Department of State as part of an experimental program.
While at KU, the student leaders will have an opportunity to become acquainted with the schools and departments of their major field of interest, with the KU Latin America Area Studies Program, and with other general academic activities.
"THIS WILL BE the group's first week in the U.S. and it will be up to us to present them with some sort of orientation program of the American scene." Professor John P. Augelli, chairman of the KU Latin America Area Program, said.
The Salvadorians will also have an opportunity to meet KU student leaders, live in KU dormitories, and observe a typical cross section of the KU community.
Prof. Augelli said there is a great lack of understanding between the two groups of the other's ideas and views. The discussion will offer an opportunity for the exchange and possible debate on certain issues held in high regard by the respective student groups.
"WE ARE ARRANGING a series of informal sessions in which the group will meet and discuss with KU student leaders," Prof. Augelli said. "These sessions are intended to facilitate more effective communication between Latin American and North American students."
THE LATIN American student leaders will also participate in four seminar sessions while on campus "U.S. Government and Political Institutions" directed by Clifford Ketzel, associate professor of political science; "Economic Development of the U.S." directed by Charles E. Staley, associate professor of economics; "U.S. Policy in Relation to Latin America" directed by Robert D. Tomasek, assistant professor of political science; and "Structure of U.S. Society with Particular Emphasis on Race and Class Factors" directed by Charles Warriner, associate professor of sociology and anthropology.
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Prof. Augelli said interesting differences of opinion and points of controversy may arise during these seminars. They will be held at 9:30 a.m. April 23, 24, 25, and 26 in the Pan American Room of the Kansas Union.
After leaving Kansas, the group will visit Indiana, New York, Washington, D.C., and Miami. Florida.
The two girls in the group will stay at Lewis Hall, and the men will stay in Templin and Joseph R. Pearson Halls.
STUDENTS
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Tuesday, April 16, 1963
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 or omissions.
FOR SALE
1960 G. S. Vespa Motor scooter. Good com-
pair new paint. Low mileage. See at
1064 J. Werner.
Almost new 70-watt ELCO stereo amplifier $100.00 Stromberg-Carlson companion $25.00 Ventritable $75.00 Shure-Brother stereo stereo cabinet 4-18 Steve Kiepe at VI P 1-2331 4-18
Microscope, German made, monocular,
used 2 years, 4 objects, accompanying
lamp, $175.00. Fred Faas, 5942 El Monte,
Mission, Kansas.
4-22
1929 Ford model "A" in good condition Has fair coat covers, good tires and good 222
Student Specials—1952 Nash Ambassador
A-1 mechanically, $150.00; 150.00 Plymouth,
clean, rebuilt motor, $100.00; 1952
manufactured, car warranty, good $80.00;
1950 34 ton Chevrolet metro, good
chanical condition, $150.00; VI CHA
1626 or see at 1902 Harper. 4-22
1960 Sprite, red. Immaculate. 21,000 care-
less. Reasonable. Call evening.
V I 2-1985. 4-18
Almost new men's black Dacron baccio
suit. Size 39 long. $25.00 CV. VI 3-4085
S&W .38 special, Walther P-38, Collectors
German Luger, 32 H&R revolver, 28
Ruger automatic, 22 Remington
automatic, the AMMO, 45. 30 carbine, $9mm-
06-05-46 — touch Alive have some .22
08-06-30 tracer. See at Stouffer 6,
or call VI 3-1110.
4-17
Mobile home, 45'x8', 2 bedrooms with new air conditioner and outside storage building. Excellent condition. Call VI 3-5157. 4-17
Hairdryers! Hair 'driver's' The Ideal Easter gift! Largest stock in Lawrence. At amorous brands at low discount price at $8.00! Ray Stoneback—298 Mass.
Registered "Pek" puppies. Call VI 2-1817
4-16
1957 T.W.N. Motorcycle 125 cc 2 cycle.
Dave Shraer or Don Wilkins 4-16
3944
PRE-MED SENIORS: 46" mobile home
3 blocks from Medical Center in Kansas
140 South Park Avenue
Contact Roy Hartley, 3610 Rainbow Blvd.
K.C., Kansas. J-02-9051
4-23
New and used portables, standards and
electrics. Royal, Olympia, Smith Corona,
Contables, Portables, Bond
typing papers, Lawrence Typewriter,
7Mass. Phone VI 3-3644.
"YPING PAPER BARGAINS: Pink
matta pads only 25£ per team. Yew
matta pads only 25£ per team.
per pound The Lawrence Outlook 1005
Massachusetts, open all day Saturday, tf
Printed Biology Study Notes: 70 pages
hensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes Formerly known as the
dental Library Call VI 2-5701. Free de-
livery. $4.50. Free if
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop closest to best — Pet phone VT 3-2921, Modern, service — Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. weekdays.
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!
FOR RENT
Graduate men and older undergraduates A few studio apartments will be available during summer. Now is the time to reserve your yellow outdoor duplex, rented apartment for the summer school, or move from Union to a vite parking idea. Study condition. For Apartment Cul VI 3-8534 4-18
BIKE RENTALS — New lightweights — $1.00 per day (1 week minimum rental),
$3.00 per week, $30.00 cash deposit required on all rentals,
Stoneback's — 929 Mass. — 4-11
Close to KU as 1st floor, 5 room apartment. Unfurnished. Pay utilities except carpet. $75. McGrew Agency, VI 3-4431, hours phone MH Dicker at VI 3-7431.
Crescent Heights Apartments, 25th & Redbud. Rear entrances. Large utility room. Garage off street parking – Built in ranges Refrigerators – 2 Bdramas. 840 sq. ft. Individual Controlled Heating. Fully Carpeted and Dust-free Garbage disposal. Air-conditioned – Showers. Competitive Rents Dis-room for 1 or 2 Years Lease Manager. Redbud Lane, 675-739-4511
BUSINESS SERVICES
Tutor—Mrs. William Bixner, former children’s librarian and school teacher, teaches children in speech, English, reading and history through May 29th. Call for information at 6:30 p.m. except Friday for evaluation appointment. Time and location to be arranged.
Transportation plus parking convenience
at an oppen motor scooter of your choice,
demonstrate and sell in your spare time.
—Blein's Bike Shop, 74th
and Michigan.
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center, 1218
Conn. Personal service—sectionalized
birds, mammals, chameleons, turtles,
pipiops etc., plus complete list of
pet supplies.
RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267.
DRESS MAKING and alterations. Foot-
wear made by Ola Smith 939% Mast. Call VI S-5263.
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1ST FIRST NATIONAL BANK or Lawrence 746 Massachusetts St.
Pay your bills with an Economy Checking Account and know where your money is and where it goes. In any amount, your account is welcome.
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TYPING
Will do neat and accurate typing in my home. Experienced in themes, theses, and term papers. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Adcook, VI 2-1795. tf
"GOOD TYPING CREATES a favorable impression with instructors." For excellent typing of theses and term papers, call Miss Louise Pope, VI 3-1097. tf
WANTED
Theses, term papers, reports, typed quickly and accurately. Experienced typist; electric typewriter; Marian Graham. 1619 Del - VI 3-0488. ttf
Dissertations, theses, manuscripts and textual papers, taped on new electric typewriter, typeset in special keys. Experience in education and sciences. Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. VI 2-1546, ff.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, books. Reasonable rates with an electronic typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patl. VI S-3759.
Former secretary and English major.
Will do next typing — term papers,
theses, reports, etc. Reasonable rates.
Mrs. Campson—1311 N.H. tt
TYPING: Experienced tysoil. Former secretary will type these, term papers, reports, course write materials. Electric tysoil. Mrs. McEldowney. 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8688. tft
Efficient typist. Would like typing in her home. Special attention to term reports, theses, letters. Call anytime at VT 3-2651.
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
American copper, silver and gold coins,
metal tokens, campaign badges and insignias.
Also wanted many foreign
money notes. Mint 1025 Hours
Hours 9:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.
4-25
Good typist. Would like to do term papers, and theses. Mrs. Oxford. VI 2-0675.
Experienced typist does term papers, 'heses, manuscripts and dissertations on electric typewriter. Special symbols and signs. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs. Robert Cook at 2000 Rhode Island Phone VI 3-7485 tt
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast accurate, neat work, reasonable rates Funillar with legal terms. Marsha Goff VI 2-1749. ff
Prompt neat accurate work on wide carriage electric typewriter. Journalism-Business secretary experience. Charlotte Weber, VI 3-3495. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPEIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher. VI 3-0558. 1031 Miss. tt
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809 Mass.
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Guess who offered me an executive position with a leading organization, where I'll get good pay, further my education, and enjoy world travel?
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF HUMAN SERVICES
My uncle.
In this case, nepotism's a pretty good idea. And the best way to get it is through Air Force ROTC-because the Air Force prefers to commission its officers directly upon graduation. But if you couldn't fit AFROTC into your schedule, you can still apply for Air Force Officer Training School.
OTS offers college men and women an opportunity to assume great responsibility. When
you complete the three-month course, you'll be commissioned a second lieutenant, and become a part of a vital aspect of our defense effort. As an Air Force officer, you'll be a leader on the Aerospace Team.
We welcome your application for OTS now- but the same may not be true next year. So if you're within 210 days of graduation, get full information from the Professor of Air Science.
U. S. Air Force
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 16, 1963
Students Selected-
(Continued from page 1) and George William Frick, Fort Scott freshman.
William Getz, Newton sophomore; Wayne Graham, Independence, Mo.; freshman; Cindy Grisamore, Wichita freshman; Janice Hayden, Ocean Springs, Miss., sophomore; Kenneth Holm, Prairie Village freshman; Gene Ireland, Shawnee Mission sophomore; Kay Kelly, Prairie Village sophomore; Martha Knight, Shawnee Mission sophomore; Carl Maxwell Logan, Holliday junior, and Karen Miller, Omaha, Neb., junior.
MARY MORTON, Leavenworth freshman; William Penglase, Tulsa, Okla., sophomore; Bernardette Schraeder, Dodge City freshman; David Schellabrager, Topeka sophomore; Dorothy Spitzfaden, Dallas, Tex., freshman; Margaret Steele, Salina freshman; Nancy Stevens, Shawnee Mission sophomore; Margarete Stolzenbach, Washington, D.C., sophomore; Claude Dwight Sutton, Wichita sophomore, and Susan Jane Riseley, Maumee, Ohio, junior.
Students going to Germany:
Charlotte Rae Almqist, Bridgeport freshman; Karen Kay Anderson, Bird City junior; John Patterson Atkinson, Topeka sophomore; D. George Barisas, Kansas City, Mo.; sophomore; George Sinclair Benson, El Dorado sophomore; Judith Anne Bodenhausen, Topeka sophomore; Carol Lee Crumrine, Tulsa, Okla, freshman; Danny Eugene Davidson, Wichita freshman, and Donna Ann Dennett, Kansas City freshman.
UP Will Continue Political Activities
University Party (UP) although defeated in all but three races in the elections April 3-4, plans to continue as an active political organization.
UP Greek co-chairman Bob Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla., sophomore, said, "The party will be as active as ever, if not more so. We will go ahead with our Student Political Education Campaign (SPEC), and the plans for holding a mock political convention next fall.
"We also plan to run a full slate of candidates next fall. People are interested, and we will remain active. We are a minority party but we are a strong minority party.'
Charles Whitman, Shawnee Mission junior who was defeated in the contest for president of the student body, said it was obvious that UP was a minority party. Whitman said both he and the party would continue to be "very, very active. We don't intend to fold up."
Whitman said the party was "out-hustled and out-organized" in the election.
HAROLD GUY Dresser, Leavenworth sophomore; Joan Fowler, Shawne Mission sophomore; Janet Frey, Topека junior; Marie Emma Geisler, Alma junior; William Don George, Kansas City junior; Douglas Martin Hager, Hutchinson junior; Robert Hindman, Neodesha sophomore; Betty Louise Hinsdale, Richmond, Va., senior; Gary Irl Hoffer, Newton junior; Ronald Eugene Horwege, St. Francis freshman; Mary Ruth Lanning, Lawrence freshman, and Fred Nelson Littooy, Hutchinson sophomore.
Pamela Kaye Longhofer, Salina freshman; Jeanne Frances Martini, Bartlesville Okla., sophomore; Claire Anne McElroy, Wichita sophomore; Frank John Munday, Denver, Colo., freshman; Lowell Calvin Paul, Colby freshman; Thorold Erskine Roberts, Lawrence sophomore; John Charles Roper, Garden City freshman; Lyndel Irene Saunders, Hugoton sophomore, and William Max Self.
Ann Victoria Sheldon, Independence junior; Karen Elizabeth Shoop, St. John sophomore; Leslie Leroy Siegrist, Hutchinson sophomore; Karen Lynn Stevenson, Wichita junior; Ruth Anne Thielen, Santana sophomore; Howard Lea Wilcox, Lawrence freshman, and Julie Evelyn Winkler, Caney sophomore.
Three KU Women To Study Abroad
Three KU women have received direct exchange scholarships for graduate study at universities in England and Germany.
Carol Betlack, Leoti senior, has received a scholarship to the University of Birmingham in England. The other grant for study in an English university has been awarded to Nadie Prouty, Newton senior, for study at the University of Reading.
Lois Lorand, Nutley, N. J., graduate student, has received a grant to study at the Christian-Albrechts-Universtität, Kiel, Germany.
Temperatures today will range from the upper 70's to the lower 80's. The low tonight will be in the 50's.
The weather will be clear to partly cloudy today with scattered thundershowers expected here tonight.
Weather
Tomorrow's temperatures will be cooler.
Law Day Friday; U.S. Judge to Talk
University of Kansas Law Day, the annual School of Law event featuring speeches, moot court competition and student awards will be held Friday.
The main speaker at the evening banquet will be Judge John W. Oliver of Kansas City, Mo. Judge Oliver recently was appointed to the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Missouri. Also speaking will be James K. Logan, dean of the School of Law. He will give the annual "state of the law school address."
FOUR STUDENTS will argue in the moot court competition. They will be graded by Judge Oliver; Judge Delmas C. Hill, Wichita, of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 10th Circuit, and Justice Harold R Fatzer, Topeka, of the Kansas Supreme Court and former Kansas attorney general.
Finalists in the moot court competition are Harry Craig and Ed Collister, both of Lawrence, Henry William Hopp, McPherson, and Tom Triplett, St. Joseph, Mo. All are second year students. The winners will comprise the moot court team which will enter national competition next year.
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All Student Council To Install Officers
The All Student Council will meet tonight in the Cottonwood Room of the Kansas Union.
Jerry Dickson, Newton senior and outgoing student body president will swear in Reuben McCormack, Abilene junior, and John Underwood, Parsons junior, as president and vice-president, respectively.
Nominations for next year's All Student Council officers will also be called for.
The nominees for ASC chairman, vice-chairman, secretary and treasurer will be voted on at the next meeting of the council, two weeks from tonight.
MARTY
On Campus with Max Shulman (Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf", "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis," etc.)
NOW YOU CAN BE YOUNGER THAN SHE IS
Thus the freshman boys are left dateless, and many is the night the entire freshman dorm sobs itself to sleep. An equally moist situation exists among upper-class girls. With upper-class men being snapped up by freshman girls, the poor ladies of the upper class are reduced to dreary, manless evenings of Monopoly and home permanents.
It is a scientific fact that girls reach emotional maturity earlier than boys. For this reason freshman girls are reluctant to make romantic alliances with freshman boys, but instead choose men from the upper classes.
It pleasures me to report there is a solution for this morbid situation—indeed, a very simple solution. Why don't the two great have-not groups—the freshman boys and the upper-class girls—find solace with each other?
True, there is something of an age differential, but that need not matter. Take, for example, the case of Albert Payson Sigafoos and Eustacia Vye.
Albert Payson, a freshman in sand and gravel at Vanderbilt University, was walking across the campus one day, weeping softly in his loneliness. Blinded by tears, he stumbled upon
We could build a Snowman...
the supine form of Eustacia Vye, a senior in wicker and raffia,
who was collapsed in a wretched heap on the turf.
"Why don't you watch where you're going, you minor youth?" said Eustacia neevishly.
"I'm sorry, lady," said Albert Payson and started to move on. But suddenly he stopped, struck by an inspiration. "Lady," he said, tugging his forelock, "don't think me forward, but I know why you're miserable. It's because you can't get a date. Well, neither can I. So why don't we date each other?"
"Surely you jest!" cried Eustacia, looking with scorn upon his tiny head and body.
"Oh, I know I'm younger than you are," said Albert Payson,
"but that doesn't mean we can't find lots of fun things to do together."
"Like what?" she asked.
"Well," said Albert Payson, "we could build a Snowman." "Rab!" said Fustacia, grinding her teeth.
"All right then," said Albert Payson, "we could go down to the pond and catch some frogs."
"Ugh!" said Eustacia, shuddering her entire length.
How about some fun shape paint? suggest Eustacia, "and You are callow, green, and immature," said Eustacia, "and I will thank you to remove your underaged presence from mine eyes."
Sighing, Albert Payson lighted a cigarette and started away. "Stay!" cried Eustacia.
He staved.
"Was that a Marlboro Cigarette you just lighted?" she asked.
"What else?" said Albert Pavson.
"Then you are not immature!" she exclaimed, clasping him to her clavicle. "For to smoke Marlboros is the very essence of wisdom, the height of American know-how, the incontrovertible proof that you can tell gold from dross, right from wrong, fine aged tobacco from pale, pathetic substitutes. Albert Payson, if you will still have me, I am yours!."
"I will," he said, and did, and today they are married and run the second biggest wicker and raffia establishment in Duluth, Minnesota.
* * *
© 1963 Max Shulman
Freshman, sophomore, junior, senior—all classes, ages, types, and conditions—will enjoy mild, rich, filter-tip Marlboro—available in pack or box in every one of our fifty states.
S
Daily hansan
60th Year, No.122
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
Wednesday. April 17, 1963
C. J. H. D. B.
NEW OFFICERS INSTALLED—Outgoing student body president Jerry Dickson, Newton senior (right), swears in Reuben McCornack, Abilene junior, the new All Student Council president, and John Underwood, Parsons junior, vice-president.
ATO to Build On TKE Site
Plans for a $160,000 addition to the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity house have been announced—but the ATO's can't start work until Tau Kappa Epsilon moves.
The ATO addition will go on the south end of their house at 1537 Tenn. St. But the TKE house occupies the land where the addition is to go.
ATO bought the TKE house last year, with a gentleman's agreement that the TKE's could rent the house until they got a new one built.
THE TKE FRATERNITY MEN hope that will be soon.
Robert Keelin, Ottawa senior and president of Tap Kappa Epsilon, said the fraternity plans to begin work on a new home this month, but construction cannot begin until the drawings are completed.
The fraternity had planned to begin construction April 1.
The new Tau Kappa Epsilon house will be built at the corner of 19th and Iowa Streets. The fraternity purchased two lots from the Univsity Endowment Association in 1961.
The new TKE house will house 80 men and will cost about $250,000. Keelin said.
THE HOUSE WILL be a tri-level structure, he said. One two-story wing will contain study rooms and sleeping quarters. The dining room will be on one level, the living room will be on a second level, and a chapter room and recreation room will be on a third level
Keelin said the house should be finished by next fall.
The new wing on the ATO house will match the structure's present exterior and will contain a living room, dining facilities, a new kitchen and several new study-bedrooms.
The addition will also provide room for a chapter room, which the ATO's do not have now, and will increase the dining room capacity from 80 to about 120, according to Dave Gough, Chanute senior who is past president of the fraternity.
THIS WILL BE the second time the ATO's have added to their house. The house was originally built to house 45 men, but a fourth floor was added several years ago.
The expansion will provide space for 26 more men. The present capacity is 72 men.
The ATO's use a study-bedroom plan. This is a suite of three rooms—a study room flanked by two small sleeping rooms.
The other system, which will be used in the new TKE house, is the sleeping porch system. Under this system, the fraternity men sleep in large rooms.
THE ATO'S PLAN to begin work on the addition in the summer of 1964, since the TKE's have signed a contract to rent their old home for the 1963-64 school year.
The area just south of Stouffer Place is owned by the Endowment Association, and has been named Fraternity Place. The entire area has been marked for fraternity expansion.
Dickson Relinquishes Reins to McCornack
Reuben McCormack, Abilene junior, and John Underwood, Parsons junior, were sworn in as student body president and vice-president, respectively, at the All Student Council meeting last night.
They were installed by Jerry Dickson. Newton senior and outgoing student body president. Newly-elected members of the council also took office last night.
Before the installation of new members, the outgoing council acted on pending business.
A PROPOSED amendment to form an executive appointments committee was defeated after much discussion.
The purpose of such a committee would have been to approve all executive student appointments made by the student body president and to determine the eligibility of appointees. The amendment was submitted by Tom Ward, Concordia sophomore.
Ward said the ASC, "being the principle student governing organization, should have the right to set up requirements for executive student appointments."
He explained that the appointments committee would not make appointments, but would approve those made by the student body president. Appointments would then have to be ratified by a two-thirds vote of the council.
GREG TURNER, Seattle, Wash., junior, opposed the formation of the committee.
"It would drastically retract from the power of the student body president, a power which has not been abused," he said.
Turner said the committee, which would have consisted of the administrative assistant to the chancellor, two political party representatives, and two students appointed by the Dean of Women and the Dean of Men, "would give part of the executive power to someone else besides the legislative body."
"Why have a student body president if people don't feel he shouls have the responsibility to make some very basic decisions about those who serve on ASC committees," Jerry Dickson asked. "I am always opposed to any restriction of power of the only representative of the entire student body," he said.
★★
McCornack Tells His Plans To ASC
Reuben McCormack, newly-elected student body president, announced his plans and policies to the All-Student Council last night.
McCormack, Abilene junior, said, "I will try to keep the council aware of its responsibility to fulfill its obligations to the student body in providing the services needed by the students."
HE SAID HE WOULD try to "carry out the proposals of the council in the best possible manner and be conscientious in representing the student body."
He suggested the formation of the following committees as part of an extensive legislative program to be considered and acted upon by the ASC this spring:
- A special committee to study student health insurance rates.
- A Hosting and Hospitality Committee, which would set up hosting facilities for groups coming to the campus next fall.
- A Student Travel Service to make arrangements for students going home at the end of the semester.
- A committee to work in conjunction with the registrar on enrollment problems.
- A committee to study the seating arrangement in the University Theater.
- A committee to investigate possible extension of library hours.
McCORNACK SAID there was no need for a committee such as this, "for there are adequate safeguards in our present system of appointments."
In other business, nominations were made for council offices. Nominations will again be opened at the next council meeting, and elections will be held at that time.
Nominees for chairman are John Young, Salina law student, and John Stuckey, Pittsburgh junior; vice-chairman, Charles Marvin, Lawrence junior, and Greg Turner, Seattle, Wash.; junior; secretary, Anne Donald, Prairie Village freshman, and Sandra Garvey, St. Louis, Mo., junior; and treasurer, Jack Croughan, Novato, Calif., junior, and Chuck Portwock, Shawnee Mission junior.
Bob Swan, Topeka junior and Peace Corps president, gave a report of the activities of the Peace Corps.
JOHN FAIRHURST, Wichita junior and, chairman of the Peace Corps special events committee, announced that the first statewide Peace Corps conference will be held here May 3-4.
Swan said the Peace Corps would like to become a self-perpetuating organization working in affiliation with the ASC.
After the installation of the new members, McCornack presented an outline of business to be handled by the council before the end of the semester.
Weather
The hot, humid weather that came into Kansas yesterday is expected to continue through today with some stiff southerly winds.
Temperatures in the Central Kansas counties were near 90 yesterday, but today's highs are expected in the 75 to 80 range with a low tonight around 60.
Widely fluctuating temperatures may range throughout the state, but no moisture is predicted.
KU Grad Uses Odd Angles To Photograph Relays Action
By Roy Miller
One of the many photographers who will be scurrying around the track in Memorial Stadium this weekend is no stranger to the Kansas Relays.
Rich Clarkson has missed only one KU Relays since 1948.
Clarkson, a native of Lawrence and 1956 KU graduate, is chief of the photography department of the Topeka Daily Capital and State Journal.
THE SCHOOL OF JOURNALISM graduate received national recognition recently in Editor & Publisher, a newspaper trade magazine, for the novel pictures he took at the KU-Kansas State basketball game here this year.
Clarkson placed a remote-control camera on one of the panes of glass backboards in Allen Field House to get a unique view of that game.
Clarkson used the same device at last year's Relay's. As an experiment he placed a remote-control camera in the pit area of the pole vault event.
CLARKSON'S SHOTS of John Uelses, the 16-foot pole vaulter who was competing here, were picked up by the Associated Press and used
throughout the nation.
Although only 30 years old, Clarkson is known as one of the best photographers in the Midwest. Numerous citations and plaques hang above his desk in the Capital-Journal newsroom.
CLARKSON has won eight first places in the last 12 monthly contests sponsored by the Midwest Region of the National Press Photographers Association. He won the association's first place nationally in December.
Clarkson, who has been doing free lance work for Sports Illustrated magazine since 1957, has been offered several jobs. But he claims he has considered only three of them seriously.
HE HAS also been offered positions as picture editor of National Observer, a weekly newspaper published by the Wall Street Journal, and as assistant illustrations editor of National Geographic magazine.
"I'm not quite ready yet to sit down at a desk being a picture editor," Clarkson said. "I have too
Clarkson said he turned down one of the offers — to head the Houston Chronicle's photography department — because he didn't feel he would have enough freedom.
Clarkson worked for the Lawrence Journal-World on a free lance basis while he was a Lawrence high school student. At the end of his freshman year at KU, Clarkson became a fulltime Journal-World reporter-photographer for the summer months.
much fun taking action pictures."
After graduation, he was the newspaper's chief photographer. Nine months later he was drafted. He served his entire term of duty at Forbes Air Force Base in Topeka.
"I FLEW A DESK. I was a public officer." Clarkson said,
Clarkson joined the Topeka newspapers in 1958 and completely re-organized their photography resources.
Clarkson's latest organization job has been planning the photo department for the new Capital-Journal plant which is slated for occupation May 4.
Clarkson's outside work with Sports Illustrated keeps him busy. This winter he was on assignment for the weekly sports magazine from a small Utah community to Boston.
People in the newspaper business sometimes wonder why Clarkson doesn't move into the magazine
(Continued on page 12)
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 17, 1963
JFK vs. Steel Industry
The current situation in the steel industry gives some interesting insights into the gospel of the presidency according to St. Kennedy.
From all outward appearances President Kennedy is de facto head of the steel industry as well as of government. The Chief of State and Industry role has popped up before, but usually during time of war or financial crisis.
A YEAR ago President Kennedy squelched a price increase, but then the situation was quite different. The President had used his influence to avert an industry-wide strike—a strike that would have played havoc with the entire economy. To do this he got the unions to cut their wage demands with the understanding the industry would not increase the price of steel.
That was a year ago under conditions peculiar to the time. Now, under considerably different conditions, the President is taking similar though less stringent action. This time there is no threat of strike to be averted. Neither is there an agreement to hold prices down in return for modified wage demands.
A week ago, Wheeling Steel Corp. announced an average price increase of $6 a ton, the same increase that President Kennedy stifled a year ago. Then Lukens Steel Co., the nation's 20th largest producer, announced increases ranging from $5 to $7 a ton on six products. Yesterday, Republic Steel, the nation's third largest producer, followed suit with a $5.3- $4 a ton price increase on some carbon steel products.
WHETHER THE President can block further price increases remains to be seen, but it is certain that he will try. A year ago, the steel industry thought the President swung a big enough club to back down without an open fight. Whatever the President's club was, he did not have to use it last time. It may have been the Attorney General's office, which could bring a great deal of pressure to bear to the steel industry through anti-trust and labor laws. Whether he actually would have resorted to this sort of harassment cannot be said because he did not have to. At any rate, the industry was not then willing to risk a head-on collision.
A year ago the President had an even bigger club than the attorney general's office. He had public opinion. Everything was clearly defined. It was just like one of the old western movies on television. President Kennedy was wearing the white hat and riding the white horse, and the nasty old industrialists were wearing black hats and riding black horses.
THERE SEEMS to be some doubt about who runs the steel companies. if the directors elected by the stockholders run the steel companies, then it is up to them to decide whether the prices should be increased now. If the President runs the steel companies, then it is his decision.
The price increases announced by Republic Steel are on "selected products," which may meet the approval of the President. The steel officials seem content to try to second-guess the President's wishes instead of making their own decisions. Whatever his club may be this time, it apparently is still big enough.
— Dennis Branstiter
WRITERS IN TRANSITION. by H. Wayne Morgan (American Century, $1.65 paperback; $3.95 cloth).
BOOK REVIEWS
The casual reader, untrained in the dialectic of literary criticism, might enjoy this group of essays on seven American writers. H. Wayne Morgan makes no significant pretensions here, contending that basically what he has written are "appreciations."
There also is no particular theme, no attempt to group proliterarian novelists or social novelists. Morgan observes that he ranges from the austerity of Edith Wharton to the primitivism of Sherwood Anderson, from the formal style of Ellen Glasgow to the looseness of Thomas Wolfe, from the fatalism of Stephen Crane to the optimism of Hart Crane.
The seventh of the writers with whom he deals is Willa Cather. Morgan believes that each of his seven writers was a spokesman of cultural transition as well as literary artist, that each had a definite vision of his role as writer. He also notes that each was distinctively American.
VERSIONS OF CENSORSHIP, edited by John McCormick and Mairi MacInnes (Doubleday Anchor, $1.45).
Here is an exceptionally good anthology of basic documents and commentaries on censorship. McCormick and MacInnes go back to Milton's "Areepagitica" and move up to modern cases of censorship to offer readings that offer almost a panorama of the problem.
"Censorship and Belief," "C censorship and Fact," "C censorship and Imagination" and "Self-Censorship" are the categories the editors have selected. They analyze the basic work by Milton, discuss Milton's intolerance of Catholicism, and move on to the Index Librorum Prohibitorum, Galileo and Spinoza.
In "Censorship and Fact" they consider the writings of Hobbes and Sir Julian Huxley and the recent Oppenheimer case. This section also includes analyses of censorship and the news, and there are writings here by Jefferson, De Tocqueville, Horace Walpole, Zechariah Chafee Jr. and commentators on the sale of "pernicious material."
In "Censorship and Imagination" the subject matter deals with Henry Miller, D. H. Lawrence, Germaine de Stael, George Orwell, and Shaw. "Self-Censorship" has Freud's "Dream-Censorship" and a section from Dostoevsky's "The Brothers Karamazov."
---
Kansas Sets Pace With Mental Health Program
By Rose Ellen Osborne
It is no longer considered either a sin or shame to be mentally ill.
Modern drugs, therapy and more widespread public education have changed the public concept of mental illness. Mental disturbance is now regarded as comparable to physical illness.
THIS NEW public awareness of the scope of the mental health problem has prompted various studies and legislation aimed at the rehabilitation of the mentally ill.
In 1955 Congress provided $1.5 million to finance a nationwide study of the mental health problem in the United States by the Joint Commission on Mental Illness, a group of experts representing 36 national organizations. They published their findings in 1961 in a booklet called "Action on Mental Health."
The commission termed the majority of U.S. mental hospitals "dumping grounds for social rejects, rather than true hospitals." It found that more than half of 500,000 patients in 277 hospitals were receiving no actual treatment, but only custodial care.
IT FOUND patients chained to their beds in Alabama. Mississippi boasted one psychiatrist for every 6,000 patients. All over the nation they saw mental hospital wards where patients had been "put away" with no hope of ever leaving the institution.
The patient has a 50-50 chance of recovering the first year. After the fifth year of hospitalization his chances for release are 99-1 against release.
"Shabby treatment of the many millions of the mentally disabled" was the subject of President John F. Kennedy's February message to Congress.
KENNEDY, WHOSE oldest sister is mentally retarded, advocated a financial stimulant that would permit expansion of the outpatient program to relieve crowded hospitals and establishment of community health centers.
Like the joint commission, Kennedy suggested that the biggest step toward solving the problem could be taken by establishing local community mental health centers in the community at the grass-roots of American society.
KENNEDY ASKED for $4.2 million in 1964 to plan community centers. Building would begin in 1965 under this plan with the federal government financing 45-75 per cent of the first costs and providing grants to pay the staff's salary temporarily.
"If we launch a broad new mental health program now, it will be possible within a decade or two to reduce the number of patients now under custodial care by 50 per cent or more," the President said.
Kansas now has 14 community mental health centers in 13 cities. Centers are located in Lawrence, Wichita, Emporia, El Dorado, Humboldt, Ottawa, Johnson County, Wyandotte County, Atchison, Garden City, Salina, Toneka, and Manhattan
Harvey, Crawford and Bourbon Counties have declared their intent to establish centers and each is now levying a tax.
THE KANSAS community mental health centers are all locally supported by a one-half mill levy on property owners and by fees which are determined by the size of the patient's family and his ability to pay.
The centers are manned by a psychiatrist, psychologist, and
psychiatric social worker team intended to serve a base population of 50,000. Cities requesting clinics need not have a population of 50,000, but populations smaller than 50,000 increases the financial burden on property owners, says Sue Ellermeier, information representative for the Kansas Bureau of Community Mental Health Services.
Miss Ellermeier, a psychiatrist, a psychologist and a psychiatric social worker make up the bureau. Working under the Kansas Board of Social Welfare and the Division of Institutional Management, the four staff members travel from community to community to help establish mental health centers.
ALTHOUGH THE community mental health centers are locally controlled, the bureau often acts in an advisory capacity.
Lack of funds has made it necessary to locate centers in old run-down buildings and reconverted homes.
"Like Karl Menninger, we believe we can cure people in a barn if we have the staff," Miss Ellermeier said.
KANSAS IS considered a
UNIVERSITY Daily Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904,
changing from a weekly to a bi-weekly
University of Kansas student newmaner
Telephone Vikling 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 $2. Y. International. United States International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
Fred Zimmerman ... Managing Editor
Dennis Braustiter ... Editorial Editor
Jack Cannon ... Business Manager;
leader in the field of mental health. But, according to a study by the American Psychiatric Association, Kansas is barely above average in the amount of funds it devotes to its mental hospitals.
Concerning patient care and personnel relationship Kansas is first in the nation. The average rate in the nation is 57 per cent. Kansas has a rating of 196 per cent. Kansas has 202 staff members per 100,000 persons.
Part of this can be explained by the location of Menninger's in Kansas. The private hospital has the reputation of being one of the best in the country.
BUT THIS figure is deceptive, warns Miss Ellermeier.
Treatment at Topeka State is based on the principle of psychoanalysis. Letha Swank, public information officer, said. The hospital does not employ an analyst. Patients who desire this kind of assistance must seek private help.
"There is a rapid turnover of psychiatrists. Menninger's place many in state institutions for their residency. As soon as their residency is completed, they leave the state," she said.
Staff members do not have the facilities to help patients gain deep understanding of their problem. They can only provide the means for the patient to express his repressed emotions and perhaps alleviate his anger, Miss Swank said.
Kansas has also been one of the first among the states to take the lead in experimenting with the open door policy in hospital wards. The movement to unlock the mental hospitals began in Scotland in 1949. After World War II Britain began opening the doors of its wards. New York, Delaware and Kansas tried the experiment in the
U. S. and were pleased with the results.
MANY PATIENTS at Topeka have freedom to roam the grounds. Some are allowed to go uptown shopping. Others have part-time jobs or attend high school or college classes.
The hospital has a dramatic group which takes plays out-of-town. Participation is voluntary after the patient has consultation with his doctor to see if acting suits his particular case. The hospital also sponsors excursions of busloads of patients to Kansas City to visit the art gallery.
Some mental patients awaiting transfer to a state hospital are confined in iron-walled prisons with bars on the windows. Even one night's stay in such a place creates a deep psychological impression on the patient and adds to the trauma of the experience.
KANSAS IS far ahead of many states in the field of mental health. It has three psychiatric hospitals located in Topeka, Larned and Osawatomy and three schools for the retarded in Parsons, Winfield and Topeka. Thirteen communities have established community health centers. KU has an excellent mental health clinic for college students and a guidance bureau where students may go to "talk through" their problems.
And still the old ways hang on in many states.
FORMER MENTAL patients still have difficulties securing jobs. Friends and relatives in many instances continue to treat them with curiosity and care.
The public is aware of mental health, but more education, funds and facilities are needed if the United States is to down its number one disabler.
---
Wednesday, April 17, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Drury Examines Kansas Home Rule
"Home rule" — the concept that local affairs should be under local controls — will be granted to all cities in Kansas by a constitutional amendment effective in July, 1983.
"CONSIDERING the complexity of the subject, and the fact that the amendment did not become effective until July, 1961, a surprisingly large number of cities have taken advantage of the provision," he writes.
Prof. Drury lists three types of situations in which cities may use their powers, since adoption of the home rule amendment.
James W. Drury, professor of political science, analyzes the use of home rule by Kansas cities in the current issue of "Your Government," the bulletin of the KU Governmental Research Center.
Because most of the previous state laws pertaining to cities have not been repealed, most of the ordinances which cities are likely to want to enact are still authorized by those statutes.
A second situation, based on the home rule amendment, pertains to ordinances on local affairs that are not authorized by state law.
"Cities may increasingly be expected to base more and more of their ordinances on the broad grant given them under the new constitutional provision," Prof. Drury says.
"SUCH ORDINANCES are known as 'ordinary' ordinances. Because of the broad terms of the grant and because of specific injunction in the amendment that it should be interpreted liberally to increase the powers of cities, it seems likely that the total effect of this amendment will be to enlarge substantially the powers of city governing bodies," he says.
The third situation covered by the amendment allows cities to revise, amend or exempt themselves from certain types of state laws. To do this, the city governing body passes—a two-thirds margin is required—a "charter" ordinance. In this way the city does not have to go to the legislature for special laws.
The League of Kansas Municipalities has compiled figures, quoted in the article, which show that, as of February, 1963, 70 cities had passed 96 charter ordinances and 77 cities had passed 120 ordinary ordinances.
A TOTAL OF 107 cities have taken advantage of the home rule amendment. Eighty-seven per cent of these are first class cities, 41 per cent are cities of the second class, and ten per cent are third class cities.
Students Renew Psychology Club
Phi Chi, the honorary psychology society, was re-established here last night with the initiation of 22 members.
The KU Psi Chi chapter has been inactive for six years. The society extends membership to both graduate students and graduates in the field of psychology.
Graduate students initiated last night are Robert Bechtel, Potts-town, Pa.; Frederick Binding, Manitoba, Canada; Edward Dreyfus, Lawrence; Stephen Goldfarb, San Diego, Calif.; Sophia Stathopolous, Kansas City, Mo.; Rachel Streib, Lawrence; Joyce Tobiassen, Kansas City, Mo. and Allen Wicker, Independence.
Undergraduates who were initiated are Sandra Aylor, Kansas City, Mo., junior; Patricia Bingham, Lawrence senior; Marilyn Cory, Wichita senior; Pamela Gunnell, Bartlesville, Okla., junior; David Hume, Kansas City senior; Margaret Ives, Silver Lake junior, and Linda Larsen. McPherson senior.
Other undergraduate initiates are Robert Mitchell, Lawrence senior; David Newcomer, Shawnee Mission junior; Jack Nichols, St. Joseph, Mo., senior; Joseph Pierce III, McPhearson junior; John Platt, Topeka junior; Martha Sipes, Mission senior and Marvin Tills, Ft. Worth, Texas, junior.
AVALON, Calif. — (UPI) — A big school of mackerel turned the tide on a fishing boat crew.
Fish Dump Crew into Drink
The crew netted the fish off Catalina Island yesterday and prepared to boat them when the school took off and overturned the boat. Another fishing boat rescued the crewmen clinging to the hull.
"The effect of the constitutional amendment has been to expand the concept of local control of local affairs. It is too early to evaluate with any finality the effect of this revised pattern of state-local relations." Prof. Drruy writes.
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"Further experience with home rule may result in even wider use and may develop its potential even further. The record of the first 18 months is impressive," he concludes.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 17, 1963
Humanities Lecturer Cites French Influence In Brazil
The French language has been a tremendous influence on Brazil, but the greatest influence in the South American country today is provided by the English language, a visiting associate professor from Brazil said here last night.
Wilson Martins, visiting associate professor of Brazilian and French literatures, spoke of the French influence upon Brazil in his address at the Humanities Forum.
Prof Martins, who is a professor of French literature at the Universidade de Parana in Cubituba, Brazil, said English has become the main language because of its technical and political uses.
(1)
Wilson Martins
He called French the "social language" of Brazil.
"The influence is all American now. That's why I think these misunderstandings are superficial. We have more reasons to have understanding than psychological misunderstandings between the two countries."
Prof. Martins told how the U.S. influence had extended to the sports, theater, cinema and literature of Brazil.
Prof. Martins is a literary critic for O Estado de San Paulo, a leading newspaper in Brazil. He has written five books, three on literary criticism, one on European immigrants in Brazil and one on the history of language.
"However paradoxical it seems, French literature is not the source of French influence in Brazil and in the world," the visiting professor said in his speech, "the knowledge
of literature is a consequence and result of that influence.
"It can even be said that the love and understanding of French literature is a by-product of the influence that French civilization exercised or exercises.
"And if that civilization is, more than anything else, a product of the language—then it is the language, more than any other factor that is found in the origins of that complex and delicate phenomenon."
Prof. Martins spoke of the nationalist and the internationalist principles in the intellectual and artistic life of Brazil and said:
"Whatever be the motives. Brazilians fluctuate at all times between those two irresistible temptations.
in the idea and the national sentiment constitute an enigma which is renewed every day and is born again from its own ashes, the generous and mysterious attraction of internationalism places them with extraordinary frequency in the
enigmatic port from which all foreign adventures depart."
Prof. Martins said the cultural relations between France and Brazil began in the 16th century with French pirates who traded brazilwood. This "cultural contact," he said, has not always been intact.
After the discovery of Brazil, the policy in the Portuguese colony was "anti-French," according to the visiting associate professor.
Noting that it has been said that Brazil has "received more than she gave" in its cultural relationship with France, Prof. Martins concluded;
". but, in reality, what Brazil received was more the consciousness of her own profound nature, both in its good and bad aspects; the imaginative contribution that permitted her to see what was hidden behind a more immediate realism."
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First She's A Coed What Happens Then?
(The second of a three part series)
B by Patti Behen
The woman plays the role of the college coed only four years of her life. What then?
What of the future that awaits her? She is a freshman, sophomore, junior, senior and perhaps she does some graduate study.
Kate Hevner Mueller, professor of education at Indiana University, says. "Fortunate indeed is the college woman of the 1960 decade of our American society."
GRADUATION comes and the future begins to take on the cloak of the present. Will it be marriage? A career? Or perhaps it will be both
"She will undoubtedly at some time have a job in the outside world, but she will also have a home and family life with children," she says.
Donald R. Brown, professor of psychology at Bryn Mawr College, in his essay "College and Value-Conflict," tells us that most colleges "manage to instill considerable feelings of obligation on the part of the intelligent and educated woman to contribute something from and of herself to society beyond her child-bearing years."
"She will earn a large salary and pay high taxes. She will be listening when the midnight carillons ring in the new century. She may even help her daughter plan a Junior Year on the moon."
YET THE college woman will also work hard. She will have problems, anxieties, decisions, competition and disappointments, just as all her ancestors and contemporaries had had
"The educated woman then faces a society that leads her to flee into early marriage to prove her womanhood and at the same time surrounds her with 'labor-saving' devices which give her just enough free time to feel guilty about her 'wasted education.'" says Prof. Brown.
If the college woman receives a really successful education, she will be quite capable of seeing the problem not as a personal failing, but as a social dilemma.
CURRENT LABOR statistics indicate that more than half of our educated women will be working outside the home in the future. It is anticipated that in 1970 40 per cent of all women will be working.
Laurine E. Fitzgerald, speaking at the 1963 convention of the Intercollegiate Associated Women Students, said that three out of four college women of today can anticipate working 30 or more years after
The trend toward part and full-time employment of women shows increasing recognition of the womanpower in the economy of the nation
graduation, at least on a part-time basis.
In the 1920s, when few women were ever likely to work, a "career woman" averaged 11 years of employment. Today, more and more women enter industry.
"WOMEN OWN 47 PER CENT of all the stock of our railroads," says Starr, "and are said to own two-thirds of the wealth of the country, although men still manage and control it."
Mark Starr, in his book "Labor Looks at Education," says that "few people appreciate how important woman's position has become in industry."
Prof. Fitzgerald pointed out an interesting sidelight.
"Only a small percentage of women use their education in their employment, other than nurses, social workers, and teachers," she said.
Is a college education wasted on the woman who chooses marriage and decides against working? Everyone has heard the too-frequent response of the woman who says, "I'm only a housewife."
Phyllis McGinley, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for poetry, argues the case in an article written for the Ladies' Home Journal.
"To assert that housewives have no right to the simple joys of knowing is to denigrate everything best in civilization," said Mrs. McGinley
SHE SAID THAT the housewife with a college education "will be able to judge a newspaper item more sensibly, understand a politician's speech more sagely, talk over her husband's business problems with him more helpfully, entertain her children more amusingly."
Surely higher education is wasted on no one. Whatever the college woman decides to do with her life, she will always see the benefits of her college years. Six decades of life await her after graduation.
At 20, the beginning of her third decade of life, the modern woman is married or on the verge of marriage.
"For the most part," Prof. Mueller tells us, "she will spend this decade having two or three or four children. This will be her station wagon decade, the suburban, cook-out, teeth-straightening, mortgage-making era."
crises wane. At 30, even at 35, a woman has more life ahead of her than behind her, three or four full decades to go."
"It is an era too for emotional strain and personality reorganizing. In her fourth decade, emotional
OF COURSE there are many possible variations to this sequence.
There is the "professional volunteer," the career woman, and the young woman who deliberately postpones her earning career until after some family experience.
"Finally," says Prof. Mueller "there is the highly motivated student who maintains a continuous but perhaps slower career in a chosen profession with full family experience at the same time."
The woman who wishes to be the "working wife" after college faces the more difficult problems. She must learn to combine the roles of homemaker, wife, and mother with that of the career woman.
'Minutemen' Leader To Discuss Vigilance
Robert Bolivar De Pugh, national coordinator of the organization "Minutemen," will address the SUA Minority Opinion Forum at 4:30 p.m., tomorrow in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union
De Pugh will speak on the need for the "Minutenem" in America to guard against Communist infiltration and occupation.
The organization is secret and is made up of U.S. civilians. It was denounced as an extremist group in 1961 by President Kennedy.
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Applications Ready For Jayhawker Posts
Applications for editor and business manager of the 1964 Jayhawker are due Wednesday, April 24.
Applications should be sent to Raymond Nichols, vice chancellor for finance and chairman of the Jayhawker advisory board, 223 Strong Hall.
Three letters of recommendation, one of which must be from a former employer, should accompany the application.
J-School Juniors Receive Awards
Two students from the KU School of Journalism have been awarded $200 scholarships by the Kansas City Press Club.
Russell Corbitt, Chanute junior, and Ralph Gage, Ottawa junior, were selected for the awards. Both are news-editorial majors in journalism.
The scholarships will be effective the fall semester in September
FOUR OTHER scholarships were given by the press club, two each to journalism students from Kansas State University and the University of Missouri.
The awards, presented by the club's scholarship committee, are drawn from a fund formed by the proceeds of the annual "Griddle Show" in Kansas City.
Breon Mitchell Named New SUA President
Breon Mitchell, Salina junior, was selected president of Student Union Activities by the Union Operating Board.
Others selected by the board are Bob Moutrie, St. Louis, Mo., junior, vice-president; Mary Morozzo, Council Grove sonhomore, secretary, and Scott Linscott, Topea sophomore, treasurer.
The present SUA Board chose the rest of the board to serve during the 1953-64 term.
The new members are Marcia Cowles, St. Joseph, Mo., junior; Joe McGrath, Prairie Village junior; Nancy Partin, Prairie Village junior; Margaret Harris, Leawood junior; David Smith, Jackson, Mich., junior; Gene LaFollette, Overland Park sophomore; John Mays, Lyons freshman, and Peggy Carroll, Prairie Village junior.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 17, 1963
University Daily Kansan SPORTS KU Athletics Have Productive Years
(First of a series) By Russ Corbitt
Few people realize the KU athletic department is a half-million dollar business.
Statistics for the 1961-62 school year, show a gross income last year of $635,082.91 for the KU Physical Education Corporation, which confirms that athletics at KU is big business.
In order to obtain a complete picture of the athletic department, its organization and operation, one must first examine KU's past participation and achievements in intercollegiate athletics.
THE JAYHAWKER BASKETball team first competed in 1899, under Dr. James Naismith, who invented the game. The team finished its first season with seven victories and four defeats.
The KU football team first entered the scene in 1890, and won one of three games.
Records show the first organized conference the Jayhawks belonged to was the Missouri Valley, KU was a charter member of the conference in 1907, and remained in the league for 20 years.
IN 1928, KU, Iowa State, Kansas State, Missouri, Nebraska, and Oklahoma broke away from the Missouri Valley and formed the Big Six conference.
The league expanded to the Big Seven in 1948 with the addition of Colorado, and finally to the Big Eight with the entrance of Oklahoma State in 1957.
The Jayhawkers can point to one of the most successful basketball histories in the nation. According to statistics compiled last year by a Boston writer, KU is second only to Oregon State as the winningest basketball team in history.
IN THE 64 SEASONS that KU has fielded a basketball team, it has won a total of 873 games while losing 397. This winning percentage of .687 places KU sixth on the nation's all-time list in this category.
The Jayhawk basketball teams have had only four coaches during the 64 season span.
Dr. Naismith was followed by the dean of basketball coaches, F. C. (Phog) Allen, from 1908 and 1909. W. C. Hamilton began his decade as head coach in 1910.
Allen returned to KU in 1920 to commence his remarkable 37-year career as head coach. Dick Harp, Allen's understudy, took over in 1957.
TWO YEARS after assuming the coaching chores in 1920, Allen built his charges into a powerhouse. The Jayhawks won six consecutive Missouri Valley titles, compiling a won-lost record of 87-7.
KU finished fifth in its first year in the Big Six conference, but never finished below third place during the remainder of the 19-year period.
The Jayhawks captured 12 championships or co-championships in the Big Six, and finished in second place three seasons.
Coach Allen and his cagers won or shared four of ten Big Seven titles, and second once. KU finished in the lower division the other four years under Allen. Coach Harp led the Jayhawks to their fifth Big Seven championship in the final season of the league, and finished second in the NCAA tourney.
IN SIX SEASONS of Big Eight play under Coach Harp, KU has shared one title and finished second twice.
KU has more to boast of than its excellent coaching and superior winning records. A Jayhawk has won the individual conference scoring championship 19 times since 1920. KU has also placed 19 players, many of them more than once, on the All-
America first teams. In all, KU has won 31 conference titles or co-titles, 24 of them under Allen.
The history of the KU football team since it took the field in 1809 does not match that of the basketball team.
The KU griders have managed to finish in first place five times since the first conference game in 1907.
THE JAYHAWKERS won two Missouri Valley titles and three Big Six crowns.
KU has never placed higher than third place in the Big Seven, but has twice finished second in the Big Eight.
The Jayhawks won the title in 1960, but were ordered by the Big Eight to forfeit their victories over Colorado and Missouri when the conference declared KU had used an ineligible player (Bert Coan) in those games. The forfeits knocked the Jayhawks down to third place.
KU officially has not won a conference championship since the Big Six titles in 1946 and 1947.
Although the Jayhawks have never been a consistent powerhouse, they have several times received national ranking in certain categories.
East Texas State track coach Delmar Brown faces two problems with his precious sophomore spinner, R. L. Lasater. One is to get him out of the starting blocks faster; the second to get his mind off model airplanes long enough to run.
KU HAS ALSO had its share of individual stars. Six Jayhawkers have been named to the All-America first teams, with John Hadl receiving the honor twice. Jim Bausch, an all-conference fullback in 1929 and 1930, and Olympic decathlon champion in 1932, was voted into the National Football Hall of Fame in 1954.
"He's got them hanging all around his room," laughs Brown, a former North Texas State spinner, who helped the Eagles to their first Kansas Relays baton championship in the 880 in 1937. "Once in a while when he makes a good one he sends it home to his Mom. He'd put them together on trips too if I'd let him. But I don't. I want him to get his mind on the meet.
"HE'S A FINE sprinter. One of the best you ever saw without a good start. It's not his form. It's just his reflexes. We've worked and worked to get him out of it, but we can't. He's got a great finish in the last 70 yards though. This is one reason I'm really encouraging him in the quarter-mile.
East Texas State Sprinter Is Model Airplane Enthusiast
The quarter-mine for a guy who runs a wind-bait .99.2 and several wind-aided :09.4's, plus a legal .20.4! "That's right." Brown remarks. I think he can get down to :45.0 (a tenth above the world 400 meter record) by next year. "Of course we've got to develop his endurance. But he's a great competitor. He's already done :47.5 on the blocks."
CONTINUING, BROWN, who unwinds a dialogue that draws comparison with Chester of Gunsmoke fame, explains. . . . "We're eyeing the quarter for the Olympics. There's a cow-lot full of :09.4 and :09.5 sprinters and :20.4 and :20.5 220 men. It's tough to break in. The
good quarter milers today have the speed of a spinner. This boy ran only one quarter in high school on the mile relay team. Why, he doesn't even know how to run it yet."
"He works hard in practice, but he can't do anything. He times :09.8 and :09.9 all the time. But put someone out there in a meet for him to run against and he can really let go."
"Lasater ran as fast as : 09.8 in junior high at Big Springs, Texas. Last year as a freshman he broke Brown's : 20.5 Lone Star Conference 220 record with his : 20.4.
OF MORE importance at the moment is how well he can handle the quarter as the pack takes a run to break Texas Southern dominance of the college division in the 38th Kansas Relays next weekend. The Tigers won all six baton hauls here a year ago including a record burst of 3:11.0 in the mile.
ine repeated their 1962 slam at
Texas a week ago, by bagging all six relays, stretching their streak on the Texas-Kansas-Drake Grand Circuit to 21 of a possible 23 championships. They spun 3:10 at Austin to outdistance Texas Western's 3:14.6 and East Texas' 3:16.1.
Two weeks earlier Brown's Lions were down to 3:13.5 at the West Texas Games. But that was good for no better than third since Western skated 3:12.7 and McMurry 3:13.2.
Looks like Lasater, who'll also be in the 100 here, will be obliged to fire that 45.0 ahead of schedule if the Lions are to break through.
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Giant U.S. Steel Joins Price Hike
NEW YORK—(UPI) -- Big steel, apparently anticipating no repetition of last year's slapdown by the White House, raised its prices yesterday, joining the ranks of other lesser producers who preceded it in announcing increases.
Page 7
Giant U.S. Steel, which bore the brunt of President Kennedy's wrath last year when the industry tried to raise prices, announced it would make selective increases of $4.85 a ton on flat rolled steel which constitutes about 29 per cent of its sales.
Fourth-ranked Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp., sixth-ranked Armco Steel Corp., and eighth-ranked Inland Steel Corp., announced their own increases within hours of the nation's largest producer.
IT REMAINED only for Bethel-
hem Steel, ranked No. 2, to join the
other four top producers in the
price scramble. Third-ranked Rep-
ublic Steel announced its hikes
Monday.
The raises were expected to make the United Steelworkers Union more determined in its demands for higher wages.
One of the industry's leading trade publications, Iron Age Magazine, said the present market can absorb the price increases because conditions are vastly different from a year ago when Kennedy raised objections. Inventories are low, demand is brisk and picking up and the labor situation is quiet, the magazine said.
It has the right to re-open contracts with 11 leading steel companies anytime after April 30 and can strike 90 days after re-opening if it does not get what it wants.
PRESIDENT KENNEDY conferred with his economic advisers at the Vacation White House in Palm Beach, Fla., on the latest moves by the industry. There was a possibility he would amplify his recent statement that while he was opposed to across-the-board increases by the steel makers, he did not believe "selective price adjustments up or down" were out of line.
Apparently taking him at his word, U.S. Steel and others made their selections, although U.S. Steel's increases were lower than the $5-$7
general range of hikes announced by other firms.
Prices on the New York Stock Exchange dropped after the announcement by U.S. Steel President L. B. Worthington. Apparently investors feared that Big Steel's joining the other firms in the increases might prompt Kennedy to force the industry to back down again, observers said.
BUT THE MARKET came back and U.S. Steel showed a fractional increase on its common stock at the close.
Most of the nation's smaller steel firms were watching to see what U.S. Steel would do. Its announcement was expected to trigger immediate selective increases by these companies.
Wheeling Steel started the price rises last week. Yesterday's raises brought to seven the number of large producers who have made such announcements. Lukens and Pittsburgh followed Wheeling.
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Wednesday, April 17, 1963 University Daily Kansan
An Organizational Oversight LONDON — (UPI) — The British Railways reorganization plan includes closing St. Mark's Station even though a two-year improvement plan has just been completed. "In an organization as large as the railways things like this are bound to happen now and then," a spokesman said yesterday.
Kissing Driver Hits Car
Kissing Driver Hits Car
LAREDO, Tex — (UPI) — It cost
Carlos Roberto Garcia $25 for his
auto amour.
Police said Garcia, 20, kissed his wife while driving and his car hit a parked automobile. He was fined yesterday for careless driving.
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University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 17. 1963
Commencement Events Scheduled for June 1-3
Graduating seniors, their parents and friends, and alumni and their families will have three busy days June 1-3.
Those days will be busy for them, that is, if they participate in the scheduled activities of the 91st annual KU commencement.
THE SUPPER, which begins at 4:30 p.m. June 2 in the Kansas Union Ballroom, features Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe's "State of the University" address.
The reception will be held from 3
4:30 p.m. June 3. It will feature the
presentation of the senior class gift,
a silver coffee service, to the Museum
of Art.
Highlights of the commencement activities include the all-University commencement supper and the reception for seniors.
Other commencement week activities include recitals by Ronald Barnes, University carilloneur, reunion luncheons and dinners, concerts by the KU band and bus tours of the campus.
Baccalaureate services will be held at 7:30 p.m. Sunday, June 2, in Memorial Stadium. Commencement exercises will be the next evening at 7:00. Graduating seniors will receive greetings from a representative of the State Board of Regents and Chancellor Wescoe. Presentation of degrees and distinguished service citations will be made also.
THE BACCALAUREATE and commencement events will be held in Allen Field House if it rains.
However, Henry Shenk, professor of physical education and chairman for the committee on arrangements, said:
Rooms will be available for alumni and parents of students in Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall, 500 W.11th. Charges are $2.50 per person per night.
"There has been only one time that I can recall in the past 10 or 11 years that the exercises were held in the field house."
Alumni registration begins at 10 a.m. Saturday, June 1, in the Kansas Union.
Debate on Medicare Planned for Monday
A liberal Congressman from Minnesota and a Kansas doctor will debate medical care for the aged at 7:30 p.m. Monday in the auditorium in Bailey Hall.
Rep. Donald M. Fraser, who represents Minnesota's Fifth Congressional District (Minneapolis), will support the position taken be the department of health, education and welfare (HEW). The department favors medicare.
Dr. Thomas Butcher, Emporia, will oppose government plans to provide medical care for the aged. Butcher is a past president of the Kansas Medical Society.
Although Fraser will support HEW's position, he is not an official representative from the department.
The debate will be moderated by Klaus Pringsheim, instructor of political science.
But Where. Please?
TEXAS CITY, Tex. — (UPI) — Police said the manager of a drive-in grocery telephoned last night, said, "We've been robbed," and hung up.
He called back a few minutes later to give the grocery's address.
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P-t-P Plans Book Sale For Scholarship Fund
Extension Director To Visit Schools
People-to-People will hold a book sale at 9 a.m. Tuesday, April 23, in front of Watson Library.
T. Howard Walker, director of the KU Extension Division, will visit Kansas and Missouri colleges this week and next for the National University Extension Association.
The sale which will last for three to four hours, will include books which were collected during the P-t-P book drive and which could not be sold to the Kansas Union Book Store.
Walker will join Extension Dean Ernest Brandenburg of Washington University (St. Louis) for discussions April 22 and 23 with St. Louis University officials.
Money collected through the sale will go to the foreign students book scholarship fund.
The trips are being made to discuss possible membership of the schools in the national association.
Visits this week will be made with Julius Nolte, executive secretary of the NUEA and dean of the Extension Division at the University of Minnesota, and Roman Verhaalen, head of Continuing Education at Kansas State University. They will talk with officials at Fort Hays Kansas State College April 16 and 17 and at Kansas State College at Pittsburgh April 18 and 19.
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I didn't even know the Department was thinking about me.
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1. According to the Department of Labor, you're worth over $350,000 as soon as you get your sheepskin. That's theoretical, of course.
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4. Since you'd be only 22, you couldn't qualify for Social Security. You'd have to go back to your dad for an allowance.
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I never could handle money.
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Wednesday, April 17. 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Navy Board and Destroyer Probe Thresher Tragedy
Aboard the USS The Sullivans—(UPI)—a destroyer, equipped with super-sensitive sonar devices to map the ocean's floor, joined the search today for the exact location of the sunken nuclear submarine Thresher with 129 men aboard.
Week-long attempts to pinpoint the watery grave one and a half miles under the North Atlantic have failed. The scene is 220 miles east of Cape Cod.
The arrival of The Sullivans will increase to eight the number of vessels patiently criss-crossing a 10-square-mile patch of the ocean in search of the wreckage and hunting for additional debris from the stricken vessel.
The Sullivans was to rendezvous with the destroyer Warrington to transfer new charts and supplies to the task group flagship. Capt. S. A. Andrews, commander of the submarine development group and head of the search, is aboard the Warrington.
Besides The Sullivans and Warrington, the other six ships patrolling the search area are the Polaris missile submarine USS Thomas Jefferson, the submarine rescue vessel Sunbird, the USS Gillis, the conventional submarine Redfin, the USS Rockville and the research vessel Atlantis II.
PORTSMOUTH, N. H. —(UPI)— A Navy board of inquiry investigating the sinking of the nuclear submarine Thresher with 129 men aboard yesterday ordered the skipper of an escort vessel to explain why he did not report the sub's final messages.
The board named Lt. Cmdr. Stanley Hecker; 36, of Brooklyn, N. Y. commander of the escort ship Sky-
EVERYONE READS AND USES WANT ADS
lark, "a party to the inquiry" into the tragedy.
The Navy said the court will not meet today as originally scheduled, presumably to give Hecker time to confer with his counsel and to re-examine the Skylark's log. It was expected to resume hearings tomorrow.
THE COURT EMPHASIZED that Hecker's action could not "conceivably have contributed in any way to the loss of the USS Thresher and those on board."
Vice Adm. Bernard L. Austin, president of the court, said Hecker was not accused of dereliction or neglect of duty. By making Hecker a party to the inquiry, Austin said, it will "enable him to present his side of the story."
IN WASHINGTON. Adm. George W. Anderson Jr., Chief of Naval Operations, said he believed the Sky-lark officers did some "Monday morning quarterbacking" during their testimony before the inquiry board.
"I am sure that they were endeavoring to report everything that they considered important at the time. But later, in retrospect, Monday morning quarterbacking you
friday
Flicks
fraser theater 35°
DAZZLING SPECTACLE...THRILLS OF A CENTURY!!
The Adventures of
Robin Hood
COLOR BY
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ERROL FLYNN
OLIVIA
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BASIL, RATHBONE
CLAUDE RAINS
Speedy Gonzales cartoon
and Chapter 12 of Captain
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and
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All Units Are Air Conditioned, Carpeted and Have Disposals. Provincial Furniture Available. Swimming Pool Available.
PARK PLAZA SOUTH Ph. VI2-3416 1912 W. 25th Day or Night
Math Dinner To Be Held Monday
The dinner will be held at 6:30 p.m. Monday, in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
"Mathematics Today: A Discipline in Fission," will be the topic discussed by the guest speaker at the annual honors dinner of the department of mathematics.
might say, they came to certain conclusions and very properly presented these conclusions and their observations at the time of the court of inquiry," he said.
The speaker will be Wallace Given, professor of engineering sciences from Northwestern University. He is presently associate director of the applied mathematics division of the Argonne National Laboratory of the Atomic Energy Commission.
In previous testimony Hecker and his navigator aboard the Skyklar, Lt. (ig) James D. Watson, said they received a message from the submerged Thresher that she was "Experiencing minor difficulty. Have positive up angle. Attempting to blow." This meant that she was trying to surface.
BEFORE RECEIVING these messages, the Navy had said there was no indication of trouble aboard the Thresher.
They also said they heard sounds of blowing and a "muted dull thud" like a compartment collapsing.
The 351 foreign students attending KU have been invited to an American-style picnic to be sponsored by Delta Delta Delta sorority and Phi Kappa Theta fraternity this Sunday.
Happy Hour Picnic To Be Held Sunday
The picnic, under the People-to-People Happy Hour program, will be held from 12:30 to 2:30 p.m. on the grounds behind the Phi Kappa Theta house.
Included in the planned entertainment will be singing of sorority and fraternity songs and folk songs.
In addition to offering the foreign students and members of the two houses an opportunity to become acquainted, the picnic will also serve as a type of farewell party for the students who will be returning to their native lands at the end of the semester.
BROWSING LESSONS
Given Free
at the
BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass. VI 3-1044
How Ford economy won for Tiny Lund at Daytona
21
ENGLISH MOTORS
The Daytona 500 is one of America's toughest stock car events. It measures the toughness, stability, over-all performance and economy characteristics of the cars that take up its challenge in a way that compresses years of driving punishment into 500 blazing miles. This year mechanical failures claimed over 50 per cent of the cars that entered. That's why Tiny Lund's victory in a Ford (with four other Fords right behind him) is a remarkable testimony to sheer engineering excellence.
Lund attributed his victory in part to the "missing pit stop." He made one less pit stop for fuel than his competition proving that Ford economy can pay off in some fairly unlikely situations!
Economy and the winner of the Daytona 500 might sound like odd bedfellows at first. Yet economy is basic in every car we make . . . yes, even the Thunderbird is an economy car in its own way. Here's what we mean . . .
Economy is the measure of service and satisfaction the customer receives in relation to the price he pays for it. It does not mean, however, austerity . . . you have taught us this. Americans want—and we try hard to give them—cars that are comfortable to ride in, fun to drive, and powerful enough to get out of their own way. Not many Americans want to settle for basic transportation. You see this in our sales figures—more than half of our 1963 sales are coming from the top of each model line. We're selling convertibles, hardtops, the jazzy cars . . . the bucket-seat, high-performance, luxury editions are going like hot cakes.
Yet for all the fun that people are demanding in their cars, they still are
very conscious of the element of thrift of avoiding unnecessary expense. This is the kind of economy we build into every car from the compact Falcon to the luxurious Thunderbird.
There's a special economy, for instance, in Ford's freedom from service. Every car and virtually every wagon can travel 36,000 miles before it needs a major chassis lubrication. Other routine service has been reduced, too—because these Fords are simply built better—and of better materials than ever before.
In its own elegant way, even the Thunderbird gives you economy. It will travel 100,000 miles or 3 years before you have to lubricate the chassis. Thunderbirds have a way of becoming classics—as a look at their remarkably high resale value will quickly tell you. This, too, is economy.
Once, long ago—before the arrival of the Income Tax—a wealthy lady was asked to comment on the solid gold plumbing of her latest villa at Newport. "So thrifty, my dear," said the dowager . . . "it will never, ever rust."
Economy then, is many things to many people. Whatever economy means to you, you're pretty sure to find it in a Ford.
America's liveliest most care-free cars! FORD
Faicon • Fairlane • Ford • Thunderbird
FOR 60 YEARS THE SYMBOL OF DEPENDABLE PRODUCTS Ford MOTOR COMPANY
---
22.
Page 10
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 17, 196
1
PASSING
CHECKING SUN MACHINE—George Beal, professor of architecture, studies the reflection of the light produced inside the building model by his sun machine invention, the Inside-Outside Heliodon.
Professor Learns Inventors' Dilemma
By Dolores Orman
Recognition of an invention may seem slow to an inventor, but no matter how late it comes it is still satisfying.
This would seem to be the opinion of George Beal, professor of architecture. In 1939, Prof. Beal invented a sun machine called the "Inside-Outside Heliodon," the first of its kind ever built in the United States.
Prof. Beal received many requests from American universities and colleges for working drawings of the machine. But it was not until 15 years later that he began receiving requests from foreign countries.
IN JULY, 1954. Prof. Beal received a request from the Bengal Engineering College in Howrah, India. The Scientific and Industrial Research Center in Roorkee, India, sent a request in 1956 and a school of architecture in Nottingham, England, asked for working drawings in 1958.
A few weeks ago, officials of the department of architecture of the Universidad Nacional de Colombia in Bogota asked for drawings.
The Inside-Outside Heliodon is built to approximate the path of the sun and to reproduce sunlight on the exterior and the interior of a building, Prof. Beal explained.
The sun machine has practical as well as theoretical benefits.
"FROM STUDYING the various angles of the sun's rays on a building," Prof. Beal explained, "one can ascertain the best way to build a building in order to assure the right amount of light and to prevent a blinding glare from the sun's rays."
Prof. Beal also explained that through studying the machine it is possible to gain information on constructing a building for maximum heating and cooling benefits.
The Inside-Outside Heliodon consists of a small hollow building model fixed over a hole in a wooden platform and a small motor-operated flood light attached to a long retractable metal arm.
The light revolves around the building, approximating the path of the sun.
A MIRROR located beneath the hole in the platform allows the observer to see the light as it appears inside the building.
The retractable arm can be set at days and months of the year. The "sun" can be set also at the approximate latitude of the building.
Though the Inside-Outside Heliodon was built especially for classroom work, Prof. Beal said the machine is also of great potential benefit to industry.
838 Mass.
JIM'S CAFE
OPEN
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9th and Indiana
Leonard's Standard Service
Complete Brake Service Minor Tune-ups
Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.
1919 Vintage Silent Picture To be Shown in Kansas Union
"Blind Husbands," a silent movie filmed in 1919, will be shown at 7 p.m. today in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Movies scheduled for the remainder of the week include:
- "The Burmese Harp," a Japanese film with English subtitles, to be shown at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in 303 Bailey Hall. The film won the San Giorgio prize in 1956 for the film which "best shows man's capacity to live with one another."
- "Rembrandt van Rijn" and "Baroque Churches in Germany," films on art, to be shown at 7:30 p.m. and 9 p.m. tomorrow in Spooner Museum.
- "The Adventures of Robin Hood," starring Basil Rathbone and Errol Flynn, to be shown at 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. Friday in Fraser Theatre. The film replaces "Come September."
Lawyers to Outline Specialized Careers
Reports on specialized careers in law will be made by eight junior members of the Kansas Bar Association at 2:30 today in the courtroom, Green Hall.
Careers to be discussed include; corporate practice, practice with a large firm in a large city, practice with a state, practice in a rural community, and practice as an elected official. i.e., county attorney or probate judge.
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The Friday Flicks to be shown next Friday in Fraser Theater will be "Tammy and the Bachelor," starring Debbie Reynolds.
Woman 'Lest' in Mate Choice
STEED HILL England — (UPI)
— Elsie Cupit got 26 marriage proposals after her Scots boyfriend called off their wedding.
"I would like very much to get married but the difficulty is choosing the right man," she said yesterday. Elsie plans to meet each of her suitors before deciding.
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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 invocation.
FOR RENT
Wednesday, April 17, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Graduate men and older undergraduates:
A few studio apartments will be available
that you can rent to serve your comfortable quiet air-conditioned apartment for the summer school.
You can stay from Union to vate park ideal conditions. For
Apartment Call VI 3-8534.
BIKE RENTALS - New lightweights -
$1.00 per day (1 week minimum rental),
$2.50 per week, $3.00 cash
deposit required on your credit,
Stoneback's - 929 Mass. - 4-18
Crescent Heights Apartments, 25th & Redbud; Rear entrances. Large utility room with air conditioning. Off street parking – Built in ranges Refrigerators – 2 Bdrmts, 840 sq ft; Refrigerators – Fully Carpeted and Controlled Heating – Fully Carpeted and Controlled Garbage disposals – Air-conditioned – Warehouse – Competitive Rents – Discography or 1 year lease Redbud Lane, Ph. VI-2-3711 4-19
Tutor—Mrs. William Bixner, former children's librarian and school teacher, teaches children in speech, English, reading and history through May 29th Call and停息 6:30 p.m. except Friday for evaluation appointment. Time and place to be arranged.
BUSINESS SERVICES
Transportation plus parking convenience and an opportunity to earn extra money, ride a new motor scooter of your choice, demonstrate and sell in your spare time. Get our deal—Blevin's Bike Shop, 7th and Michigan. tf
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center, 1218 Conn. Personal service—sectionalized birds, mantles, chameleons, turtles, and plum, etc., plus complete line pet supplies. **tf**
RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. tti
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
warding copies to Ola Smith.
939% Mail. Call VI 3-5263.
TYPING
Good typist. Would like to do term papers, and theses. Mrs. Oxford. VI 2-0673
Will do neat and accurate typing in my home. Experienced in themes, theses, and term papers. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Adcock, VI 2-1795. tt
"GOOD TYPING CREATES a favorable impression with instructors." For excellent typing of theses and term papers, call Miss Louise Pope, VI 3-1097. tt
Fast, accurate and work by experienced typist. References. Phone VI 3-6506. tf
Secretary and English major will do expert typing of papers. Mrs. Compton, department do, part time. 1311 N.H. Department do. Particular attention to problems of foreign students. if
Experienced typist Contact Mrs. Hayes
at VI 2-0057. 4-30
Theses, term papers, reports, typed
quickly and accurately. Experienced
typist, electric typewriter. Marian
Graham. 1619 Del. — VI 3-0483. tf
Dissertations, theses, manuscripts and term papers typed on new electric type-bronze ribbon binders keys. Experience in teaching and sciences. Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. VI 2-1546. ff.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, manuscripts, and research with an electric typewriter. Reasonable rates. Carr Mrs. Charles Patliff, VI S-8379.
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, Electric typewriter, Manable Meldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-868. tf
Efficient typist. Would like typing in her
houses, letters, Call anytime at V3-2641-80
English major and former secretary will type themes and theses on electric typewriter. For neat and accurate work call Mrs. Melisand Jones, VI 3-5267. tt
MILIKENES SOS — always first quality typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines.
Others on transcriptions. On hours—7 a.m. to 1 p.m. = 0212$_{1}$ Mts
Phone VI - 3-5920
Experienced typist does term papers.
Experienced word processor does
scientific typewriter. Special symbols and
signs. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs
Koord at book on 2004 Rhode Island Phone
VI 3-7485
Prompt neat accurate work on wide carriage electric typewriter. Journalism-Business secretary experience. Charlotte Weber, VI 3-3495. tf
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
accurate, neat work, reasonable rates
Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff
VI 2-1749
EXPERIENCED TYPEIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mr. Fulcher. VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tf
Used cars—highest prices paid. Call VI 3-
9811. 601 Vermont.
American copper, silver and gold coins
metal tokens, campaign badges and in-
formation cards from many companies
coins. American Copper 1025 Mag
Hours 9:30 a.m. to C 6:30 p.m.
4-25
WANTED
FOR SALE
1955 Ford — original owner — 2 door radio and radiator, 6 cylinder. 19 miles by the gallon. Well running car. Good price Call VI 2-0189. 4-2
1961 Volkswagen, excellent condition Would consider trade. See at 1244 La.
Navy Transmitter GP-7 by Westinghouse. Brand new, never used, many goodies. Bring $45.00 and someone to carry it out of Stouffer Bldg. 6, Apt. 8.
1960 G S. Vespa Motor scooter. Good condition. Pkg. low mileage. 1-422
G, West thst. 4-22
Almost new 70-watt ELCO stereo amplifier $100.00. Stromberg-Carlson constant speed amplifier $100.00. $75.00 compatible amplifier $100.00. Call Steve Kieppe at VI 2-3391. 4-18
1929 Ford model "A" in good condition Has fair snow conditions and good tires and grits V 2-044 V 2-044
Microscope, German made, monocular,
used 2 years, 4 objectives, accompanying
lamp. $175.00. Fred Fas, 5942 El Monte.
Mission, Kansas. 4-22
Student Specials—1953 Nash Ambassador,
A-1 mechanically, $150.00; P150 Plymouth,
clean, rebuilt motor, $100.00; 1952
car, rebuilt gas car, good, $65.00;
1950 3" ton Chevrolet metra, good,
mechanical condition, $150.00. Call VI-
1626 or see at 1092 Harper. 4-22
1608 Spirite, red. Immaculate 21.00 care
Reasonable. Call evening.
VI 2-1928 4-18
Almost new men's black Dacron cover
Suit. Size 39 long $25.00 Call VI 13-4085.
S&W 38 special, Walther P-38, Collectors
German Luger, 32 H&R revolver, 22
Ruger automatic. 22 Remington auto-
toric carbine, carbine, mm.
30-06—5c cground. Also have some
30-06 tracer. See at Stouffer 6, apartment
8, or call VI 3-1110. 4-24
Mobile home, 45'x8', 2 bedrooms with new air conditioner and outside storage building. Excellent condition. Call VI 3-3157. 4-17
Hairdryers! Hair driers! The idea
Easter gift! Largest stock in Lawrence.
A famous brands at low discount price.
As many as $8.00 Rocky Stone@c29-
Mass.
PRE-MED SENIORS: 46' mobile home
3 blocks from Medical Center in Kansas
with phone with wireless
Contact Roy Hartley, 3610 Rainbow Bldw.
K.C., Kansas. J-209-511. 4-23
New and used portables, standards and
electrics. Royal, Olympia, Smith Corona,
Botyping papers, Lawrence Portables, Botyping
papers, Lawrence Typewriter, 735
Mass. Phone VI 3-3644.
*YPING PAPER BARGAINS: Pink typing paper, 85c per ream. Yellow per pound, 35c scratch pads, 85c per pound. The Lawnward Massachusetts, open all day Saturday, 10am-5pm.
Printed Biology Study Notes: 70 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta Notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50. If
HAPPY SHOPPING always at. Grant's Drive-In Pet Center — most complete shop in the lowest — Pet phone VT 12-329 Modem, service - Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. weekdays
All kinds of house plants. Potted ...
Including philodendron to be used for
room dividers and in picture windows.
Phone VI 3-4207. tff
Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extensively comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.00 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. If
MISCELLANEOUS
Free Bumper Stickers: "Not Bombs but Brotherhood" or "Spend Up for Peace"
Write Jim Masters, $840_{12}$ Ky—No obligation.
4-22
Will care for children in my home. 2 years old and older. Convenient to KU. Fenced in yard, references. Phone VI 3-6763. 5-7
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
YELLOW CAB
VI 3-6333
STUDENTS
Bring Your Car Repairs
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704 VT.
V13-4732
HIGHLIGHTING the 43rd ANNUAL ENGINEERING EXPOSITION CAPTAIN JOE ENGLE
aerospace research pilot
Captain Joe Engle, aerospace research pilot, will present a test pilot's viewpoint on Air Force manned space flight systems.
sat. april 20
11:30 am
allen field house
---
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 17, 1963
KU Grad-
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1) field fulltime or why he doesn't move up to a larger newspaper.
"I have a rather unique position, here in that I have a good fulltime job and I still am able to freelance too." Clarkson explained. "Monstarily, it is rather rewarding," he said.
"IT WOULD honestly be difficult for me to go to another newspaper.
Official Bulletin
International Students: Students interested in the Oskaloosa hospital visit on April 25 (3:00 to 11:00 p.m.) should sign up in Dean Coan's office.
Foreign Students: Pick up invitations for the International Festival at 228 Holy Hill, London.
People-to-People Industrial Tour: Foreign students interested in taking the course will be on a up now in the P-t-P office, Kansas Unison. The tour will be on Wednesday afternoon, April 24, at 12:45 p.m. (from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m.) UM Medical Center, Kansas City, Kansas
TODAY
Le Cercle Francais se rémure mercredi à 16 h, 30 h dans la salle 11 de Fraser. Causerie de M. Admussen: "La Republique antrafaireme: Souvenirs de la Broussse."
Radio Production Center, 7:30 p.m., 220 Flint, Executive Committee, Meeting
Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses, 7:00 a.m., 11:40 a.m.
St. Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Strat-
ford
Der deutsche Stammtisch trifft sich
Donnerstag, den 18. April, in Alcew "A"
des Cafeterias. Alle sind herzlich
eingeladen.
Mathematics Colloquium, 3:30 p.m. 103 Mathematics College, Halla! 'On the Differentiability of Solutions of Dissipative Boundary Probabilities' Berkeley, University of California at Berkeley
Poetry Hour 4:30 p.m. Grant Goodman
Haiku Poetry. Music Room, Kansas
State University.
Christian Science Organization, 7:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel. Everyone welcome.
FRIDAY
A.U.R.H. weekly open house and mixer.
9 p.m., Hashinger. "The Whatamatcha-
SCHEDULED INTERVIEWS
If you are interested in a teaching position for September, 1963, in any of these areas, please sign up for an interview in 117 Bailey Hall.
Parkville, Mo., Public Schools, by James Fike. Friday, April 19.
Bakersfield City School District
Bakersfield, Calif., by Marguerite Halcombe. Friday, May 17, in the afternoon.
Telone, Valley, High. School, Lane
Antelope Valley High School, Lans
aster, Calif., April 19.
Here I sit with the monster I've created.
"There are things that are satisfying and frustrating. I get tired of sitting at a desk."
While he was a KU student Clarkson drove to Columbia for a Missouri-Kansas State basketball game. He figured that somebody would pay for a picture.
"SPARKY" STALCUP, Missouri coach, complained bitterly about the officiating in the last few minutes of the game. Clarkson captured Stalcup's actions, taking 28 pictures in two and one-half minutes with a cumbersome Speed Graphic camera.
The next day, an eight-column panel of pictures of Stalcup was used in the Kansas City Star. Stalcup was outraged.
Clarkson said Stalcup called him the following Monday and informed the photographer he was no longer welcome in Brewer Field House. Clarkson took notes during the telephone conversation. These notes added to his rife with Stalcup when the substance of the notes was used by several area sports columnists.
EVEN LIFE magazine planned to use a two-page spread on Stalcup. But, as Clarkson recalled, that was the same week King George VI of England died.
"Later Stalcup told me I could come back and all was forgiven. But I don't think all was forgiven until a couple of years ago when I got to know him better," Clarkson said.
Poetry to Be Read In English, Japanese
Japanese poetry will be read in both English and Japanese at the SUA Poetry Hour, at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Music and Browsing Room of the Kansas Union.
Grant Goodman, visiting associate professor of history, will read the English translations and Mitsue Shibata, instructor of Oriental language and literature, will read the Japanese verse.
the young man who buttons down his collars wears CRICKETEER® sportcoats
C. B. D. R.
This Cricketeer look harks back to days when sports cars were longer, the Twenties roaring. Up-dated now in slim ticking stripes, wider blazer stripes or certified checks, all drawn on clean white backgrounds. Essential for the summer Circuit. Cricketeer tailored in Dacron* polyester and worsted to keep the trim, natural lines in shape. $32.50 to $39.50
Authentic button down shirts in solids and stripes, from $4.50 to $6.50
THE Town Shop DOWNTOWN
THE University Shop ON THE HILL
Town Shop
University Shop
Pre-Med Day Planned
Visitors may attend and participate in classes, view a demonstration of new equipment, and tour the medical center. There will also be an opportunity to speak with the admissions committee about admission procedure and career opportunities.
Students planning to enter medical school in fall 1964 are invited to attend the KU Medical Center's annual pre-medical day, April 27.
Activities will start at 9:45 a.m. at Battenfield Auditorium, Rainbow Boulevard at Olathe Boulevard in Kansas City. The activities will end at 3:30 p.m. Meals will be available in the Medical Center cafeteria at the students' expense.
QUALITY CRAFTSMANSHIP at BUSH BODY WORKS formerly University Ford Body Shop
"We Repair ALL Makes & Models"
East 23rd St. VI 3-3006
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Daily Hansan
Thursday, April 18, 1963
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
100
EXPOSITION QUEEN—Sharrie Farrar, Kansas City, Mo., senior, will reign over the Engineering Exposition in Allen Field House tomorrow and Saturday. Miss Farrar was also chosen the St. Patrick's Day queen by the School of Engineering and Architecture in March.
ALL DEPARTMENTS of the School of Engineering and Architecture will concentrate on exhibits showing how their branches of engineering contribute to space exploration.
Engineers' Exhibit On Space Program
"Project Apollo" will be portrayed in the 43rd annual Engineering Exposition in Allen Field House all day Friday and Saturday morning.
A 2,000-lb., 23' 6" full scale mockup of the Mercury spacecraft will be on display. Through a glass window, visitors will see the dummy astronaut and instruments. The Mercury builder, McDonnell Aircraft of St. Louis, is supplying the mockup.
Bell Telephone Laboratory is providing a mockup of the Telestar Satellite, complete with automatic sound recordings explaining its use.
THE EXPOSITION AWARDS banquet Saturday evening in the Kansas Union is a new feature this year. Principal speaker will be Dr. Joseph F. Shea, deputy director for systems, manned space flight, in the National Aeronautics Administration.
Sen. Frank Carlson, R-Kan., will be a guest at the banquet. Rep. William Avery, R-Kan., said he will attend a portion of the Exposition.
Another speaker will be Capt. Joseph Engle, 1956 aeronautical engineering graduate of KU, who will soon complete the Aerospace Research Pilot course at Edwards A.F.B., Calif.
Student co-chairman of the Exposition are Bruce Null, Grand Island, Neb., junior, and Ron Keith, Beaumont, Tex., senior. Kirk Bond, Soldier senior, is publicity chairman.
THE ENTRANCE to the Exposition will be marked by a 30-ft. "discontinuous compression structure."
Weather
Partly cloudy west, mostly cloudy east this afternoon and tonight with occasional showers and thunderstorms East and extreme North portions. Locally heavy rain likely extreme Northeast this afternoon and evening. Cooler Northeast this afternoon and over state tonight. Friday partly cloudy and cooler South portion. Lows tonight in the 30s West to the 50s East. Highs Friday in the 60s North to the 70s South.
A display of planet surface transportation by "moon buggy"; the evolution of a manned Venus expedition, including the working model of the Rogallo wing, which will be used for landing on Venus; a controlled atmosphere dome, launch pad, and sun distillation unit.
erected by architecture students. Inside the fieldhouse, exhibits will include:
A display of the problems involved in control of the spacecraft's motion; displays of radiation problems of Project Apollo—where radiation is met in space and how it affects man; instrumentation of space capsules and the positioning for accessibility to the astronaut.
The latter will be in what appears to be a floating room.
The Centrex system—centralized telephone exchange—should provide adequate service for the University's predicted growth through the 1970s and beyond, according to Raymond Nichols, vice chancellor of the University.
Departments, offices, faculty and staff members will have telephone numbers that can be dialed directly without going through the university operator.
60th Year, No. 123
If the caller does not know the number, he will dial UN 4-2700 and ask the KU operator for the number. He must then hang up and dial the number.
OUTGOING CALLS WILL BE MADE as now, by first dialing "9" and then the complete number. Outgoing long distance calls will continue to be placed through an operator.
Senate Committee Discloses Campaign Gifts of Lobbyist
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The Senate Foreign Relations Committee disclosed today that a highly-paid lobbyist for Philippine interests made 1960 campaign contributions to more than 20 members of Congress or their associates.
KU Plans Special Telephone System
The list included some of the biggest names in the House and Senate. The lobbyist was John P. O'Donnell of Washington who was working for payment of Philippine war damage claims and also represented Philippine sugar interests.
The biggest check—for $2,000—was drawn to Rep. Clement J. Zablocki, (D-Wis.) chairman of the House Foreign Affairs subcommittee on the Far East and co-author of the Philippines claim bill. The other co-sponsor, Rep. George P. Miller, (D-Calif.) received $500.
Chairman J. William Fulbright,
(D-Ark.) and committee staff members estimated that O'Donnell received about $150,000 for his activities on behalf of the $73 million Philippine damage claim bill passed by Congress last year and from $250,000 to $300,000 for representing various Philippine religious orders who received compensation under a 1956 claims bill.
A GENERAL Accounting Office report made public by te committee showed that O'Donnell drew cashier's checks on Oct. 12, 1960, to more that a dozen Congressional candidates. These included Senate Democratic whip Hubert Humphrey, Minn., and Rep. William E. Miller, (R-N.Y.) now chairman of the GOP national committee.
FULBRIGHT said the disclosures were so serious the committee will meet next week to consider amending the Philippine War Damage Act to bar "those who interfere in our governmental processes for private gain from receiving benefits" from the bill.
ANOTHER $1,000 was drawn to
The disclosures came as the committee resumed open hearings in an investigation of private lobbying for foreign interests. O'Donnell, who was excused from testifying in person because of health, was questioned at length March 1 in a closed hearing. His testimony was made public today.
ALL CAMPUS THREE-DIGIT extension numbers will be discontinued and given a UNIVERSITY 4 prefix and a four-digit number.
A new telephone system, a miniature of Lawrence's Vlking exchange, will be installed at KU in August.
The VIking 3-2700 will become UNiversity 4-2700. KU will have the only UNiversity 4 prefix in the nation, and long distance callers will be able to dial any KU number by using the Lawrence area code, 913.
Intra-campus calls will be made as now, except that the four-digit number instead of the current three-digits will be used.
The new switchboard and control center is being installed in Fred Ellsworth Hall, the new men's residence hall which will open in September.
Edward McCormack, who in 1960 was a candidate for Attorney General of Massachusetts and a nephew of House speaker John W. McCormack.
O'Donnell listed the payments in his March 1 testimony but his testimony did not jibe exactly with the GAO list. O'Donnell listed payments totaling $5,500. The GAO audit contained some items he did not list. The total on the GAO list showed $8,600 in cashier's checks drawn on Oct. 12, 1960.
Manned Orbit Attempt Threatened With Delay
CAPE CANAVERAL — (UPI) — Problems in a booster rocket today threatened to delay U.S. plans for launching Astronaut Leroy Gordon Cooper Jr. on a 22-orbit journey around earth May 7.
Informed sources said a postpone-ment of Cooper's flight aboard a bell-shaped capsule he tentatively named "Faith-t" looks "very likely."
NO NEW FIRING date was mentioned, but the delay could range anywhere from a few days to a week or longer.
The National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) declined comment on the report.
The troubles were pinned to an inverter and gyroscope inside the silvery Atlas booster rocket, no. 130-D, that was tabbed for the job of hurling the 36-year-old Air Force major into orbit at a speed of up to 17,500 miles per hour.
The Atlas also ran into problems with its tankage earlier. But one spokesman said these difficulties were "minor" and that they were "all but cleared up."
COOPER'S FLIGHT, which would be by far the longest space voyage ever attempted by an American Astronaut, already is far behind schedule. The shot was originally
set for late last year, but slipped to February, then to April and finally to May 7.
MERCURY PROGRAM technicians had planned to mate the one and one-half ton capsule to the top of the rocket Saturday. But yesterday, after the first indications of the booster troubles, the critical move was postponed until Saturday.
The Atlast rocket arrived at Cape Canaveral and was installed on its firing pad last month.
Today, informed sources said, the mating was moved back one more day, to next Monday.
Previously, plans for the launching had run a gamut of hurdles ranging from a lack of money to a last-minute decision to rewire a critical flight control unit in the booster.
Even the naming of the capsule by Cooper was reported to be causing problems. Cooper selected the name "Faith-7," but some officials inside NASA object to the name on the grounds that it could pose a "tricky public relations problem."
"Suppose that, for some reason, we lost the capsule at sea," said one source. "Then it could come out reading something like: The United States today lost Faith."
Liberals Move to Discontinue Aid to Discriminating States
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., said today he is preparing a bill to bar federal aid programs for any state where discrimination exists.
At the same time, Sen. Kenneth B. Keating, R-N.Y., urged President Kennedy to issue an executive order insisting on non-discrimination under all government grant-in-aid programs.
The actions by the Liberal Senators came on the heels of a report by the U.S. Civil Rights Commission asking Kennedy to cut off federal funds to Mississippi.
THE MISSISSIPPI recommendation brought the four-year policy of uneasy co-existence between Southern Senators and the Civil Rights Commission to an imminent showdown.
The Michigan Senator said some aid programs clearly carry such authority while others, such as funds provided for hospital construction may not.
HART TOLD A NEWS conference he has written the heads of all government departments and agencies asking whether they have authority to ban federal funds if the money will be used to support discrimination in any manner.
There are strong indications that the southerners will put up more than token resistance when the Senate must decide whether to extend the Commission's life.
In 1861 when the Administration requested a two-year renewal for the Commission the southerners contented themselves with a few speeches.
BUT TODAY SEN. JAMES O.
Eastland, D-Miss., said the report "is
There was no real floor fight and there was no hint of a filibuster.
the best possible argument that it (the Commission) should be abolished.
"The charge that Mississippi is guilty of subversion of the Constitution," he said, "is the rankest falsehood."
Sen. John C. Stennis, D-Miss., said the "presumptious and utterly ridiculous" statement was "proof positive that the Commission should be permitted to die its long awaited natural death later this year."
The report "is but the latest example of the repeated meddling of busybodies acting beyond their assigned mission and purpose," Stennis said.
Eastland, Stennis, and Sens. John J. Sparkman, D-Ala., and A. Willis Robertson, D-Va., agreed that the Commission stepped beyond its jurisdiction in its report.
Reactor Building Has Small Fire
An electrical fire in the nuclear reactor building about 11:30 a.m. today caused concern but little apparent damage.
The fire was confined to the power center of the building, and most of the damage was to burned insulation.
There was no connection between the fire and the nuclear reactor.
The fire apparently started from the temporary drop cable leading into the building from the Kansas Power and Light wires, according to Keith Lawton, vice chancellor in charge of the physical plant.
He said K P and L would have to make a complete check before they could determine the cause.
Electrical power will probably be restored this afternoon, Lawton said.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday. April 18, 1963
Political Undercurrents Entangle Editor
Ellsworth is a small town much like many other small Kansas towns—except that the editor of one of its weekly newspapers does not believe in "playing it safe."
PAYTON IS a newcomer in Ellsworth, but not to the smalltown weekly newspaper. For 20 years he was editor of the Overbrook Citizen. From Overbrook Payton went to Oklahoma City, where he was an editorial writer for the Daily Oklahoma during the year before he moved to Ellsworth. Payton took over the Ellsworth Messenger in March, 1960.
Dwight Payton is that editor. And the Ellsworth Messenger is his paper. He is a big man with an easy manner and a calmness about him that provides sharp contrast with the vigor of his editorials.
Most small-town weekly editors are either afraid or too busy to rock the boat. They are in close personal contact with the citizens of their communities every day. They are not protected by the immunity of numbers that shields the the editor of the metropolitan daily. The sanction of social pressure is at its zenith in the small, established community. Those who rock the boat face the full force of this pressure.
Dwight Payton rocked the boat in Ellsworth. He fought for changes in one of the most sacred of all sacred cows in the small town — the Chamber of Commerce. The Chamber of Commerce represents the core of the professional community, and as such it represents the advertising dollar. Advertising dollars are not easy to find in a small town. Two or three big advertisers could make the difference between profit and loss. This is another reason why many small town editors feel they must play it safe.
BUT DWIGHT Payton did not play it safe. He published a few facts and figures that had been brought up in a Chamber of Commerce membership meeting;
"We pay our mayor $100 a year to manage a corporation which handles an annual budget
of $215,000 a year. Then we pay our Chamber manager $4,540 (plus $650 allowance for driving her own car in town) to manage an enterprise with a budget of $2,606 after her own salary is extracted." wrote Payton on the editorial page of the Feb. 6 Messenger.
Payton's enemies, accumulated during three years of vigorous and outspoken editorial comment, were at the March 5 Chamber of Commerce meeting in force, and they were "loaded for bear."
CHAMBER OF Commerce President Robert E. Nichols, a local pharmacist, called the meeting to bring the strong feelings that had thus far been expressed only privately out into the open. He began the business of the meeting by reading a list of 19 criticisms he had heard about the Chamber, and then opened the meeting to discussion.
Mrs. Verna Leuty, manager of the Ellsworth Chamber of Commerce, was the first to be recognized, and she was well prepared with a list of 16 quotations from the Messenger. She maintained these quotations were unfair criticism of the Chamber of Commerce and its manager.
"THE ONLY fair comparison of Chamber salary would have been to compare the $4,540 with the city payroll of $41,094—if we are going to compare salary of Chamber and city."
Here are her rebuttals to Payton's comments on her salary and car allowance:
"Amazing as it may seem, the editor of the Messenger was a board member in 1961 and 1962 when I asked that someone else furnish the Chamber car and get the $55 a month allowance. All board members received individual copies of all board minutes."
Mrs. Leuty also said Payton was present when she asked that someone else furnish the car.
FROM HER comments on the car allowance, it seems that Mrs. Leuty considers Payton's attack on the allowance to be a personal attack. Paytons objection was not that SHE received the car allowance, but that ANY-ONE should receive the allowance.
Most of the other criticism that Mrs. Leuty quoted suggested that there was a lack of interest in the Chamber of Commerce and it was too expensive for the benefits derived.
At this same meeting, Payton distributed leaflets giving the manager salaries. car allowances and Chamber dues in other Kansas towns of comparable size. Of the 10 towns listed, Ellsworth has the highest Chamber manager salary and car allowance.
Mrs. Leuty denied both these contentions.
MRS. LEUTY and her supporters feel Ellsworth has a superior Chamber and therefore gets its money's worth.
After a lengthy discussion centering almost exclusively around Payton's relationship with the Chamber, the members voted to hire another full-time manager to take Mrs. Leuty's place when her resignation, submitted Feb. 9 to become effective July 1, becomes effective. Mrs. Leuty has since decided not to continue until July 1.
In the Messenger on the morning after the meeting appeared Payton's account of what had happened at the meeting:
"Did you ever get the holy stuffins kicked out of you before a whole crowd of people? It's quite an experience. It happened to me last night at the emergency Chamber of Commerce meeting held at the City Hall in Ellsworth."
LATER IN the article he describes the voting:
"A fight developed on how the votes were to be taken. Aylward (Paul Aylward, city attorney, member of the Chamber board of directors, County Democratic chairman and Democratic candidate for the U.S. Senate from Kansas in the 1962 election) demanded that voting be by a show of hands, commenting that members ought "to have enough guts to stand up and be counted." Payton protested, saying that all tradition was for secret balloting on important issues where personalities were concerned, but he was voted down by a show of hands and the open votes were unanimous from then on."
Douglas
DWIGHT PAYTON sits at his desk in the editor's office of the Ellsworth Messenger.
AFTER THE meeting, Payton's opponents had good reason to believe they had put the editor in his place. Payton's supporters, if he had any, did little in the way of defending him at the meeting.
According to the opposition weekly, the Ellsworth Reporter, the ballots were by a show of hands "to conserve time."
In interviews conducted by this writer 10 days after the meeting, some of Ellsworth's citizens appeared to think the town should be ashamed of what had happened.
Quentin J. Eklund, owner of Eklund (photographic) Studio and former Chamber of Commerce president, had this to say about the meeting:
"I THINK there have been some gross injustices done. I
think the town should be thoroughly ashamed of that so-called meeting they had down there.
"This is just too small a community for this sort of thing. It has gotten vicious... In a town this size everybody's interests are so completely interwoven... Things have got to calm down.
"I think a lot of it stems from the last election. There seem to be some hard losers.
"WHEN THEY start trying to censor a man's writing . . . that's going too far.
"They just saw that they were losing control and they got bitter about it.
"I think the thing that hurts most people is when they stop arguing principles and start arguing personalities. I think that the people who do that are running scared. They know they're beat in principle."
IN AN interview the same day, Payton said politics, not the Chamber of Commerce, was the foundation for the attack. The Chamber of Commerce meeting merely offered an opportunity for the attack.
"I'd say without any doubt it (the attack at the meeting) was organized." Payton said. "It was brilliantly organized. It had to be contrived. Bob (Nichols) had a list of criticisms. This was to be the business of the meeting—it wasn't."
"It's my opinion that the thing had political overtones in the very beginning." Nichols said. "It was mostly just a series of personal clashes involving a few individuals."
Robert E. Nichols, local pharmacist and Chamber of Commerce president, agreed with Payton's contention that the attack was basically political.
ASKED IF the attack was pre-arranged, Nichols said. "It appeared that way; however, it wasn't. No one saw my notes before the meeting. I can't speak for anyone that spoke against him (Payton)."
Nichols said the 19 points he read were "things I had heard during the course of this thing." These were points of criticism "involving both sides of the question."
"I have at this time very little hope that the problem is solved yet. I have hope that it's solved but very little confidence.
"As it developed, nothing was brought up other than against Payton," he said.
"I DON'T think this is a Chamber problem particularly. I think it's a community problem."
Mrs. Leuty was interviewed in the Chamber of Commerce office in the basement of the bank. Referring to Payton, she said, "He has a talent. I just wish he would use it for good. I'm the goat of the whole thing — caught right in the middle.
"I'm out of this thing. I just wish you would leave me out of it. You are just making a bad situation worse.
"Other newspapers — they make it sound sensational — things I didn't say.
"DON'T YOU quote me on anything — because I have an attorney. This is just too big a
thing for newspapers to come in here and quote people."
When the reporter asked if she preferred that he speak with her attorney, she called John V. O'Donnel and arranged for a meeting. When the reporter reached O'Donnel's office, he was invited into the book-lined office and offered a chair. That was all he got.
Fortunately, other townspeople were willing to discuss the situation.
"Before you start asking questions, I'll tell you now I'm not going to answer," O'Donnel said.
"DWIGHT (PAYTON) says this town isn't big enough for two newspapers," said Calman. "I think Dwight misconstrued this to be political.
Henry J. Calnan, editor and publisher of Ellsworth's other weekly, the Ellsworth Reporter, said the controversy is not political but is based on competition between the two newspapers.
"It looks like a direct parallel to the Kansas City Star antitrust suit." He said Payton tried to discourage the townspeople from advertising in the Reporter.
"This really led up to this Chamber of Commerce thing. He has developed a misconception that there is a drive out to feed advertising in here. It wasn't any political instigation or anything of the kind.
"Some say Payton got cut unnecessarily—but others say he got what he had coming to him.
"WEVE TRIED to stay out of this battle, frankly. To my notion the purpose of a newspaper is to keep the people informed—not to cut people down through character assassination.
"Dwight is hurting himself, but he keeps right on... It's no good for the town. I've never seen a situation like it in my life and it's not easy to live around."
Asked how he thinks the situation will end, Payton said:
"I can only say what I hope for—a town that is tolerant of open editorial expression—a town where political opposition is recognized as a basic privilege, where Republican can oppose Democrat and vice versa on a friendly, good-neighbor basis. "I hope that the leaders of the community can all get along harmoniously and direct their efforts toward bettering their community and not waste time on negative activities.
"IF IT doesn't work out like that, our community is going to be branded as a community that will not tolerate these things. This would make Ellsworth a name that is more or less anathema among the good communities of the state."
— Dennis Branstiter
UNIVERSITY Daily Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly, 1904,
1926.
Member Inland Daily Press Association,
Associated Collegiate Press. Represen-
ted by National Advertising Servi-
ce and University of North Dakota.
News service: United Press International.
Mail subscription rates: $3 a
semester or $5 a year. Published in
Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the
weekend. Subscription on Sundays,
University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
10. (1) 2
Page 3
Integration Leaders Switch Emphasis from Registration
THE NEGROES arrested in yesterday's march were charged with parading without a permit, and 29 others have been jailed in earlier protest demonstrations.
Police Chief Jamie Moore, in an act unprecedented in the anti-segreation campaign now in its 18th day, made a personal plea at the voter school headquarters for the Negroes not to march.
Birmingham has a population of about 341,000 of which about 40 per cent is non white. About 10,000 Negroes are among nearly 70,000 registered voters.
Using a blank registration form. Bovel and other leaders drill Negroes in filling in the blanks.
"Now you know I don't have anything against your registering to vote." Moore said. He told the Negroes they would not be molested if they chose any other means of getting to the registrar's office except a march.
INTEGRATION WORKER James Bevel said he has been conducting classes for prospective Negro voters because of the "inequalities of segregated education."
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. — (UPI) — Negro leaders said more segregation protest demonstrations are planned for today but they will not be in the form of another voter registration march.
They said a march, similar to one yesterday which resulted in 16 arrests, would be useless today because the voting registrar's office is closed. The registrar's office is open Monday through Wednesday.
THE GROUP listened quietly, then 29 stepped out on the street. Thirteen later turned back when police stopped the leaders a block away. The rest were arrested.
One protested, "This is not a parade. We are going down to register to vote." In response to a police
Several hundred Negroes gathered in a nearby park to watch the march. Three were arrested for refusing police orders to leave.
tempt of a circuit court's no-demonstration injunction. About 100 other integrationists were still in jail. Others were released on bond.
question, he said he was aware of a court injunction prohibiting parades or other demonstrations.
THE REV. Martin Luther King, Jr., who has led the drive, remained in jail on charges of illegal parading. He faces a Monday hearing on whether he should be cited for con-
The voter march was similar to tactics used at Greenwood, Miss., earlier this month, and aimed the current local desegregation drive in a new channel. Previous demonstrations all took the form of picketing, protest marches on city hall and lunch counter sit-ins.
UNLESS THERE is a change in policy within the state, the committee said, "The federal government will be forced to answer this senseless challenge to its duly constituted authority with measures such as those recommended by the Civil Rights Commission."
Thursday, April 18. 1963 University Daily Kansan
The commission said Tuesday that Mississippi is close to a "complete breakdown of law and order" and it recommended that President Kennedy cut off all federal funds to the state.
Gov. Ross Barnett declined comment on the commission's report.
The bi-racial advisory committee to the U.S. Rights Commission said the federal government cannot ignore the state's "gross irresponsibility, not to say subversion" in refusing to insure Negro rights.
JACKSON, Miss. — (UPI) - A civil rights advisory committee yesterday reported "the hour is very late" but there still is time for Mississippi to "return to common sense" on racial matters and thus avoid federal punishment.
Mrs. Wallis I. Schutt of Jackson, a white housewife who is chairman of the committee, said, "The committee is gratified that the commission has sent a special report to the President with recommendations for
"It IS WITH DEEP regret that we acknowledge the necessity for such federal action," she said. "However, we find that the existing conditions under which our Negro citizens must live are in the main intolerable, with a continuing deprivation of rights, and an ever-present threat of police brutality."
Committee Tells Mississippi Of Possible U.S. Action
executive action designed to force the leaders of this great sovereign state of Mississippi to face up to their responsibilities. . .
The committee said Mississippi's government has "brazenly espoused racist mythology as official policy, thus serving notice on some 42 per cent of the population that they are inferior in the eyes of the state.
"It has encouraged the people of Mississippi to disregard laws and judicial decisions of the United States, and to place state loyalty above national loyalty. It has fostered a spirit of enmity towards our duly constituted national government, based on false ideas of federal-state relationships in our American system of government.
"Mississippi," the committee reported, "should regard the commission's special report as a warning signal. If we react constructively, there may still be time to forestall the recommended federal action, although the hour is very late."
Argentina Rounds Up Frondizi Supporters
BUENOS AIRES — (UPI) — The government today arrested seven former top aides of ousted President Arturo Frondizi and issued orders for seizure of nine others.
The Marine guard at President Jose M. Guido's suburban home was strengthened and orders for additional security precautions suggested a new political storm may be brewing in Argentina.
IN A DAWN communique, the government termed its roundup of Frondizi sympathizers a security measure. It said the men involved were "Marxist-Lennists." They included Dr. Jacobo Gringanz, former personal physician to Frondizi, and Arnaldo Musich, his economic advisor.
Guido remained in Olivos yesterday instead of going to his office as usual. He was reported suffering from what was described as a "muscular indisposition."
Reinforced police patrols were posted in downtown Buenos Aires last night for the second successive
night, and reports from the provinces said an infantry regiment in Bahia Blanca had been alerted.
BAHIA BLANCA. 350 miles southwest of Buenos Aires, is the city nearest the big Puerto Belgrano naval base which was the principal center of anti-government resistance in the Navy revolt earlier this month.
Apprehension over the unexplained military and police precautions was heightened yesterday by reports that the leaders of the armed forces were holding their biggest meeting since the revolt.
Police Hit Pickpocket Ralley
CAIRO — (UPI) — Egypt's pick-
pockets convoked a seminar at
Ahmed El-Bakkash's coffee house
this week to exchange trade secrets.
When the clandestine conference adjourned, a group of the "delegates" flashed police badges and arrested 25 of Egypt's most-wanted pickpockets.
BOWLING is FUN!
Try It This Weekend at Hillcrest Bowl 9th & Iowa
32 AUTOMATIC LANES
YOU ARE INVITED
to hear the following speakers at K.U.'s annual Advertising Day on Campus
(Everyone welcome - no charge.)
THURSDAY, APRIL 25 JAYHAWK ROOM, KANSAS UNION
9:30 a.m.
Al Lockhart from Bruce B. Brewer Agency
11:30 a.m.
10:30 a.m. Bill Vaughan from the Kansas City Star
Gene Davis from KMBC Radio-TV
12:30 a.m.
Les Suhler
Vice-President, Look Magazine Guest Luncheon Speaker
You are also welcome to attend the luncheon in the Jayhawk Room at 12:30 p.m. after which Mr. Suhler will speak. Make luncheon reservations in Kansan Office before Monday, April 22.
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Thursday. April 18. 1963
Rockefeller to Talk Before Peace Corps
John D. Rockefeller IV will be the main speaker at the Statewide Peace Corps Conference to be held here May 3 and 4.
Th conference, open to interested high school and college students. Peace Corps liaison officers, and parents of volunteers, is designed to better inform these people of the functions and philosophies of the Peace Corps. Registration deadline for interested groups is April 22.
Rockefeller served as a special assistant to Peace Corps Director Sargent Shriver, and was a member of the National Advisory Council of the Peace Corps before he took charge of the Peace Corps Far East Region Philippine program.
ERADSHAW MINTENER JR., a Peace Corps specialist in African affairs, will be one of the discussion leaders at the meeting.
Mintener is a special assistant to the director of the College and University Division of the Office of Public Affairs.
The conference will open Friday evening at 6:30 with a dinner in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Dean George Waggoner of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will give the keynote address on "KU and the Peace Corps."
ROCKEFELLER will open the Saturday session with an address entitled "The Significance of the Peace Corps."
The remainder of the mornig and the first part of the afternoon will be devoted to group discussion meetings. Topics of special interest to the various groups of participants have been prepared for these sessions.
A summary session at 4 p.m. will conclude the program, and will feature Rockefeller's address on "The Future of the Peace Corps."
Der deutsche Stammtisch trifft sich
Donnerstag, den 18. April, in Alceve "A"
des Cafeterias. Alle sind herzlich
engeladen.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Mathematics Colloquium, 3:30 p.m. 103 Hall St. Berkeley, CA 94720 'On the Differentiability of Solutions of Dissipative Boundary Probabilities' Corder, University of California at Berkeley
Petry Room 4.30 p.m., Music Room Union, Grant Goodman, Haiku Poetry
International Festival Rehearsal: Participants in the Festival evening program will meet in Hoch Auditorium at 6:45 p.m. tonight for rehearsal.
Christian Science Organization, 7:30
p.m. Danforth Chapel. Everyone welcome.
College Life, 7:30 pm Cottonwood
Life Director of Kansas City Pearce. Young
Life Director of Kansas City
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses, 7:00 a.m. 11:40 a.m.
St. Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford
SCHEDULED INTERVIEWS
If you are interested in a teaching position for September, 1963, in any of these areas, please sign up for an interview in 117 Bailey Hall.
April 19-117 Bailey -Antelope Valley High School, Lancaster, California.
April 19—117 Bailey—Parkville, Missouri Public Schools.
Kennedy Ponders Steel Price Raise
WASHINGTON — (UFI) — The consequences of the steel price increases are being considered by President Kennedy today in the form of a report from his Council of Economic Advisers.
Council Chairman Walter Heller was called to the White House to make the report less than five minutes after Kennedy returned from Palm Beach, Fla., yesterday.
He is not expected to include the matter in his prepared speech, but the editors will probably ask questions about steel after the speech.
THE REPORT concerns the percentage of steel output affected by the increases, and the percentages of company receipts involved.
BEFORE THEY left Palm Beach, Hatcher said, the President was "in constant touch" with the council regarding the price increases. He was trying to determine whether they fell within his definition of protecting "over-all price stability."
Acting White House Press Secretary Andrew T. Hatcher said he did not expect Kennedy to make any immediate statement on the issue. But he may make his views known tomorrow at an American Society of Newspaper Editors (ASNE) lunch.
The Pentagon said it was not looking into the effect the increases would have on the defense budget, although last year, when steel companies announced increases, it assailed them as gravely injurious to national security.
NILS LENNARTSON. Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Public Affairs, said "It is my understanding that we have no inquiry in this matter."
Sen. George A. Smathers, D-Fla., said the steel increases could wipe out any benefits the average citizen might get from President Kennedy's proposed tax cut.
Kennedys Don't Always Win
PORTERVILLE, Calif. — (UPI)— Jack Kennedy was one of nine candidates for two trustee seats in Tuesday's Porterville elementary school district election. He finished last.
SUA
SUA INTERVIEWS
for
Summer Board and Fall Committee
Chairmanships
Summer Board
• Fall Concert
• Activities Carnival
• SUA Carnival
• Jazz Festival
• Open House
Homecoming Dance
Displays
Chancellor's Reception
• Popular Film Series
• Classical Film Series
• Quarterback Club
• Bowling – Men and Women’s
• Feature Speakers
• Traditions Dance
Exhibits
Summer Board
• Fall Concert
• Activities Carnival
• SUA Carnival
• Jazz Festival
Open House
Homecoming Dance
Displays
Chancellor's Reception
• Popular Film Series
• Classical Film Series
• Quarterback Club
• Bowling - Men and Women's
Feature Speakers
Traditions Dance
Exhibits
Summer Board
Fall Concert
Activities Carnival
SUA Carnival
Jazz Festival
Open House
Homecoming Dance
Displays
Applications available in Activities Director's office ★ Applications are due Tuesday, April 23,1963 ★
★
★
Thursday, April 18, 1963 University Daily Kansam
Page 5
Relays Parade Begins At 10 A.M. Saturday
The parade for the 38th annual Kansas Relays will begin at 10 a.m. Saturday at 11th and Massachusetts streets.
Dignitaries expected to ride in the parade are Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, Senator Frank Carlson, Rep. William Avery and astronaut-intraining Capt. Joe H. Engle.
THEME FOR THE PARADE is "Legendary Characters Visit the Relays." Floats have been entered by the combined groups of Tau Kappa Epsilon-Phi Delta Theta, Alpha Phi-Lambda Chi Alpha, Joseph R. Pearson Hall-Hashinger Hall and Lewis Hall-Templein Hall.
The TKE-Tri Delt float is being built around a dragon. The Alpha Phi-Lambda Chi float follows the theme of "Tortoise and the Hare."
The JRP-Hashinger float is called "Zeus' Champion" and the Lewis-Tempipl float involves the theme of Casay Jones. The winning float will be announced during the Kansas Relays Saturday afternoon. The Tempipl-Lewis float won the first place trophy in last year's parade.
Battenfeld Hall Wins Ping Pong Tourney
Battenfeld Hall defeated Stephenson Hall last night to win the men's scholarship hall ping pong tournament held in the Kansas Union.
Chuck Thompson, Helstead sophomore, won the individual first place trophy. He is a resident of Battenfeld Hall. Thompson met Bruce Witherspoon, Coffeyville sophomore of Stephenson, in the finals.
Other members of the Battenfeld team were Les Siegrist, Hutchinson sophomore, who placed fourth, and Lacy Banks, Kansas City sophomore, who placed seventh.
Bird Mav Embarrass Thief
FROME, England —(UPI) —Donald Risdon, director of a tropical bird garden, warned yesterday that whoever stole his pet salmon-crested cockatoo will soon "be glad to get rid of her."
He said if someone has taken the bird home "he will be highly embarrassed by her whistles, catcalls and screams."
The boats will be on display in Zone X Saturday afternoon.
BANDS IN THE parade include the KU band, a band from Ft. Leavenworth and seven high school bands. The high school bands are from Lawrence, Haskell, Eudora Winchester, Madison, Yates Center and Derby.
The parade will end at 7th and Massachusetts streets.
P-T-P Industrial Tour Next Week
People-to-People will take an industrial tour to the Kansas University Medical Center, Kansas City, Kan., on Wednesday, April 24.
The tour, which has been planned for 35 foreign and American students, will include visits to the research laboratories, surgical rooms and several other sections of the hospital.
Frank Bangs, Jr., Wichita sophomore and publicity chairman of P-t-P, said the tour would be of interest to students who are thinking about the medical career. He said the tour will give foreign students an opportunity to see the facilities available in the American hospital.
The bus will leave at 1 p.m. from the Kansas Union and will return before 5:30 p.m.
Students interested in joining should sign up at the P-t-P office in the Kansas Union as soon as possible.
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A Water Safety Instructor Course will be offered to students with current senior Life Saving Red Cross Certificates at the swimming pool of the Robinson Gymnasium.
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The course will be divided into two different parts, the first from April 22 to April 30 and the second from May 13 to May 17.
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Further information is available at 106 Robinson Gymnasium.
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 18, 1963
PLAYER of the WEEK
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Carl Nelson, Overland Park senior, lost a heart-breaker when he pitched a one-hitter Friday against the Nebraska Cornhuskers, yet dropped the game 1-0. Then Saturday, Nelson came on in the 7th and blanked the Huskers... giving KU a 4-3 victory.
CARL NELSON
April 19 *Kansas State at Manhattan (2)
April 20 *Kansas State at Manhattan
April 26 *Okla. State at Lawrence (2)
April 27 *Oklahoma State at Lawrence
May 3 *Iowa States at Ames
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Thursday, April 18, 1963. University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Choice of Being 'Working Wife' Needs Thought
By Patti Behen
(Third of a three-part series.)
His foot is down. No wife of his will ever work. . and he's your husband.
He's one of the many things you must consider before you decide to become a "working wife."
THE COLLEGE woman planning to marry after graduation takes it for granted that she will continue in her chosen occupation. After all, she has studied and prepared for it.
"But the young wife must consider several variables before she goes to work," said Muriel Johnson, associate professor of home economics at the University of Kansas.
"Only 25 per cent of the women who work are single," said Laurine E. Fitzgerald, keynote speaker at the 1963 convention of the Intercollegiate Associated Women Students.
Alberta Engvall Siegel, associate professor of child development at Pennsylvania State University, found from her studies of the working mother that "college-educated women are working outside the home in increasing numbers today, not only because of the increasing demand for their skills and the advent of technological innovations which have eased the homemaker's tasks, but also because they wish to respond to the social need for people with special skills."
CURRENT LABOR statistics show that some four million working mothers have children under 18.
The variables which a college woman must consider before she decides to become a "working wife" are many.
SHE MUST TAKE a long look au herself - her energy level, personality, attitudes and needs.
Kate Hevner Mueller, professor of
Cardinal Koenig Enters Hungary
BUDAPEST — (UPI) — Franz Cardinal Koenig of Austria visited Jozef Cardinal Mindszenty today in an apparent effort to persuade the Roman Catholic Primate of Hungary to give up his Asylum in the U.S. Legation and leave this communist-run country for the Vatican.
Mindszeny, symbol of the church's presence in Hungary, is not expected to yield to such overtures, if they are made.
Officially, Cardinal Koenig is here on a visit at the invitation of Hungarian Bishop Endre Hamvas, the ranking prelate of the Catholic Church still at liberty.
He said before he left Vienna that any visit to Cardinal Mindszenty would be only a sidelight of his visit. But Cardinal Koenig crossed the border from Austria in strictest secrecy this morning, drove the 147 miles to Budapest in an official car of the Austrian Legation here. He went directly to the U.S. Legation where the Hungarian Primate is living asylum.
education at Indiana University, tells us that the young woman must look not only at the total span of her life, but also at herself as a total human being, with all parts interacting to give that mysterious force which we call 'personality.'"
There was a time when the home was a self-supporting economic unit. The housewife made clothes, bread, candles and medicine for her family.
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MODERN LABOR-SAVING devices have abolished this back-breaking household work of the past, however, and the wife may feel a need to take a job.
"The young wife must decide on the kind of woman she wants to be and the role she wants to play in the community." Miss Johnson said.
"She must realize she may have a lower position in a firm because she is a woman," she said. "If she feels she could not be happy in such a job, perhaps she should stay at home where she is Queen."
THE HUSBAND, of course, is a strong factor in the housewife's decision to go to work. She must take into account his definition of the wife's role and his attitudes on the "working wife." She must keep her husband's ego in mind.
"THEER IS NO conciving indication from research that a mother's employment per se harms the quality of her relations with her children, or restrict their chances for healthy and normal development," says Prof. Siegel.
The children bring much to bear on a housewife's decision to go to work. Their number, ages and attitude toward the mother's working are important factors. How independent are they? Will there be an adequate child care plan?
"Present evidence suggests that it is other factors, rather than outside employment of the mother, which account for damage to children when it occurs," she says.
"Some say the more secure male
Family factors also enter into a wife's decision to work. How adequate is the family's income? A woman should consider her family's social class and standard of living before she makes her decision.
would not feel threatened with his wife work." Miss Johnson said. "The college woman should definitely make her decision to work before she chooses a husband."
SEVERAL OTHER variables must beconsidered if a young wife wishes to take a job. The college woman should give careful thought to the matter before she marries, and the
young wife must take each variable into account if she decids to work
Ruth E. Hartlev, associate professor of psychology at Long Island University, in her essay "Women's Roles," warns that "working mothers have to be freed of the load of guilt with which society has saddled them."
tributions to their home, not only because of financial gain, but also, and perhaps more importantly, because interesting work may make the mother a more interesting person, a more socially respected and self-respecting individual, a mother less likely to project unsatisfied ambitions and strivings on her husband and children."
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Prof. Siegel says "the working mother role is by no means suited to all women, or to all family situations.
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 18, 1963
Bursting Pipe Seen as Cause Of Thresher Going Down
ABOARD THE USS WARRINGTON - (UPI) - A Naval submarine officer said today a bursting pipe probably caused the sinking of the submarine Thresher with 129 men aboard.
Capt. Frank A. Andrews, commander of submarine development Group II, to which the Thresher was assigned, said the tragedy will prompt the Navy to examine two key aspects in submarines — current test diving techniques and the design of nuclear powered submarines.
ANDREWS WHO was in charge of the search for the Thresher's hull in Atlantic waters 220 miles east of Cape Cod spoke to newsmen aboard his flagship USS Warrington
Andrews said he expects to testify at a Naval court of inquiry into the disaster at Portsmouth, N.H.
"It sometimes takes something tragic like this to really realize material weaknesses," he said.
Andrews said a pipe carrying salt water to cool pumps and motors probably snapped under pressure. He said water probably flashed through a compartment, perhaps striking an electric board and shortcircuiting the power supply.
ANDREWS THEORIZED the Thresher could not blow water out of her ballast tanks fast enough to
Matrix Table to Hear Foundation Trustee
Mrs. John R. Keach of Mission will speak at the annual Matrix Table dinner tonight.
The Matrix Table is sponsored by the KU chapter of Theta Sigma Phi national professional society for women in journalism. The dinner will be held at 6:30 p.m., in the Kansas Union.
Mrs. Keach was elected to the board of trustees of the William Allen White Foundation at KU Feb. 11. She is the second woman to serve on the board. The other is Doris Fleeson.
In her speech, "The Price Is High." Mrs. Keach will discuss the work that goes into a book of travel and history.
At the Matrix Table dinner, an award will be given to an outstanding woman journalist in Kansas. This is an annual honor, presented by the KU chapter in recognition of exceptional work.
Native Food, Music To Be at India Picnic
the picnic will be held from early in the afternoon till 7 o'clock at night Saturday. April 27.
Transportation will be provided by the club. Indian food will be served at 5 p.m. and vocal and instrumental Indian music will be presented by Indian students.
The cost of the picnic will be $1
for members and $1.20 for others.
Students and faculty members interested in joining the picnic should give their names with a 25 cent deposit to Vinay Kothari at 1231 Louisiana St. before Thursday, April 25.
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surface and sank as the weight of the hull increased.
An "implosion" — or busting inward — probably occurred within the hull, Andrews said.
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He said he based his theory in part on talks with Capt. Deane Axene, a onetime commanding officer of the Thresher.
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"Had the Thresher been going at high speed, she might have been able to overcome rapid flooding by planing to surface," he said.
THE THRESHER, he said, probably conducted a test dive "at a relatively slow speed which is the current technique in test dives.
He said no one ever has conducted a search comparable to this one because of the depth of the ocean in the search area.
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Relays Dance Set For Saturday Night
The Relays weekend will end Saturday night with the annual Relays Dance.
The dance will be held from 9-12:30 p.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom. Tickets, which may be purchased at the Information Booth, Kansas Union or at the dance, cost $1 per couple.
Dress is casual for the dance.
Marjorie Anne Fischer, Lawrence sophomore, who is KU Relays queen for 1963, will reign over the dance. She will be attended by Susie Caple, Neodesha freshman, and Martha Yankey, Wichita freshman.
Foreign Students Plan Oskaloosa Trip
According to Dr. Clark Coan, foreign student adviser, this will be a good chance for foreign students to see a very small American community.
The Oskaloosa Rotary Club will host more than 15 foreign students on Thursday, April 23, in Oskaloosa.
Coan said there are a few opportunities available to visit small communities.
Students will visit farms, schools and several other places and will have dinner there.
Interested students should contact Coan before noon Friday so that the arrangements can be made.
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ANNOUNCING
UNIVERSITY OF THE SEVEN SEAS
A UNIVERSITY AFLOAT-110 DAYS AROUND THE WORLD WITH COLLEGE COURSES FOR CREDIT.
A "Floating University" which will take approximately 750 U.S. students on two World Cruises during which fully accredited college credits can be obtained will commence next October.
Called the "University of the Seven Seas", the cruises will take students on two voyages of 110 and 120 days during which calls will be made at 22 ports including Lisbon, Naples, Alexandria, Bombay, Hong Kong, and Honolulu.
The University has existed for three years and its courses will be conducted, coincidentally, aboard the motor ship "Seven Seas", a 12,574-ton, 482-foot liner of the EUROPE-CANADA LINE, for which Holland-America Line is general passenger agent.
The ship is being especially modified to serve as a floating university with complete classroom facilities including a well-equipped library, medical staff, special film equipment and various other material relevant to college study.
The first semester voyage will begin on October 22, 1963, when the "Seven Seas" sails eastward from New York from Holland-America Line's new Pier 40, and will terminate in San Diego, California on February 8, 1964. The second semester voyage will last 120 days and sails from San Diego on February 11, 1964, ending in New York on June 9, 1964.
Headed by William T. Hughes, President of the University of the Seven Seas, the non-profit organization, originally sponsored by the Whittier Rotary Club, is incorporated in California and has acquired official status as an institution of higher learning from that state, which empowers it to issue transcripts of student records and to grant degrees.
In addition to Mr. Hughes and Executive Director Dr. E. Ray Nichols, Jr., the University Afloat will have approximately 40 professors and instructors including some 15 women faculty members.
Among the academic courses open to students who attend the University will be classes in architecture, creative writing, music, painting, theatre, business administration, economics, education, political science, astronomy, geography, geology, oceanography, public health, languages, history, anthropology, philosophy, psychology, religion, sociology, and speech.
Rates for students who enroll will range from $1590 which includes gratuities and special field trips while in port. In addition, tuition for each semester voyage at sea is $400.
Chaplains of the Protestant, Catholic, and Jewish faiths will be aboard the vessel. From time to time at different ports-of-call, the students will be addressed by prominent political figures, international leaders and educators in the various parts of the world.
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Thursday, April 18, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Keating Tells About Troops
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Sen. Kenneth B. Keating, R-N.Y., said today "there has been no substantial reduction of Soviet military personnel in Cuba" since Russian missiles and bombers were removed last November.
"Several thousand personnel have left Cuba, several thousand have arrived," Keating said. He concluded that "there were and are in the neighborhood of 17,000 men there."
The Senator made the statements in a speech prepared for delivery before the American Society of Newspaper Editors (ASNE). More than 500 editors from throughout the nation were on hand for the annual meeting.
KEATING'S FIGURES conflicted with the last statement by President Kennedy on Soviet strength in Cuba. Kennedy gave figures at his news conference April 3 showing that there were roughly 12,000 to 13,000 Russain troops left on the island.
U. S. officials said later that the President's estimate took into account new Russian arrivals in Cuba as well as withdrawals of Soviet personnel.
Keating told the editors he understood "from naval personnel" that despite close surveillance of Cuban waters to prevent clandestine shipments of men and weapons, "some navy ships have specific orders not to searchlight smaller vessels that are constantly moving in the Cuban and Caribbean waters at night."
"NONE OF THESE ships are ever searched by U.S. patrols," he said. "How can we hope to get evidence of support of subversion if we don't investigate these small scale but very numerous operations? The only name I can think of for this policy is, out of sight, out of mind."
Keating called for a "firm and realistic program" designed to get the Russians out of Cuba. He said a national "consensus" could be developed in support of such a policy through a return to the sort of bipartisanship which existed in the era of the late Sen. Arthur H. Vandenberg (R-Mich.).
That will require, he said, "better communication, a sharing of responsibility for the conditions which exist in Cuba, a more candid disclosure of facts to the American public, confidence that leaders in either party will not attempt to make political capital out of success or failure in Cuba, and the articulation not of an easy, but of a clear and consistent program of action.
"I AM NOT ASKING that any olive branches be extended. On the contrary, I believe we need more, not less leadership." Keating said.
Keating's comments on Soviet military strength in Cuba followed his assertion that there must be full confidence in the information disclosed by government leaders. He said he saw little point in a "numbers game" on the question and little difference in the basic problem whether the Soviet total was 17,000, 14,000 or 20,000.
"But, according to my information, since the withdrawal of the technicians who accompanied the MRBMS and IRBMS and bombers in mid-November, there has been no substantial reduction of Soviet military personnel in Cuba," he said. "There were and are in the neighborhood of 17,000 men there. No functional units have been withdrawn."
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"There is no reliable evidence whatsoever of a decline in Soviet military strength or capability since those first withdrawals in November," he declared. "The great publicity given to recent departures has completely clouded over the fact that a comparable number of new troops have been brought to the island."
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday. April 18. 1963
British 'Espionage May Reflect on US
MOSCOW —(UPI) The snow-bailing espionage case of a British businessman will bring new Soviet spy charges against Americans in Russia. Western observers predicted today.
Powers was convicted of espionage for flying his reconnaissance plane over the Soviet Union May 1, 1950. He was given a 10-year sentence, but subsequently was exchanged in February, 1962, for Soviet spy Col. Rudolph Abel.
The Russians showed all signs of building the case into a show trial comparable to that of American U2 pilot Francis Gary Powers. No trial date was set.
Indictments announced last night said the two men are charged with being members of a Western spy ring that received Soviet scientific and military secrets. Both face possible death sentences if convicted.
THE ACCUSED BRITON is Greville Wynne, 42, a London businessman. Also involved in the case is a Russian official, Oleg V. Penkovsky.
There is no legal appeal of a death sentence in the Soviet Union, and the only chance for elemency is a request to the ruling presidium.
WESTERN OBSERVERS said preparations for the trial indicated there would be new charges and attacks against present and former U.S. Embassy personnel.
Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev said in February that the Kremlin had "complete proof" against Wynne and that he worked in a "joint project started by the British, who then shared their knowledge with the Americans."
The Russian press has called Penkovsky a traitor and a "twist-mad Judas" who is fond of Western dancing.
THE SOVIETS LAST night linked Richard Carl Jacob, 26, a former U.S. Embassy staff worker, with Wynne and Penkovsky. They said Jacob, who was expelled from Russia last fall, had received official secrets from Penkovsky.
The Hungarian government disclosed that Wynne had been extradited to the Soviet Union because his alleged activities had been directed against the Russians.
The British foreign office has maintained that Wynne had no connection with British intelligence services.
The Soviets charged that Penkovsky sold secrets to the alleged Western spy ring and left them in a dead-letter box for pickup.
CAPE CANAVERAL — (UPI)— Members of an International Association of Machinists (IAM) local here returned to their jobs today after a one-day walkout against the Boeing Co., but officials called the return "temporary."
Boeing Machinists Await Contract Vote
However, the picket lines were pulled down by the local today while labor leaders awaited the results of a nationwide vote on the offer.
The issue remained in doubt today. The union local at Boeing's home plant in Seattle, Wash., yesterday accepted the contract by a nearly 2-to-1 margin.
IAM Local 2001 yesterday had reelected Boeing's latest contract offer and had set up picket lines about one mile from the south gate of Cape Canaveral.
Still to be heard from was an IAM local at Wichita, which refused yesterday to vote on the hoeing offer. The Wichita local is now scheduled to take its vote Friday — and it appeared possible the results could tip the scales one way or the other.
VIENTIANE, Laos — (UPI) Premier Prince Souvanna Phouma said today that fighting has broken out in the strategic base of Phone Savan near the Plain of Jars and the situation is "grave."
Phone Savan is located between the Plain of Jars and Khang Khya, a town that was held by Gen. Kong Le, commander of the neutralist forces in the area. Presumably the fighting is between the Communist Pathet Lao and the neutralists.
Earlier, the pro-Communist Pathet Lao forces, already in virtual control of the key Plain of Jars, were reported spreading their operations in southern Laos.
Premier Reports New Laos Fighting
Informed sources said the pro-Communist capture of Ban Ban, third neutralist village to fall this week, made a shambles of the ceasefire and threatened to give the pro-Communists complete control of the Plain of Jars—a military complex that could control all of Laos.
Sources here said the Patnet Lao sized the three towns in the Plain of Jars in direct violation of a cease-fire agreement arranged only last Sunday by Souvanna.
WESTERN DIPLOMATS fear that the renewed fighting will lead to the collapse of the three-way coalition government of rightists, neutralists and pro-Communists. The government was set up last summer by the Geneva conference which guaranteed the tiny king-dom's independence and neutrality.
Pathet Lao control of Laos would open the way for Communist penetration of almost all Southeast Asia, notably Thailand and South Viet Nam.
Observers in the capital said it now is clear that the once three-sided coalition has been realigned into two rival groups—neutralist and rightist forces on one side and the Pathet Lao and dissident "neutralist" troops on the other.
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Thursday, April 18. 1963 University Daily Kansan
Athletic Success Result of Coaching
(The second of a three part series.)
By Russ Corbitt
Much of the credit for KU's successful athletic history must be attributed to competent leadership. Many of the men who have led the Jayhawks to a position of national recognition and prestige are still present on the KU sports scene continuing their efforts.
Heading this list, of course, is Athletic Director A. C. Lonborg, who has held the position for the last 14 years.
LONBORG'S REGIME has not only led to success on the field, but also to improvements in the athletic department's physical plant.
Thirty-five Big Eight championships and four NCAA titles attest to Lonborg's successful leadership during this period. KU has also won six runnerup honors in NCAA competition under Lonborg.
Of course the major achievement along this line was the erection of Allen Field House. This mammoth structure has provided facilities for basketball, track, and baseball, football and tennis practice.
Improvements on the indoor and outdoor tracks, installation of a scoreboard for the baseball field, construction of a football parking lot (Zone X), and installation of a new electric scoreboard at the stadium are other achievements of the Lonborg regime.
OTHER MEMBERS of the administrative staff include Earl Falkenstein, athletic business manager; Denzel Gibbens, ticket manager; and Monte Johnson, director of promotions and public relations.
Falkenstien has three full-time employees under him in the business department. Also the athletic department maintains a full-time staff of six secretaries. Part-time secretarial help is obtained when it is needed.
The two men who probably do the most to spread the good name of KU athletics are Monte Johnson, director of promotions and Don Pierce, sport publicity director.
JOHNSON BECAME public relations director in June, 1961, when the position was officially created. Previous to that time, assistant
"About one-half my time is spent on ticket promotion." Johnson said, "and the other half is devoted to advertising, publishing schedules and programs, and working personally with the athletes."
coaches had handled the duties during their spare time.
"I MADE between 400 and 500 phone calls regarding season tickets last year," Johnson said. "Most of them were around the immediate area of Lawrence, Kansas City, and Topeka."
Johnson said his main duty is to promote sales of season tickets.
Johnson is also in charge of helping athletes who are having academic troubles. He sends out grade report forms to the teachers of all the athletes at the three-week, six-week, nine-week and twelve-week periods. These forms ask the teacher for the athlete's grade in the course at the time, his class attitude and the number of times he has missed the class.
An athlete-tutoring service is available to those athletes who desire special instruction in certain courses.
"THIS IS NOT only for athletes who are having trouble." Johnson said. "Some athletes who are between a 'B' and 'C' in a course may like a little help so they can get a higher grade."
Johnson phones the particular departments of the University to see what teachers are available for tutoring service, and then gives a tutor's name to the athlete. It is usually up to the athlete to make the appointments. No figures were available on the cost of the service, but Johnson said he thought it is probably a little less than in other Big Eight schools.
Johnson also arranges for proctors for the study halls held in Bailey Hall Monday through Thursday evenings. The proctors are usually faculty members or past athletes who are doing graduate work at the University.
DON PIERCE, now with 24 years of sportswriting experience, worked on five newspapers before coming to KU in 1945.
One of his chief duties here is to send out athletic publicity releases to area and Big Eight newspapers. Most of these are news and advance stories on events, but several of them are individual reports on athletes which often are obtained through interviews.
Pierce's other duties include managing the press box, mailing tickets to radio and press representatives who will be covering the events, assigning them seats in the press box, compiling up-to-date statistics on all sports, maintaining a list of past records, and answering correspondence pertaining to KU athletics.
Mitchell's original five-year contract was torn up after his fourth season in favor of a "lifetime pact," which Mitchell calls "one of the best, if not the best, contract a coach and his staff ever had."
FOOTBALL COACH Jack Mitchell has guided the KU team for the last five years, compiling a record of 29 wins, 18 losses, and 4 ties.
Mitchell spent his first two years of head coaching to Wichita University, and then moved to the University of Arkansas for three seasons before coming to KU.
MITCHELL, who has compiled a
head coaching record of 60-35-6, has a staff of six assistant coaches at KU
Dick Harp, KU basketball head coach, has filled this capacity for seven seasons. He took over the head chores from Dr. F. C. Allen in 1957.
Harp holds what is believed to be an unequalled distinction of reaching the NCAA finals as a player, assistant coach, and head coach.
HE WAS co-captain of Dr. Allen's 1940 NCAA finalist team, assistant to Allen when the team won the title in 1952, and took his own team to the finals in 1957, only to lose a triple overtime match to North Carolina.
Harp's charges have won one Big Eight championship and shared another, and have compiled an overall record during the seven seasons of 108 wins and 70 losses.
Coach Bill Easton has been at the helm of the KU track teams for 15 years, and has recently led his teams to consecutive NCAA finishes of third, second, fourth, second, first, and first.
EASTON IS only the second coach in history to develop NCAA championship teams in both cross-country and track and field. His former coach, the late Billy Hayes at Indiana, was the only other coach to achieve this feat.
KU, Illinois, and Southern California are the only schools who have captured two consecutive NCAA track and field titles.
Of course, one of the prime requisites for a successful athletic program is securing top-notch athletes.
THE COACHES of the various sports go about recruiting high school athletes in similar ways. They subscribe to a large number of newspapers who sport columns give them leads on promising young athletes
Contacts are then made through the mail, through alumni living in the area, and through personal contact by the coaches during the summer. Files are kept throughout the season on these boys and their accomplishments.
The KU coaches also send out post cards to Kansas high school coaches asking for names of their top athletes.
"WE CHECK a man on three main points," Coach Easton said, "academic ability, deportment, and athletic ability."
Tomorrow—"Athletics as a Business"
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University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 18, 1963
Little Cal Bowser Tosses Big Stick
The smallest competitor in college javelin-throwing will be vying for that crown on Friday and Saturday in the 38th Kansas Relays.
He is 5-5, 180-pound Cal Bowser of North Texas State, who owns a top of $238-9\frac{1}{2}$ for the season. A sophomore, Bowser hauled all the way to Denton, Texas, from Butler, Pa., to join Pop Noah's cinder menagerie.
"NO. I WASN't skeptical about taking him even though he is a little guy," says Noah, who'll referee the Mt. Oread Games. "He has a fine pair of shoulders and tremendous arms.
"I know we're a long way from Pennsylvanian, but the boy wanted to get down somewhere where there is more sunshine for track. I first heard about him through a friend of mine. I met him when we went to the Penn Relays in 1961. We corresponded back and forth a few times and he agreed to come."
KU Tennis Team Defeats Washburn
The KU tennis team stopped a Washburn victory string at three yesterday. The Jayhawks defeated the Ichabods here, 9-0.
KU defeated the Topeka school by the same score in the season's opener. Washburn had won every match since then. Both teams now have 3-2 records.
The results (KU players listed first):
Jim Burns def. Allen Keller, 9-7,
7-5; Del Campbell def. L. E. Eckles,
6-2, 6-4; Lance Burr def. John Lord,
6-2, 6-0; Jan Cobble def. Charles
Brooks, 6-0, 6-2; Barry McGrath
def. Verland Miller, 6-1, 6-2; John
Guyot def. Julius Rebek, 6-0, 3-
6-3; Burns-McGrath def. Keller-
Eckles, 6-1, 6-3; Campbell-Cobble
def. Lord-Brooks, 5-7, 6-2, 7-5;
Burr-Guyot def. Miller-Rebek, 6-3,
6-1.
The Eagles' school record was 208-7 when Bowser arrived. He added almost 10 feet to that on 218-0 as a freshman. He moved up to 222-10 in the Southwest Recreational to open the season, then pitched $238-9^{1/2}$ in the Border Olympics. He followed with 221-3 in the San Angelo Games.
ODDLY, BOWSER didn't win a single meet on those three good pegs. His conqueror each time was Abilene Christian's Jerry Dyes, who won at the Kansas Relays last year on 237-4. Dyes is not scheduled to defend his crown here, which means Bowser may have the best mark in the field pending developments of the next weekend's meets.
Bowser does own one major victory this spring, casting 228-1, on his home lot at the North Texas State Relays. No Missouri Valley flinger has won this event here since 1933 when Oklahoma State's (the Cowpokes were then members of that circuit) Carl Rigney threw $184 - ^{2³⁴, lowest blue-ribbon mark in Relays history. No North Texas State thrower has won here since 1941 when Alvin Mikeska hit $190 - ^{3¹² in the days before the Eagles became members of the Valley.
Bowser modeled his throwing style after the most famous of all javelin-heaving shorties, Villanova's Al Cantello, still holder of the American record at 282- $3_{1 / 2}$ . This consists of an explosive closing burst in the last four steps of his run-up and a belly whipping dive, pulling to the left, at the finish.
"WHEN HE DIDN'T place at the Texas Relays," grins Noah. "I told him he just didn't want to dive into that mud."
The javelin was completed under trying circumstances, namely a one-inch deluge of rain, in Friday night's opening session.
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First Kansas Relays Event 3 p.m. Today
The first event of the KU Relays—the 10,000 meters—begins at 3 p.m. today in Memorial Stadium. The top contenders in the seven-man field are Ireland Sloan of Emporia State and Pat Clohessy, former University of Houston star, and now a member of the Texas Olympic Club.
Ireland is the NAIA cross country champion. Clohessy, a two-time NCAA three-mile winner, won the mile and three-mile events in the KU Reflays last year.
Others who will be going after the record of 30:46.5 set by Dennis Moore of Abilene Christian last year are George Cabrera of KU; Joe Arrazola, Denver Track Club; Joe Twyman, Fort Hays State; Dick Clark, Springfield Missouri State, and Bill Silverburg of KU.
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University Daily Kansan
Ben Bella Assumes Top Spot In Algerian Power Struggle
Page 13
ALGIERS. Algeria—(UPI)—Premier Ahmed Ben Bella appeared today to have won an important round in Algeria's power struggle by taking over leadership of the country's ruling party from political rival Mohammed Khider.
Government-run Radio Algiers announced shortly before last midnight that Ben Bella had assumed the office of Secretary General of the five-man political bureau of the National Liberation Front (FLN).
KHIDER RESIGNED from the top party position yesterday although retaining membership in the political bureau. He said he had a "fundamental divergence of views" with the other members.
Informed observers predicted that new splits will develop within the Algerian leadership.
KHIDER HAD FAVORED discussion of the proposals by an FLN congress.
on submitting proposed constitutional changes only to the constituent assembly, the governmental legislative body.
The FLN is the former underground movement which spearheaded the revolution against French rule and led to the granting of Algerian independence 10 months ago. The constituent assembly at first appeared to be largely a formal body, with most of the power residing in the FLN and its political bureau.
Ben Bella and Khired had cooperated closely throughout the struggle for independence and the early days of the new regime. They worked together to oust former Premier Ben Youssef Ben Khedda last year.
There also have been reports that Ben Bella is at odds with Col. Houari Boumedienne, minister of defense and former commander of the Army, over Algerian cooperation with France as opposed to militant Arab nationalism.
Sixth-Grader Called For Jury Duty
Informed sources said the split between Ben Bella and Khider reached a climax when the premier insisted
Observers said the latest move by Ben Bella indicates a strengthening of the government in relation to the FLN.
A SPOKESMAN FOR the French government said yesterday that France has rejected Ben Bella's appeal for renegotiating the Franco-Algerian Evian agreement which set up Algeria's independence. The Algerian premier has said some parts of the accord are not acceptable to Algeria. He made the request after France set off another nuclear device in the Algerian Sabara.
Ben Bella favors close ties to France for the time being.
BIG SPRING, Tex. — (UPI) -- Nancy Ann Tatum was summoned recently to serve on a special venire called to hear three capital punishment cases.
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Page 14
University Daily Kansan Thursday. April 18. 1963
Cuban Furor Hurts U.S., Aids Reds, Latins Claim
MIAMI — (UPI) — A past president of Guatemala and a possible future president of Cuba warned Cuban refugee leader Jose Miro Cardona last night that the only people likely to profit from his feud with the U.S. government are Fidel Castro and his comrades in the Kremlin.
(The Costa Rican ambassador to the United States disclosed in Washington yesterday that Miro has inquired about being able to take up permanent residence in the Central American nation. It was seen as a possible prelude to moving Cuban exile operations out of the United States.)
Guatemalan ex-President Muguel Ydigors Fuentes, who was ousted and exiled by the army last month, urged Miro to drop plans to air his differences with the Kennedy Administration at a meeting here tonight.
JULIO GARCERAN, a former Cuban Supreme Court Justice who is the choice of some refugees to succeed President Osvaldo Dorticos if the Castro-Communist regime should fall, said Miro's "false" charges against the Kennedy administration are "creating a grave conflict between Cubans and Americans."
There was no immediate indication that the refugee leader would be swayed by either man's argument.
Miro declared yesterday that he will re-submit his resignation as president of the Cuban (Refugee) Revolutionary Council at tonight's meeting and make public the anti-American bill of particulars he read to the council when he originally offered to resign last week.
"THEY ARE forcing me to defend myself, and I am going to do it with the answers to all the charges they have made," she said in a written statement.
Although Miro's changes have not formally been made public, informed sources told newsmen here earlier this week he had accused President Kennedy of breaking promises to sponsor a new invasion of Cuba.
Well-informed refugee sources reported Tuesday that U.S. authorities had threatened Miro with deportation as a "traitor" in an effort to persuade him not to publish his charges.
THE STATE Department has denied both Miro's charges and the deportation threat.
Ydigoras telephoned Miro last
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night to ask for an interview. The two men talked for some time on the phone, but Miro said he could not meet the ex-president because of a previous engagement.
"I beg you to suspend publication of your document of resignation, which would create difficulties for President Kennedy . . . " Ydigoras said. "Publication will aid only Fidel Castro and his henchmen — and especially Soviet Russia."
THE EX-PRESIDENT told Miro
that U.S. aid is "Cuba's only hope of salvation."
Garceran assailed Miro's charge that the United States has adopted a policy of "peaceful coexistence" with Castro's Communist-dominated revolutionary regime.
"The conflict thus created does not serve the interests, ideals and sentiments of Cubans," the former jurist said. "It affects only the relations of Council President Miro with the U.S. State Department."
Cuban Exile Leader Applies For Costa Rican Residency
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Cuban Revolutionary Council Chief Jose Miro Cardona has inquired about permanent residence in Costa Rica, according to the Costa Rican ambassador here.
Visiting Professor To Talk on Russia
The inquiry was seen as a possible prelude to moving Cuban exile operations out of the United States Miro is now living in Miami.
Charles L. Wren, Rose Morgan visiting professor and medieval literature scholar, will speak on "Some Academic Impressions from Russia" at the Faculty Club dinner at 5 p.m. Sunday.
Prof. Wren has been a professor of Anglo-Saxon literature at Oxford University in England since 1946. He plans to return there this summer to lecture.
He was a visiting professor at the University of Illinois last semester.
Cast Wasn't Put On Right Lea
BOURNEMOUTH, England — (UPI)—John Barker said his two-year-old son, Ashley, broke his right leg but when he went to the hospital they put a cast on the left leg.
Barker said a doctor at the hospital told him "That sort of thing does happen," and then changed the cast.
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Ambassador Gonzalo J. Facio said yesterday that Miro asked about 10 days ago what requisites were necessary for permanent residence in Costa Rica. But he has not yet applied for a permanent visa.
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James Stachowiak, assistant professor of psychology, will speak at the Newman Forum Lecture Series Sunday.
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CHICAGO —(UPI)— Dill pickle ice cream will be served officially for the first time at a meeting of the National Pickle Fackers Association next Thursday in Palo Alto, Calif. "It was bound to come," said William R. Moore, secretary-treasurer of the association.
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Thursday, April 18, 1963 University Daily Kansar
Page 15
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the gallon. Well running car. Good price.
Call VI 2-0189. 4-23
Navy Transmitter GP-7 by Westinghouse. Brand new, never used, many handles. Carry $45.00 and someone help you carry it out of Stouffer Bldge 6. Apt. 8. B. 4-23
1960 G.S. Vespa Motor scooter. Good condition. Low price. Low mileage. 4-22
4-22
Almost new 70-watt ELCO stereo amplifier $100.00. Stromberg-Carlson continu-
tional amplifier compatible $75.00. Shure-Brother stereo stereo Call
Steve Kleepe at VI 2-3391. 4-18
Student Specials—1953 Nash Ambassador,
A-1 mechanically, $150.00; 150.00 Plymouth,
clean, rebuilt motor, $100.00; 1952
motor, rebuilt cost, good $85.00;
1950 4" ton Chevy metro, good
chanical condition, $150.00. Call VI-
3626 or see at 1902 Harper.
1929 Ford model "A" in good condition
air cream covers, good tires and
brakes. C107, C148, C222
Microscope, German made, monocular,
used 2 years, 4 objectives, accompanying
lamp, $175.00. Fred Faas, 5942 El Monte,
Mission, Kansas.
4-22
1960 Sprite, red. Immaculate. 21,000 carefilled miles. Call Election. Call Election.
4-18
Almost new men's black Dacron suit. Size 39 long. $25.00 CVI VI 3-408S
S&W 38. special, Walther P-38, Collectors German Luger, 32 H&R revolver, 22 Ruger automatic, 22 Remington automatic rifle, AMMO 45, 30 carbine, 9mm, 30-60 rifle. Also have some 20-80 tracer. See at Steufer 6, apartment 30, or call VI 3-1110. 4-24
New and used portables, standards and
electrics. Royal, Olympia, Smith Corona,
box typing papers, portables. Box typing
papers, Lawrence Typewriter, 733
Mass. Phone VI 3-3644.
PRE-MED SENIORS: 46' mobile home
3 blocks from Medical Center in Kansas
with study with stud
Contact Roy Hartley, 3610 Wash-
KC, K.C., JO 2-0951 4-23
"YPING PAPER BARGAINS; Pink typing paper 85c per ream. Yellow paper 85c per ream. Per pound. The Lawrence Outlook, 1905 Massachusetts, open all day Saturday, tf
Printed Biology Study Notes: 70 pages.
Printed Biology Study Notes: 70 pages.
hensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the
library. Call VI 2-5701. Free tr
library. $4.50.
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop near Pet phone VI T-3212. Modern, self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. weekdays.
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. tf
BUSINESS SERVICES
Grass cutting, work and light hauling at reasonable prices. Call VI 3-887-
Tutor—Mrs. William Bixner, former children’s librarian and school teacher, tutor in speech, English, reading and history through May 29th. Call at 6:30 p.m. except Friday for evaluation appointment. Time and date to be arranged.
Transportation plus parking convenience
car carries extra money,
ride a new motor scooter or
demonstrate and sell in your spare time.
Biever's Bike Shop, 718
and Michigan.
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center, 1218 Conn. Personal service—sectionalized cooks, custmers, chameleons, turtles, guinea pigs, etc., plus complete line of pet supplies.
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. tjcfm@ncc.edu
Graduate men and older undergraduate:
A few studio apartments will be available
that will serve your comfortable quiet air-
conditioned apartment for the summer school.
Books from Union Private parking Ideas from Union
Apartment Call VI 3-8534 4-18
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
warding instructions. Ola Smith
3931) 9391; Mass. Call 3-5263.
BIKE RENTALS — New lightweights — $1.00 per day (1 week minimum rental).
$3.00 per week, $30.00 cash deposits required or all payment.
Stoneback's — 929 Mass. — 4-18
FOR RENT
Crescent Heights Apartments, 28th & Redbud. Rear entrances. Large utility room. Off street parking – in built in ranges off street parking – in built in ranges Refrigerators – 2 Bdrms. 840 sq ft. Individua. Controlled Heating. Fully Carpeted. Airconditioned Garbage disposals. Competitive Rents – Discount for 1 year manager, 2436 Redbud Lane, Ph. VI 2-712-888
WANTED
Used cars—highest prices paid. Call VI 3-
9811. 601 Vermont.
American copper, silver and gold coins
metal tokens, campaign badges and in-
gregational coins. Many ordinary
coins. American Co Mart 1025 Marm
Hours 9:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.
4-25
MISCELLANEOUS
JAZZ CONCERT featuring CHARLES KYNARD plus 3. Sunday, April 21, 3 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Community Building. Advance tickets $1.00. At the door. $1.25. Tickets can be obtained at Kief's Record Shop and at the Green Gables.
Alterations: All types women's clothing.
Call VI 3-1348. 4-24
Party time — School house available for
parties, dances and meetings. Call VV:
4-24
74835
TYPING
Free Bumper Stickers: "Not Bombs but Brotherhood" or "Speak Up for Peace"
Write Jim Masters, 8401e Ky.—No obligation.
4-22
Good typist. Would like to do term papers, and theses. Mrs. Oxford. VI 2-0673.
Will care for children in my home. 2 years old and older. Convenient to KU.
Fenced in yard, references. Phone VI 3-
6763. 5-7
Kansan Advertisers
Will do neat and accurate typing in my home. Experienced in themes, theses, and term papers. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Adcock, VI 2-1785. tf
Patronize Your
"GOOD TYPING CREATES a favorable impression with instructors." For excellent typing of theses and term papers, call Miss Louise Pope. VI 3-1097. tf
Fast, accurate and work by experienced
tenist. References. Phone VI 3-6506. 'i
Secretary and English major will do
expert typing of papers, Mrs. Compton,
Mrs. Brown, and door door door.
1311 N.H. after 6 p.m. Particular attention
to problems of foreign students, tf
VI 3-4255
Efficient typist Would like typing in her home, letters. Call appointing at VI 36120.
Royal College Shop
Royal College Shop
See the Adler Sock ad in this paper. Then stop in and BUY yours today.
837 Mass.
Theses, term papers, reports, typed
auclickly and accurately. Experienced
typist; electric typewriter. Marian
Graham. 1619 Del. - VI 3-0483. tf
ADLER SOCKS
English major and former secretary will type themes and theses on electric type-writer. For neat and accurate work call Ms. Mislaid Jones. VI 3-5267. tf
Dissertations, theses, manuscripts and term papers typed on new electric type-scholars. Special keys. Experience in education and entices. Mrs Suzanne Gilbert. VI 2-1546, tf
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, reports, Electronic typewriter, Possible notebook, Electric typewriter. Mk. Eldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI S-8688. ttf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, and research service with an electric typewriter. Resumes: Carls-Mrs. Charles Patti, VI 3-8379.
MILIKENIKS SOS — always first quality typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines.
6 a.m. tape transcriptions. Office hours: 7 a.m. 12 p.m.-10211 Mass.
Phone VI 3-5920
in
experienced typist does term paperers,
appraisers or inspectors on electric typewriter. Special signs. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs. Clark at 200 Rhode Island Island, Phone IV 5-7485.
"Kick up your heels"
Prompt neat accurate work on wide carriage electric typewriter. Journalism-Business secretary experience. Charlotte Weber. VI 3-3495.
asks you to
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tf
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
accurate, neat work, reasonable rates.
Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff,
VI 2-1749.
Experienced typist. Contact Mrs. Hayes at VI 2-0057. 4-30
YELLOW CAB VI 3-6333
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Kick up your heels in the new Adler Shape-Up cotton sock. Nothing gets it down. The indomitable Shape-Up leg stays up and up and up in plain white, white with tennis stripes, or solid colors. No matter how much you whoop it up. In the air, her Shapette, 69¢, his Shape-Up, 85¢.
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Page 16
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 18, 1963
Lindley Telescopes Spy on Outer Space
TOM MILLER
SUN IN FOCUS—Maxwell Sandford, Kansas City, Mo., freshman, focuses onto paper the image of the sun as seen through the six-inch department of astronomy telescope located on the roof of Lindley Hall.
By Dolores Orman
Perched atop Lindley Hall are two dome-shaped buildings. The smaller one houses the astronomy department's eight foot long, six-inch diameter refracting telescope. The larger building houses the 12-foot long, 27-inch diameter telescope used for photographing objects in the sky such as stars.
It is the former, the telescope which is designed primarily for observation and not photographing, that has proved to be of special interest to the layman.
VARIOUS GROUPS occasionally visit the observation telescope. The most recent groups were two Brownie troops from Lawrence.
N. W. Storer, associate professor of astronomy, said more groups ask to be shown through the observatory than there is time to take them. He said another factor is that so many times the atmospheric conditions are not conducive to good observations.
The telescope has a magnification power of from 20 to 400 times. The very high power magnification is seldom used, Prof. Storer said.
"IN ORDER TO GET a good view you not only need a clear sky but a steady sky," Prof. Sterer explained. The frequent changes in temperature — such as the hot days to cool nights — often cause heat wave-like ripples to form in the atmosphere. The more magnification used the more magnified the ripples become," he said.
The best atmospheric conditions usually occur in October, Prof. Storer said. In spring, he said, one is uncertain of the clouds and in
Take a Vacation from WASH DAY DRUDGERY GRAVITT'S FAST LAUNDRY SERVICE
You save time and trouble at Gravitt's. Drop off your laundry and pick it up later—washed, fluff dried, and neatly folded.
913 N.H.
summer the temperature changes are too many.
VI 3-6844
"You use low magnification when you want the whole object in the field of view," he explained. "At a magnification of 50 one can see all of the moon. By increasing the magnification one can see only a part of it."
PROF. STORER also explained the things that appear blurred at low power also appear blurred at high power — magnification serving only to magnify the blur and not focus it.
When asked how far away the observation telescope could cover successfully, Prof. Storer answered "A star is simply a point of light anyhow, so it makes no difference how
MARY E. MAYER
far away it is, it will still appear as a point of light."
"SOME OF THE fainter stars seem brighter because they are closer, whereas the intrinsically brighter stars seem faint because they are so far away," he said.
The things Prof. Storer has observed include the moons around the planet Jupiter, the clouds of gases called nebula, and partial eclipses of the sun. Prof. Storer said observing the partial eclipses of the sun is more interesting when one has been able to calculate when the eclipse will occur beforehand.
What's better for wearing most places than a Madras suit? See our selection at $15.00.
SUZI RUNNELLS Gamma Phi Beta
The planets are only observable at certain periods of time, Prof. Storer explained. As an example Mars is best observable at intervals of 26 months, he said.
THE REASON the planets change their position from one season to the next is that they are traveling around the sun, Prof. Storer explained. He noted that Jupiter takes 12 years to go around the sun and its position as a result is constantly changing from one month to the other.
The 12-foot photographing telescope is used among other things, for taking photographs of the spectrum of the stars. These photographs (which appear as bands of rainbow colors), said Prof. Storer, enable the observer to determine the chemical makeup and the speed of the star.
COACH HOUSE
Cooked For Trees and Creation
THE TELESCOPE works just like
Fraternity Jewelry
Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals
Balfour
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER
a camera, said Prof. Storer, only the distance from the lens to the film is 12 feet instead of a few inches. The film is placed at the eyepiece end of the telescope.
He said the observation telescope is not often used to view the artificial satellites because they move too fast. Two of his students observed one of the fainter satellites a few days ago, he said. The satellite was within range of view for
only three seconds.
Some students may wonder if it is possible to observe other things besides celestial bodies, such as the occupants in buildings. From the roof of Lindley possibly yes, but not with the telescope.
Prof. Storer said the edge of the dome is too high to observe anything more than the top of the radio tower in the vicinity of 15th and Iowa Streets.
INTERESTED IN AN OVERSEAS CAREER?
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
"Mr. Berger Erickson, Executive Vice President will be on campus
Tuesday, April 23, 1963 from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m.
to discuss the training offered at A.I.F.T. (an Intensive nine months program of post graduate study) and the job opportunities open to graduates in the field of INTERNATIONAL TRADE and GOVERNMENT SERVICE
Interviews may be scheduled at the office of the DIRECTOR OF PLACEMENT
The American Institute For Foreign Trade Thunderbird Campus Phoenix, Arizona
YOU CAN TRUST YOUR CAR
TO THE MAN WHO WEARS THE STAR.
ART'S TEXACO
WASH
GREASE
- WHEEL ALIGNMENT
- TUNE UP
- STARTER WORK
- GENERATOR WORK
9th and MISSISSIPPI
VI 3-9897
Thresher Repair Termed 'Sloppy'
Friday, April 19, 1963
PORTSMOUTH, N.H.—(UPI)—Two crewmen who by chance missed the fatal dive of the nuclear submarine Thresher with 129 men aboard have testified that mechanical difficulties and "sloppy" work plagued the vessel during nine months of overhaul and tests.
In yesterday's testimony, Machinist's mate 2.C. Frank J. De Stefano, who was transferred from Thresher's crew the day before she left on her last cruise, said design changes may have hampered the crew's ability to respond with split-second precision to emergencies.
DE STEFANO was transferred from Thresher the day before the final cruise so he could be interviewed by Vice Adm. Hyman G. Rickover's staff for possible commissioning in September.
Navy vessels equipped with sensitive sonar devices crisscrossed the North Atlantic 220 miles east of Cape Cod in search of the hull of the missing craft.
He said some general work done at the Portsmouth Naval shipyard during a nine-month overhaul of Thresher was "very sloppy."
Flooding drills, held during a March 29 dockside "fast cruise" which simulated sea conditions, were not as successful as they should have been because the crew was not familiar with a design change in the position of the sub's sea valves, he said.
DE STEFANO'S testimony followed that of a veteran submarine officer who said the Thresher had experienced continuous trouble with the vital high pressure air system used in surfacing.
Lt. (J.G.) Raymond J. McCoole, also explained numerous other mechanical malfunctions aboard the submarine.
He was not aboard Thresher because he was granted a temporary leave when his wife had a minor home accident.
During the March 29 drill, De Stefano said, certain important check valves with tricky labeling were found to have been installed backwards. This defect was discovered by the sub's crew and later corrected, he said.
Weather
A fast-moving cold front that crossed Kansas yesterday left skies generally fair and temperatures cooler in Kansas today. But the front moved too swiftly to produce much in the way of beneficial rains.
Under fair skies today temperatures will reach the 60's in the northwest and into the 70's elsewhere. Lows tonight were predicted to range from 30-35 in the northwest to in the 40's in the southeast. Moderation was expected to be evident tomorrow.
DURING A simulated leak drill, De Stefano said the crewmen could not find the proper control valve in the maze of piping.
"They (the crew) weren't particularly happy with their performance because they found out they weren't as sharp as they were before they came to the shipyard," he said.
An American scholar whose fields of interest include the philosophy of science, the theory of relativity, and comparative philosophy of world cultures will present the next Humanities Series Lecture.
He said work done by specialists at the shipyard was done properly but that some work of a general nature was "very sloppy." He did not elaborate.
IN ANSWER TO CLOSE questioning by members of the inquiry board, both De Stefano and McCoole expressed confidence in the seaworthiness of Thresher when she left on the deep-water trials.
F. S. C. Northrop, Sterling Professor of Philosophy and Law at Vale University, will speak on "The Unique Character of the American Legal and Political System," at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Fraser Theater.
Yale Professor To Present 8th Humanities Talk
His book, "The Meeting of the East and West," has been reprinted ten times and translated into Japanese, German, and Spanish.
In 1849, Albert Einstein, commenting on an article by Northrop which outlined Einstein's own conception of science, said, "I see in this critique a masterpiece of unbiased thinking and concise discussion."
In 1953, the American Political Science Association gave him the Wendell Willkie Award for his book, "Taming of the Nation."
He has been visiting professor at the Universities of Iowa, Michigan, Virginia, Hawaii, Melbourne, and the National University of Mexico.
WHILE HE IS AT KU, Northrop will also speak to classes in political science, philosophy, and history, and lecture to several other groups.
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
Daily hansan
60th Year, No. 124
Minuteman Assured Of Communist Win
"They feel that they must do something if they are going to enjoy their freedom," De Pugh said.
By Terry Ostmever
He said the "Minutemen" know the Communists will take over, but they do not believe the American people will live under Communists without fighting for their freedom.
A takeover by Communists in the United States is already underway and most Americans are unaware of the fact, the national coordinator of the "Minutemen" said yesterday.
Robert Bolivar De Pugh, speaking to about 200 persons at the Minority Opinion Forum in the Kansas Union, said the Communist infiltration began in the U.S. decades ago; "already over 500,000 Communists have landed on our shores."
A. A. M. B. S.
DE PUGH SAID Communist propaganda in this country is everywhere — in the news media, the entertainment field, the churches, and the government.
"Our country is in very grave danger. I believe that very sincerely, and when I analyze my own thinking I still believe I am right," he said.
IN ANSWER TO a question. De Pugh said he does believe in the democratic system, but he does not believe the U.S. Government has done all it can about Communism.
HE SAID THE "Minutemen" have this needed patriotism. He described them as an organization of 100,000 ordinary men and women with one thing in common:
"Always before in the past some form of patriotism has come forth and expressed Americanism," he said. "Today I wonder where the patriots are. Surely they didn't all die on the beaches of Normandy or the straits of Corregidor."
"This is the point I want to emphasize. I might be right. If I am God help us."
De Pugh said college students should reserve judging him until they make certain he is wrong by learning "the facts."
THE BEST WAY to combat Communist infiltration, De Pugh said, is with patriotism.
De Fugh said many Americans spend too much time in the city, in the classrooms, or with other people and they lose track of things as they really are.
He said that during the formation of the "Minutemen" in 1960, he and
Robert Bolivar De Pugh
the other early members felt that political activity against Communist subversion would be largely futile and would not educate the American people to the threat.
When asked if he thought President Kennedy was a Communist, De Pugh said he didn't know about that, but he didn't think the President had "lived up to his promises."
DE PUGH EXPRESSSED more definite beliefs concerning some of President Kennedy's advisors, however, particularly Supreme Court Justice Arthur J. Goldberg and press secretary Pierre Salinger.
He said Goldberg has been connected with 11 Communist organizations and had organized or helped organize at least nine of them.
As for Salinger, De Pugh said the press secretary's mother, along with Harry Bridges, helped form what he said was a Communist youth organization in Northern California in 1938.
De Pugh said college students should reorganize their thinking in order to really know Communism. He said many think they know a lot about Communism, yet he believes very few really know enough.
HE SAID HE spent six and one half years in college and now after
many years "the fine edge of college idealism has worn against the grindstone of reality."
He said, however, he is still aware of the thinking of college students even though the bull sessions have changed somewhat.
De Pugh, who lives in Norborne, Mo., is the owner and operator of a pharmaceutical firm and biochemistry laboratory.
"I mention all this to show that I'm not as difficult in my thinking as many think I am," he said.
"IF YOU WANT to know about Communism, talk to those who have recently seen it in action — those who have lived under it," he said.
From letters he has received and people he has talked to, De Pugh said he has learned that Communism is a betrayal of the people by their own government.
He said most Americans do not realize the effects of Communist propaganda because they have no reliable source of information.
"TO RECOGNIZE this," he said, "you must know what the current Communist line is. Right now they want us to believe the difference between their system and our system is not worth fighting a war over."
De Pugh said the Communists are not the only subversive factions that could and are threatening the U.S.
He said a constitutional republic should insure a high degree of personal freedom, but some Americans have already lost their freedom afforded under the U.S. Constitution, such as the Negro and the American Indian.
"To me the enemy is anyone who would try to take away my personal freedom," he said.
ALL MANKIND must be saved from Communist infiltration, he said, but he added that it must begin in America first so an aggressive anti-Communist nation can be built up.
"We should exhaust every possible alternative before we resort to violence." De Pugh stated.
De Pugh denounced several organizations in the U.S. as being Communist controlled, such as the American Civil Liberties Union and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
1000 Top Athletes Expected at KU Relays
By Steve Clark
An abundant array of the nation's top collegiate track athletes will compete for honors today and tomorrow in the 39th running of the Kansas Relays.
The Relays officially began yesterday afternoon with the running of the 10,000 meter run. The marathon race which covers six and one-quarter miles and encompasses 25 laps of the track was won by the twice NCAA three mile champion Pat Clohessy, a former University of Houston star who is now competing for the Texas Olympic Club.
Over 1,000 athletes are expected to compete in the four divisions—high school, junior college, college and university—at Memorial Stadium. Today's action started at 9 a.m. with the decathlon 100-meter dash.
The meet will close with the running of the university mile relay at 4:50 p.m. tomorrow.
Clohessy had to overcome a strong bid by Emporia State's Ireland Sloan, who is the NAIA three mile champion. Sloan jumped to an early lead which he held until Clohessy passed him with one and one-half laps remaining. In an amazing display of endurance, Clohesy put forth a burst of speed and finished 100 yards ahead of Sloan, who was unchallenged for second place. KU student Bill Silverburg, former Warrensburg (Mo.) distance ace who competed unattached, finished third.
This year's Kansas Relays shows strong individual fields in the pole vault, high jump, javelin, shot put, 100-yard dash, and mile. The records for each of these events are in jeopardy along with the 440, mile and distance medley relays in the college division.
Clohessy's winning time of 31 minutes, 16.6 seconds fell short of the record of 30:46.5 set by Abilene Christian's Dennis Moore in the first running of the 10,000 meter event last year.
Last year's illustrious pole vault field which included John Uelkes, the first man to pole vault 16-feet, and Henry Wadsworth is overshadowed in comparison with this year's. Rice's Fred Hansen, who surprisingly defeated the pair by vaulting $15-6^{1/2}$ to set a new Relays record, returns to defend his crown. Hansen won the Texas Relays, held two
weeks ago, with a 16-1 vault, as he joined the still elite list of 12 men who have broken the 16-foot barrier.
Competing against Hansen, will be Texas Southern's Gerald Pratt, who soared 10- $ \frac{1} {4} $ to win the Tiger Relays and become another new member of the 16-foot club. An impressive field of six 15-foot vaulters will challenge the pair. They are: Hansen's teammate Warren Bratlof, who has reached 15- $ \frac{6} {4} $; Big Eight indoor champion Mickey Baller of Oklahoma State, who is just one-quarter inch behind; Colorado's Roger Olander, who has done 15- $ \frac{5} {4} $; Baller's teammate Preston Holsinger, 15- $ \frac{3} {4} $; KU's Floyd Manning, 15- $ \frac{1} {2} $; and Missouri's Bill Younger, 15-0.
The Relays oldest field event record, the high jump, is in equal jeopardy. The mark of 6-8 3-16 set by Texas Bobby Walters in 1949 has been bettered by four entrants during their careers.
They include Colorado sophomore Leander Durley, who set a new Big Eight indoor mark of 6-10 $ \frac{1}{4} $ last month: Wisconsin's Jim Holden, who won the Big Ten indoor 6-10; Grambling's Roosevelt Richards,
who has done 6-9; and the defending champion from Lincoln, Charles Williams, who has gone 6-9. Behind them are two who have jumped over 6-8 and three over 6-7.
Two former KU Olympians' records could fall too. Rice's javeline threater Ed Red has already bettered the 254-9 Relays record held by Bill Alley, and Texas A & M shotputter Danny Roberts is within five inches of Bill Neider's $9-7\frac{1}{8}$ record set in 1956. In winning the Southwestern Relays, Red threw $260-7\frac{1}{2}$ and Roberts won the Texas Relays with a $59-3\frac{1}{4}$ toss.
Phil Mulkey, a Birmingham, Ala., school teacher who has broken the decathlon record five times, will be trying for a sixth. Although he scored only 7,632 points, 152 behind his present record, at Nashville last month, he is expected to be pressured by his 1960 Olympic teammate Dave Edstrom, formerly of Oregon and now with the Air Force.
The 100-vard dash field features Omaha's Roger "Rocket" Savers, brother of KU football player Gale, and Nebraska's Ray Knaub. Both men have .694 clockings to their
credits. Sayers won at Texas, running :99.6 against a 10 m.p.h. wind. Also figured to push the top candidates is Purdue's Nate Adams, who is the Big Ten 100 and 220 yard dash champion.
Emporia State's John Camien, who defeated sub-four minute milers Dyrel Burleson, former Oregon ace, and Bill Dotson, former KU star, will lock horns with ex-UCLA ace Booby Seaman in the Glen Cunningham mile run. Camien ran 4:02.6 at Texas, the fastest time by a collegiate runner to date. Seaman ran 3:58.0 last summer and has a 4:07 to date. Also in the running are Kansas State's Pat McNeal, 4:05.3, Wichita's Cal Elmore, 4:07.5, and Missouri's Robin Lingle, 4:07.9.
Relays Section In Today's UDK
Today's Daily Kansan includes a special section on the 38th Annual Kansas Relays. It appears as the second section of this 32-page issue.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 19, 1963
Kansan Focus
Latin America-Our Troubled Neighbor Alliance For Progress Church Strength Declining Faces Big Problems
By Terry Murphy
The destructiveness of nuclear weapons rules out their use as a tool of foreign policy that aims at political domination. Even allowing for degrees of relative "winning", it is known that no country would serve its interests by swapping fiery destruction with another.
But this does not produce a stalemate. The battle to determine which ideology is not slowed by nuclear deterrence. The weapons left for use in the nuclear age are limited to guerrilla warfare or economic warfare.
The alliance has three major objectives:
THE POLITICAL temperament of the United States is not attuned to fighting long, drawn-out guerrilla war; such wars produce little progress and submarine the political stability required for democratic government.
The U.S. battle plan for economic warfare in Latin America is the Alliance for Progress. It was formed March 13, 1961, with 20 Latin American republics joining.
With these considerations in mind, the United States has, since World War II, spent billions in underdeveloped countries to establish economic security and corresponding political stability.
First, to aid Latin American nations in economic development; second, to encourage changes in Latin American economic and social institutions, and third, to move against all totalitarian regimes, whether left or right, and support establishment and consolidation of political democracies in the Western Hemisphere.
THE PROJECTED cost of the 10-year program is $100 billion. Despite cries of "giveaway," and uncertain hopes for success, responsible U.S. leaders consider $100 billion cheap enough to prevent another Soviet take-over, as in Cuba. Just as important, there is no other way to prevent revolution except through fulfilling the wants and needs of the potential Communists.
Since it is necessary to work with political leaders of institutions which have the discipline and force to assure the base-required degree of stability, the United States more often than not is forced to work through military leaders.
Generally, this is distasteful to U.S. citizens. Some argue that it
serves merely to perpetuate the abuses which the program hopes to change. But no alternative short of fomenting revolution to establish U.S. colonies is available.
THE RECENT guerrilla-band strikes by communists in Venezuela oil fields, and growing unrest in northeast Brazil, have alerted Latin American leaders to the dangers of not instituting the economic and social reforms which are the heart of the Alliance for Progress. U.S. leaders have made it clear; no reforms, no aid.
The problems are often emphasized (as they must be) at the expense of overlooking gains and potential. On the plus side, for the first time in history, a development plan backed with money is taking form in Latin America. When it is realized that anything added to zero is improvement, the efforts gain new perspective.
Recalcitrant politicians are not the only problem. Unlike Western Europe, where the Marshall Plan produced a meteorite economic redevelopment, Latin America does not have a population of highly literate, industrial people. The alliance must build from the ground up, and with this in mind, success in 10 years seems highly optimistic.
There can be little realistic hope that, in the foreseeable future, the standard of living in Latin America will approach that in the United States or Western Europe. But hopes for success need not rest on such high standards.
IT IS clear that a short-range aid program and emergency reforms will not do the job. To provide coordination and careful planning, governments seeking aid must submit reports to the Economic and Social Council of the Organization of American States (OAS).
The barriers to success are stark. Less than 50 per cent of the population is adequately housed; 90 million adults (total population 210 million) are illiterate and have no marketable skills, and 1.5 per cent of the population controls nearly 50 per cent of all land under cultivation.
REGARDLESS OF how faint it may be, a glimmer of hope to the peasants should add in geometric fashion to the long-range hope that decent living conditions will be the rule instead of the exception.
The Roman Catholic Church came to Latin America about four centuries ago with the Spanish explorers. The missionaries converted the natives to Catholicism and the area has remained basically Catholic to the present time.
But the people are in revolt against the church. The natives have become aware of the 20th century and the better life it offers them. But the threat is not only to the church, but to the Latin American governments and the United States.
THE PEOPLE rebel, not in the strict sense of the word, but in the spirit. They no longer look upon the church as a necessity for them. They realize that the church has not helped and possibly will not help attain this better life in this world. So they leave the church.
Although Latin America is considered to be Roman Catholic, it is Catholic in name only, not in fact. The open refusal to accept the church is of recent origin, but the air of indifference has existed for many years.
The Latin American Catholic does not know his religion. He is not acquainted with church doctrine. One diocese in Argentina has about 2,500,000 Catholics, but estimates say that only about 13 per cent are practicing Catholics.
IN PERU. contraceptives are sold openly in the streets. The people just do not realize that the use of these as a means of birth control is against church doctrine.
One Latin American proudly asserts that he is a "good, practicing Catholic." But he has four wives in four different cities. He does not know that it is against church law
The reasons for this revolt against the Church are manifold and it is hard to put a finger on one overriding reason for the sense of dissatisfaction that exists. The people want to better their life and do not believe that the church can do it.
THE REASON which probably has been around longer than any other is the attitude the church has taken toward the native. It has not concerned itself with the people's life in this world, but has concentrated on the salvation of souls. The church has not adopted a program of social responsibility. It has continued to let the people live in squalor.
One contributing cause for the lack of knowledge about their religion is the extreme shortage of priests in Latin America. Sources
estimate that there is one priest for every 450 American Catholics and only one priest for every 5,000 plus Latin American Catholics.
Also, the priests tend to be oriented toward the upper classes, mainly because most of the priests are from the upper class. They also favor the upper class for an intellectual reason. Whenever a priest wants conversation with an educated man, he goes to the hacienda, not to the hovel of the uneducated peasant.
THE THIRD reason for the church's close relations with the upper class is its dependency on the wealthy landowners for revenue.
The church in Latin America is not the wealthy institution that most people suppose it to be. The priests rely upon the wealthy Latinus for their living allowance, but the land owned by the church produces very little revenue which can be used to pay the costs of teaching the people. Most of the schools are oriented toward the upper class because of the necessity to charge tuition to keep the school going.
A priest who tried to organize the peasants to exert pressure on the landowners to increase wages and improve living conditions was forced to abandon his plans by the landowners. The priest depended upon the Sunday collection to buy his food, and the landowners contributed most of the money to the collection. They simply ceased to contribute on Sunday mornings.
THE BASIC nature of the Latin American makes reform difficult. They are overly generous when asked to donate money for a charitable purpose, but they cannot see a situation which should be changed. They have no sense of social responsibility.
One American tourist was taken to a hacienda by a Catholic priest. The priest showed him some neat white houses on a hillside, noting that they housed the horses while the shacks further up on the hill belonged to the peasants who worked the land.
The landowners fight reform whenever they get the chance. A bishop which spoke out in favor of labor unions was denounced as a "black Communist" by members of his own church. There has to be reform within as well as without the church to attain any good in Latin America.
THE LATIN also is politically unreliable. He looks for the man
who resembles a Messiah, because such a man promises him salvation from his harsh existence. He cares not whether the man is a competent administrator as long as he promises reform.
This is the aspect of the Latin American nature which is frightening. If the church refuses to reform and urge the governments into instituting reforms, the Latin American may adopt a new religion—reform-promising Communism.
The Roman Catholic Church is one of the best assets the West has in Latin America to counter the Communist threat. The church, through a program of self-reform and pressure on the governments could become a viable organization against communism.
THE POPULATION is basically illiterate and superstitious. The natives have believed in the church for four centuries and will believe again if the church will help the people move into the 20th century and the life it promises.
The church in some countries already is doing something along this line. In Brazil, Chile and Peru, elements of the Catholic hierarchy are openly pressing the Latin oligarchy to raise wages, partition lands and enact reforms.
The church has started getting rid of its land by distributing it to land reform agencies to distribute to the peasants. In Northeast Brazil, the church helped form rural syndicates to help peasants fight the landowners who have supported the church for centuries.
THERE HAS been discussion of church reform — substitution of vernacular for Latin in church services, elimination of the cassock for more modern dress (the cassock is not allowed in Mexico and Uruguay now), restructuring of church schools so they do not favor the wealthy, and the introduction of married clergy to overcome the severe shortage. Estimates are that 200,000 priests, five times more than the number now in Latin America, are needed.
The program of reform should spread throughout Latin America. The church is becoming conscious of the threat to itself and to all of Latin America. The problem facing the Latin Church was one of the main concerns of the Ecumenical Council in Rome last year.
If the reforms are carried out in Latin America and the people are assured of more than mere subsistence, another Cuba is not an inevitability.
U.S. Unpopular in Brazil
By Byron Klanner
Signs of growing friction between the United States and Brazil came to the surface a few weeks ago. Congressmen hurled charges of Communist infiltration in government, labor, and student groups. They called for a halt of American aid to the largest nation in Latin America. Come back after you have "cleaned house" of Red influence, Brazilian diplomats were told in Washington.
Although Brazilian officials expressed regret over this new attitude from Washington, they were unable to deny the accusations.
IS BRAZIL going the way of Castro's Cuba? The answer to this question could have serious implications throughout the free world. It is believed that if Brazil goes Communist, all of Latin America will follow. Unlike the tiny island 90 miles off Miami, a nation the size of Brazil could not be isolated by blockades or quarantines. With a base of operations in Brazil for Russia to spread communism in the Western hemisphere through infiltration, espirage, and psychological warfare, the United States would be unable to contain the Red threat short of war.
American-Brazilian tensions seem to have developed almost overnight. One would hardly have expected that difficulties were brewing between the two countries. Letters exchanged five months ago between President Kennedy and Brazil's President Goulart gave the appearance of solid friendship between the heads of state.
"The number of Communists in Brazil is small but their influence is much larger than those numbers would suggest. The principal field of infiltration and influence is in the labor unions.
SINCE THEN Congress has rejected a multi-billion dollar ad request by Francisco San Tigo Dantas, Brazilian finance minister.
A formal statement was issued about March 14 by a House Foreign Affairs subcommittee based on a report from Lincoln Gordon, U.S. ambassador to Brazil. The statement said:
"In the government itself there
has been infiltration. The student movement is another major area of penetration, with the National Student Union now being dominated by Communists."
IN HIS argument to reject aid to Brazil, U.S. Rep. William H. Harsba Jr., R-Ohio; said:
time when we are using (Continued on page 3)
"At a time when we are using
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U.S. Control of Canal Irks Proud Panama
The Panama Canal and the Republic of Panama were conceived at the same time.
By Rose Ellen Osborne
Each could say it owes its birth to the other. The United States encouraged Panamanians to revolt from Colombia and prevented Colombian troops from entering Panama so that the U.S. could lease the canal.
Raising the flag over the Panama Canal is not Panama's only goal. In June of 1962 Panama's President Roberto Chiari flew to Washington for talks with Kennedy. As a result of the talks the United States agreed to fly 6 to 12 flags-
THE DATE was 1903, and Panama welcomed the aid of her American amigos. Today the American amigo has become the Yankee gringo. In the Canal Zone, a five-mile strip which lies on each side of the canal, the American flag flies beside the Panamanian flag, a constant reminder of gringo presence in the land of the Latins.
the zone. Panamanian postage with Canal Zone cancellations was to be used in the zone. A withholding tax deducted from the wages of United States workers was to affect the take-home pay of all Panamanian and non-U.S. members.
THEN TENSION eased and Americans in the zone began to work among the people to regain U.S. popularity.
In 1962 Panama's Foreign Minister Galileo Solis told the United Nations General Assembly that the canal treaty was "humilitating, injurious, unjust and inequitable."
Panamanians want a voice in operation of the canal. They want the toll increased and they want a cut in the profits. Each ship now pays about $4,700 to go through the 51 mile-long isthmus.
The U.S. pays Panama a $1.9 million annuity for lease of the canal. Another $5 million is spent improving and repairing the canal.
on page 3)
Friday, April 19, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
U.S. Unpopular-
(Continued from page 2)
American tax dollars in the Alliance for Progress to try to strengthen Latin America against Communism. I think it would be an exercise in futility to turn over money to Brazil so it can promote trade with Russia."
MUCH OF the current trouble in Brazil dates to the regime of President Janio Quadros, who quit office last August after seven months in power. He complained the job was too much for him.
Before Quadros quit, he shifted his country away from the United States and toward closer relations with the Communist bloc. Last spring a Soviet trade fair opened in Rio de Janeiro. A Soviet ambassador moved in after a 14-year break in relations between Russia and Brazil.
Chinese Communists have no diplomatic relations with Brazil, but have set up a cultural exchange program. The Archbishop of Rio recently declared in a television appearance that the Sino-Brazil Society has become a base for Chinese Communist propaganda among Brazilian teachers, journalists and intellectuals.
BRAZIL MAINTAINS strong ties with Castro's Cuba. It was the Brazilian delegation to the meeting in Punta del Este, Uruguay, in January 1962, which led the opposition against a U.S. move to oust the Cuban regime from the Organization of American States.
To date the Brazilian government has taken no action on charges of the country's navy minister, who said that the Cuban ambassador travels from city to city in Brazil stirring up hatred of the United States, and supporting
Communist student and labor groups. Castro takes plane loads of Brazilians to Havana on expense-paid trips, and students are offered scholarships in Cuban universities provided they take guerilla warfare training.
The United States is under continued attack by Brazilian politicians. One of the most outspoken is Leonel Brizola, governor of the state of Rio Grande do Sul, southernmost of Brazil's 20 states. Brizola has seized American-owned utility companies for the state government, offering only token payment in return.
BRIZOLA WAS reported to have told a crowd of students that all of Brazil's problems can be traced to "the occupation of our nation by the United States." This occupation, he said, was economic. He lumps together American foreign investments, Alliance for Progress, and the Foods for Peace program as "instruments of American neocolonialism."
A poll taken by the Rio newspaper, Journal do Brazil, shows that of five prominent men suggested for the presidency, Gov. Brizola, with his anti-American line, heads the list in popularity.
SOME CHECKS exist which may eventually keep Brazil from going the way of Cuba, Observers agree that most of the educated Brazilians abhor communism and extremist violence.
Brazil, however, demands close watching. Demagogues and Communists continue to work together spreading anti-American slogans. Also, a large segment of Brazil's poorer population is hungry, ill-clothed, uneducated and sick. They are fed up with things as they are and desire a change.
U.S. Control of Panama Canal-
(Continued from page 2)
KENNEDY HAS TOLD Chiari that when the present canal reaches its capacity, the United States will build another one. This is expected to occur between 1980 and 2000.
If such a project were decided upon, the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission would use a series of nuclear blasts to dig the channel. They estimate that nuclear devices would save the government more than half of the $3 billion it cost to dig the Panama Canal.
Whether Panamanians feel resentment or gratitude for American presence in Panama, they have developed a dependence on the canal. The Panama Canal is the country's biggest business.
IT PROVIDES jobs for Panamanian laborers at twice the wages they are paid in other parts of Panama. Critics observe that these wages are lower than those paid Americans working in the zone and are therefore "discriminatory."
Presence of the canal in Panama attracted $58 million in U.S. grants to the Spanish-speaking nation between July 1935 and July 1962. Loans of nearly $39 million have been used for roads, housing, sewage, educational and medical facilities.
The 50,000 Yankees residing in the Canal Zone account for a large chunk of Panamanian economic stability. The Americans spend about 70 million American dollars annually. This is $10 million more than the entire budget of Panama.
PANAMA is run by a clique of about 40 families who own most of the land. Many have failed to develop their land. Some Americans feel that the Panama Canal and the United States make a convenient "whipping boy" for the
failures of this group of government officials.
They argue that the Panama Canal no longer is a necessity to United States military defense. It is now impossible for the United States to defend the canal against missiles.
The canal was acquired from a French company that had abandoned the project in 1887 because of bankruptcy and tropical diseases.
ARMY ENGINEERS began construction of the canal in 1907. Construction was hampered by frequent land slides and seizures of yellow fever.
Dr. William Gorgas, U.S. health official was brought in and given control of the health program in Panamanian cities. He was responsible for wiping out yellow fever in Panama. The canal was officially opened in 1920.
By 1932 the United States had surrendered its right to intervene in any Panamanian political activities which threatened the operation of the canal. It retained the power of absolute jurisdiction in the Canal Zone. The government of the Panama Canal operates under the alien law. The head of the government is president of the Panama Canal Company.
RESENTMENT IN Panama seems to stem from the people and their deep sense of independence. The U.S. has been generous with funds for development and pays a substantial amount of rent for use of the canal. But Panama is the landlord. The canal is on Panamanian property, yet Panama has no voice in its operation.
Several solutions have been suggested to appease the Panamanian irritation.
The canal could be nationalized
under Panama, Internationalized under a regional group such as the Organization of American States (OAS) or under the United Nations. The present U.S.-Panamanian "perpetual lease" agreement could be retained with several basic changes in the treaty.
If the canal were nationalized under Panama, special provisions would have to be made to insure free U.S. access to the canal. The United States probably would insist on good service at low cost and demand a voice in the operation of the canal. Panama might lose a large part of the 50,000 American consumers now working on the canal.
OPPONENTS OF those who favor internationalization of the canal under the OAS regard the group as an instrument of the U.S. State Department. They argue that others who depend on the canal for trade would be at a distinct disadvantage.
Many see internationalization under a special agency of the UN as the only fair answer. They say that in time of war a country would hesitate attacking a project protected by the United Nations.
A fourth alternative would mean extending the present policy for continued use of the canal by the United States.
THIS COULD MEAN a partnership giving both countries equal control. Panamanians would be trained for more of the skilled jobs now held by Americans. Workers would be paid equal wages whether their nationality be Latin or American.
Whatever the outcome a great deal will hinge on the question many Americans are asking themselves: What do Panamanians really want?
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University Daily Kansan Friday, April 19, 1963
WELCOME...
to the 1963 ENGINEERING EXPOSITION
OPENING CEREMONY
NASA OFFICIAL AND OTHER DIGNITARIES SAT. 9 A.M.
HELICE AENOIO
AWARDS BANQUET
CO-CHAIRMEN
BRUCE HALL
RON KEITH
PUBLICITY
KIRK BOND
FINANCIAL
DOUG WALCHER
NASA OFFICIAL Principal Speaker CHANCELLOR WESCOE Will Present Awards Sat. Evening
Friday. April 19, 1963 University Daily Kansar
Page 5
Phys. Ed. Corp. Boasts Large Asset
(Third article in a series.)
By Russ Corbitt
The most recent KU Financial Report lists the Physical Education Corporation's total assets at over one million dollars.
Broken down, they look like this: current assets, $364,947.25; investments, $99,192.65; and buildings and equipment (at cost). $624,556.75. This totals $1,088,696.65.
According to a recent article in Fortune magazine, only 30 to 40 of the approximately 200 schools playing "anything like marketable football" last year operated at a profit. The rest were losing money on their football programs.
KU IS ONE of the schools in the black. In fact, it is the football program which keeps the Athletic Dept, from operating at a loss.
THE ARTICLE in Fortune stated that despite the fact that Colorado won the Big Eight championship in 1961, about 6,600 of that University's enrollment of 12,000 were not interested enough in the team this year to pay six dollars for a season ticket.
The financial report makes it evident that the bulk of the department's income comes from activities, particularly ticket sales. The home team is obligated to give the visiting team one-half the receipts from ticket sales, but keeps all the receipts from concessions, programs, backrests, etc.
Last year, the total attendance at the five home football games was 177,406, a record. This is an average game attendance of over 35,000.
In fact, student pressure there forced the administration to separate the football ticket price from the incidental fees that all students pay at registration.
KU students, however, are not that apathetic when it comes to football. Nine thousand KU students,
students' wives and medical students purchased football season tickets last year. The total number of season tickets sold, including discount and complimentary tickets, was 13,780.
THE BASKETBALL team last year drew 1,400 season ticket purchasers, and a total attendance of 57,300 for the 11 home games.
The largest single expenditure of the Athletic Department is the financial assistance it extends to athletes. Robert Billings, director of the Aids and Awards office, said approximately $185,000 in complete and partial scholarships was awarded this year.
"This money comes from the Athletic Department's income," Billings said, "and none of our finances for general academic scholarships is used for this purpose."
He listed the number of scholarships given as: football, 98 full; basketball, 21 full; 1 partial; track, 16 full, 16 partial; tennis, 4 partial; baseball, 13 partial; swimming, 8 partial, and golf, 4 partial.
ATHLETIC DIRECTOR A. C.
(Dutch) Lonborg said approximately $156,000 was paid out in salaries last year to the 36 employees on the payroll.
The only state finances used in the program are those used to pay the athletic director, the trainer and the track coach. The track coach is paid by the state because he is also an assistant professor.
SHE'LL LOOK TWICE When her campus man Wears a TUX from SIR KNIGHT
TUXEDO
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VI 3-9594
International Festival Scheduled For Tomorrow in Hoch Auditorium
KU students and faculty members will have the opportunity to learn more about foreign cultures and customs at the 1963 International Festival Saturday.
Vinod Patel, Baroda, India, special student, said foreign students will depict various aspects of life by featuring exhibits and a program at the festival.
THE SHOW THIS Saturday "Happy Fella Around the World." will include exhibits from 5-7:45 p.m. and the evening program at 7:45. The program will last for about 90 minutes. The exhibits also will be open for one hour following the evening program.
Among the nations planning exhibits are Afghanistan, Africa, the Arab nations, Cambodia, Greece, India, Korea, Latin America, Denmark, Sweden, Finland, Norway,
Iceland, Pakistan, the Philippines, Switzerland and Turkey. The Peace Corps, People-to-People and Haskell Institute also plan an exhibit
Various articles including clothing, vessels, art and printing pieces, ornaments and jewelry will be displayed in the exhibits. There will be a person at each booth to provide information to the visitors.
Rab Malik of Pakistan and Omneya Souelm of Egypt, both graduate students, have been selected as the master and the mistress of the ceremonies.
CHANCELLOR WESCOE will deliver a welcome address at the evening program. The program will include: From the Old to the New Frontier, Africa; Arab lands—yesterday and today, the Arab countries; Fantasia Musical, Latin America; ChhayYam (The drum song), Cambodia; Manva Melo (Human gatherings for Mate Choice), India; Deutschland—Ae We See it, Germany; Carinosa (A lively
The average attendance in the past has been 1200 to 1400. Coan expects about 1000 people this year despite the various activities on the campus.
group), the Philippines, and Afghan Dance, Afghanistan.
CLARK COAN, foreign student adviser, said the number of exhibits exceeds past years.
The festival is sponsored by the foreign student adviser's office.
The festival is open free of cost.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 19, 1963
THE KANSAS STUDENT UNION WELCOMES YOU TO THE 38th ANNUAL KU RELAYS
11
UNION CAFETERIA
QUINCY
THE HAWK'S NEST
CINEMA TRADICIONAL DE MEXICO
KU
PRAIRIE ROOM HAWKLET THERE'S ALWAYS FINE SERVICE AT THE UNION
ICBM Scores Hit With Engineers
Page 2
The engine, the second stage of a Titan I intercontinental ballistic missile, was obtained as surplus by the Mechanics and Aerospace Engineering department.
A one-ton missile engine saved from the scrap heap and brought to KU probably never will be fired.
Since the engine had been fired, the government did not want to put it in an operational missile. The manufacturer, Martin-Marietta Corp. of Denver, was ready to sell it for scrap when members of the aerospace department heard about it.
The engine is in good enough condition to be fired, but probably will not be fired at KU because of the cost, said Ammon Andes, professor of aerospace engineering.
The cost of this and other equipment, worth $2 million, was only the transportation from the surplus debits.
He estimated it would cost $100,000 to build the block house
GEM III Machine Goes to Engineers
A machine that travels over land and water on a cushion of air will be delivered to the Mechanics and Aerospace Engineering department in July.
The machine, donated by the office of Naval Research in Washington, D.C., for research performance, stability and control and vibrations tests.
Called the GEM III, or ground effect machine, the machine floats about a foot off the ground on a cushion of air produced by a turbine blower system.
The GEM III is steered and propelled by jets of air.
Ground effect machines, similar to the GEM III, when control and stability problems are solved, will be useful in crossing rough terrain and swampy areas, according to Ammon Andes, professor of aerospace engineering.
and protective embankments and set up the control panels.
In addition, the engine would cost $3,000 to $5,000 a minute to operate, Prof. Andes said.
Prof. Andes plans to use the engine as a teaching aid in a course on aerospace instrumentation.
He called the engine "an excellent piece of hardware to teach different rocket systems."
University Daily Kansan
The engine develops 60,000 pounds
Students Attend NACURH Meet
Four delegates from KU will attend the annual conference of the National Association of College and University Residence Halls (NACURH) April 25-27 at the University of Arizona, Tucson.
Those attending will be Jim Tschechtelin, Shawnee mission sophomore; Pat Service, Kansas City junior; Virginia Schwanke, Overbrook junior, and Miss Caryl Kelley, resident director of Lewis and Hashinger Halls.
Twenty-four schools have been invited to attend. Research topics on common residence hall problems and activities have been prepared and will be presented by each school. KU's topic is "Greater Identification of NACURH with Your Campus."
A similar conference for the Midwestern region will be held at KU August 25-28. Tschechtelin, who is vice-president of the Midwest Association of College and University Residence Halls, is in charge of conference arrangements.
KU Golf Team Hosts Quadrangular Today
The Jayhawker golf team plays host to Kansas State, Nebraska and Oklahoma today in a quadrangular meet at the Lawrence Country Club.
of thrust at sea level, about $1 \frac{1}{2}$ times the combined power output of the four J-79 jet engines on the B-58 Hustler, the first bomber that flies more than 1,200 miles an hour.
Two sets of Titan launch simulators also recently acquired will be used to teach control, guidance, telemetry and navigation and can be used for research.
The Jayhawkers will welcome back the services of their number one man John Hanna, who was unable to compete in the team's victory over Wichita University Monday.
One set will be kept in the department and the other will go to the electrical engineering department.
Also obtained by the department are two small jet trainer engines. One will be set up in the test cell block at the Lawrence airport and the second will be used for spare parts.
Official Bulletin
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
A.U.R.H. weekly open house and muler,
gap p.m. Lewis 'The Whatehana-
mpa'
TODAY
TOMOBROW
Catholic Masses, 7:00 a.m., 11:40 a.m.
Lawrence, Catholic Chapel, 1916
St. John's Episcopal Church, 228-235
International Festival: Hoch Auditorium-
International Festival: 45 p.m. and 9:45 to
10:15 Program: 7 p.m.
Catholic Masses, 8:00 a.m., in St. Law-
Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford
Road. 9:30 and 11:00 a.m., Fraser
Auditorium.
SUNDAY
Sunday Morning Worship, 10:45 a.m.
Westminster Center, 1204 Oread. Worship
to be led by the Rev. Maynard Strothman. Ph D.
Sunday Evening Fellowship, 5:15 p.m.
Westminster Center, 1204 Dorel
Bullill, PhD of the Wesley Foundation will speak on the New Delhi Conference.
MONDAY
Special Lecture, 3:30 p.m. 103 Strong Hall. "Malfunctions, Blunders, and Errors in Digital Computation" by Professor Wallace Givens.
April 19-117 Bailey-Parkville, Missouri Public Schools.
WILLIAM OVERN
SCHEDULED INTERVIEWS
April 19-117 Bailey - Antelope Valley High School, Lancaster, California
Friday, April 19, 1963
KU Faces Important Baseball Series Against Kansas State
KU's pitching trio of Carl Nelson, Jerry Waldschmidt and Roger Brock are assigned the task of sweeping a three game series with Kansas State at Manhattan today and to-morrow.
The games are "musts" for the Jayhawkers' baseball hopes as KU's record now stands 2-4 in league competition. The Jayhawkers are not out of the title picture yet as last year's champion Missouri lost six games.
The Jayhawkers will return the services of their leading hitter, centerfielder Steve McGreevy, who missed the Washburn game due to a pulled muscle in Saturday's Nebraska encounter.
McGreevy is presently hitting .348. eight percentage points ahead of first baseman Dick Fanning.
Also returning to boost the Jayhawkers' personnel is last year's regular third baseman Dick Radar, who quit the squad before the first game. Coach Floyd Temple may use the Wichita senior in the outfield against the Wildcats as third base is being held down by Keith Kimerer.
The Wildcats are tied for sixth place in the Big Eight with Oklahoma State. Their record is 1-5.
D&G
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VI 2-0753
½ blk. E. 12th & Haskell
Town & Country Shoes
Town & Country Shoes
Tabby
$12.95
White Kid
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FOR YOUNG WOMEN WHO JUST LOVE SHOES
Brilliant White Patent Leather!
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VI 3-4255
Friday, April 19, 1963 University Daily Kansan Page $
---
PRIVATE SUPPORT IN PURF
A. B. P. R.
The quality of its faculty determines a university's excellence in academic leadership. Private funds help K.U. retain a scholarly, creative faculty. Gifts provide opportunities to honor professors with distinguished careers, and to encourage younger teachers. Shown here is Dr. Raymond C. Moore, first Summerfield Distinguished Professor.
GIFTS FOR
- Aid needy and worthy students
- Encourage faculty improvement
- Enric
- Impr
- Support search for new knowledge
- Provi
Assembled here with Chancellor and Mrs. W. Clarke Wescoe are some of the winners of 1962-63 scholarships made possible by gifts from alumni and friends. Although more than 1,000 scholarships and 3,000 loans are now provided by private funds, a program of excellence would help all worthy students in need. The University's need for additional scholarships and student loan funds continues to grow each year.
SICILIUM UNIVERSITATIS KANSENSIS
UNIVERSITAT LAKE SICHIA DIVAR NOE CHRISTIANUS
INDUSTRIA
ESTABLISHED 1865
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
THIS ADVERTISEMENT SPONSORED BY DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK FIRST NATIONAL BANK LAWRENCE NATIONAL BANK
age University Daily Kansan Friday, April 19, 1963
PURSUIT OF EXCELLENCE
FOR KU
- Enrich libraries and museums
- Improve international understanding
- Provide adequate student housing
UNIVERSITATIS KANSENSIUS
PROGRAM POUR LA CONSEIL
ORDINAL NATIONALE
ESTABLISHED 1845
STORIES OF
RED HANRAHAN
AND
THE SECRET ROSE
BY W.R.YEATS
ILLUSTRATED & DECORATED
BY NORAH MCGUINNESS
POEMS BY W.R.YEATS
The heart of a university is its library, which supports classroom study and stimulates research. Private funds make possible the special collections that are the raw materials of excellence. These books from K.U.'s collection of Irish literature indicate the possibilities available for the humanist and the social scientist.
MEDICAL INTERVENTION
RESTORATION CENTER
Meeting the challenge of the nuclear age, gifts for the University helped build this Nuclear Reactor Center for teaching and research. Here are centered studies in nuclear engineering, radiation lifphysics, and environmental health. Private funds continue to support this work aimed at excellence in modern science.
On Behalf of
K. U. ALUMNI ASSOCIATION K. U. ENDOWMENT ASSOCIATION and GREATER UNIVERSITY FUND
Page 10
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 19, 1963
GO
Let's Go Kansas!
GO
GO
Welcome
Alumni & Visitors
to the 1963 RELAYS
We hope you enjoy your stay here at the University
KU KU's
Frosh Hawks
Jay Janes
LET'S GO KANSAS!
We're Behind You
All the Way
GO
GO
Around Campus Art Festival Plans Made
KU students and Lawrence area residents who have created works of art will soon have the opportunity to display and sell their creations.
The opportunity will be the second annual Art Festival sponsored by the Lawrence Art Guild and the Lawrence Recreation Commission.
The Art Festival which will be held May 10-12 in the Community Building. 115 W. 11th St., is open to any person who wishes to display his work.
Each person will be limited to two entries, for which there will be an entry fee of $2. Entry blanks may be obtained at the Recreation Commission office, Carter's Stationary, or Keeler's Bookstore. The deadline for entries is May 1 with the objects due from 9 to 5 p.m. May 9 at the Community Building. All entries will be insured.
Division entries of the festival include textiles, silversmith, prints, drawings, water colors, jewelry, sculpture, silk screen, weaving, ceramics and oils.
As one of its first projects last year, the Lawrence Art Guild organized the Art Festival. Some 240 entries were registered with about 1800 visitors attending the show.
The festival will run from noon-7 p.m. Friday, May 10; from 10 am.-9 p.m. Saturday, May 11, and noon-7 p.m. on Sunday, May 12. It will be open to the public without charge.
It will be open to the public without charge.
Students to Attend Festival
Students from over 100 Kansas high schools will participate in the State Speech and Drama Festival to be held here Friday and Saturday.
All activities of the festival will be held in Murphy Hall.
Ratings are given on a four point scale, with First Division ratings going to the best performances. There is no limit to the number of First Division ratings that may be given.
Students participating are those who received First Division ratings in the district festivals that took place over the state last month.
Entries fall into seven categories: extemporaneous speaking, informative speeches, one-act plays, duet acting, orations, readings and oral interpretation. Oral interpretation is divided into poetry and prose interpretation.
Medals and certificates of merit will be awarded.
The general subject for the extemporaneous speeches will be foreign affairs. Within this category there are 25 subtopics selected from the Dec.1,1962 to March 1,1963 issues of Time, Newsweek, U.S.News and World Report, and The American Observer.
The entries will have a choice of one of three topics that they draw. After the choice they will have 20 minutes to prepare a five to seven minute speech.
Judges for the festival will include speech and drama instructors from KU and other Kansas universities as well as other people active in the field.
Safety Lessons Start Monday
A Red Cross water safety instructors course, open to anyone with a current senior life saving card, will begin Monday in Robinson Gymnasium.
University Daily Kansan Page 11
The course will be divided into two phases of five lessons each. The first phase will be from 6-8 p.m. April 22-30. The second phase will be from 7-10 p.m. May 13-17.
University students will be given first enrollment preference, and if there is any room left in the classes, others will be accepted.
Interested students can register with Mary J. Mulvaney, room 106. Robinson Gymnasium.
Anyone who finds it impossible to take the course at the time it is offered here may call the Red Cross Community Building, VI 3-3550, and find out when other Red Cross Water Safety Instructor courses are scheduled throughout the state.
Those taking the course here must furnish their own suits, and girls must bring their own caps and wear them.
Art Exhibit to Open April 30
An exhibition of the works of Albert Bloch, former KU professor, will be presented April 30 at the KU Museum of Art.
The 92-piece showing will be introduced by Ernst Scheyer, Wayne State University professor, who will speak on "Albert Bloch, An American Blaue Reiter."
THE RECEPTION will mark the opening of the exhibition of Bloch's drawings, watercolors and prints.
The lecture will be given at 8 p.m. April 30 in Fraser Theater. A reception at the Museum of Art will follow.
Corps Placement Test Set
Bloch who taught at KU from 1923 until his retirement in 1955 was head of the Department of Painting and Drawing. He died in December of 1961.
A placement test for KU students interested in the Peace Corps' summer training programs will be given at 8:30 a.m., Saturday, April 27, at the Lawrence Post Office.
A new test consisting of half-hour sections on general aptitude and on modern language aptitude will be given for the first time. Candidates who have any background in French or Spanish must take an additional one-hour proficiency test.
Applicants who have not submitted a questionnaire to the Peace Corps must bring a completed one with them to the test. Questionnaires are available at the campus Peace Corps office in the Kansas Union.
The 43rd annual Engineering Exposition being held in Allen Field House will be open until 9 p.m. today.
Engineering Exhibits End at 12 Tomorrow
Expected to participate in ribbon-cutting ceremony at the Exposition at 9 a.m. tomorrow are Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, Sen. Frank Carlson, Rep. William Avery, Dr. Joseph Shea, a NASA official and Capt. Joe Engle, an astronaut-in-training who is a 1956 KU graduate.
Friday, April 19, 196:
A 2,000-pound mockup of the Mercury spacecraft will be on display at the Exposition. A glass window in the capsule will allow persons to see a dummy of an astronaut and his controls.
The exposition ends at noon tomorrow.
Chancellor To Speak On Accountant's Day
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will speak at the buffet dinner concluding Accountant's Day activities which will be held by the KU Accounting Society Monday, April 22.
Accountant's Day is an annual function of the Accounting Society carried out in cooperation with the Kansas City Chapter of the National Association of Accountants.
The day's program will begin with a special regional symposium where several technical aspects of the accounting field will be discussed. Dr. Sherwood Newton, associate professor of business administration, will moderate.
speaker will be Harry Stover, a past advisor of the Kansas City, Mo., Junior Achievement program and a certified public accountant for the Arthur Anderson Co.
The symposium will be followed by a luncheon at 12:15 p.m. The
A panel discussion at 2:45 p.m. will conclude discussion of the topics begun at the morning symposium.
"The NEW LOOK in Internal Auditing" will be the topic of the National Association of Accountants panel discussion at 4 p.m. Dr. Howard F. Stetler, professor of business administration, will moderate.
Alvin K. Heyle, president of the Kansas City chapter of the National Association of Accountants will preside at the buffet dinner at 6:30 p.m.
ROSE MARIE REID
RMR juniors
Set your fashion sights on "Sail Away"—a two-piece maillot that brings the sailors out to see! Its scooped neckline leaves more of you for tan. Self-belt and bra top are trimmed in white. A spanky swimshape in soft Helanca® nylon knit, 7-13, $19.95.
CAMPUS 12th & Oread
Jay
SHOPPE
DOWNTOWN 835 Mass.
Sunglow" classic knit sheath dares to be very bare in back—scoops low in front for even more sunning space! Shaped in curve-clinging Helanca® nylon knit, 8-18, $19.95.
rose marie reid
BUTTON
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 19, 1963
38th relays ...best yet
...best cleaning in Lawrence
Acme
1-HOUR PERSONALIZED JET LIGHTNING SERVICE
N.S.
LAKES
2
---
Friday, April 19, 1963
University Daily Kansan
Page 13
WELCOME
to the 38th annual Kansas Relays. We represent one of the many "plus" services offered to students, faculty, alumni and guests of the University of Kansas. Please feel free to browse through our store in the Kansas Union Building.
RELAYS SPECIALS
K. U. SWEATSHIRTS black with 3 color Jayhawk-$3.50
SHORT SLEEVE SWEATSHIRTS navy blue-$2.75
MANY OTHER STYLES AND COLORS (with Kansas in white)
STUFFED JAYHAWKS $2.25 $3.95
MUGS
$2.25 to $12.50
PENNANTS
$.25 to $2.75
KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORE
Page 14
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 19, 196'
Student Anxious To Aid Venezuela
By Russ Corbitt
A KU sophomore from England may spend this summer helping Venezuelans conquer slum problems.
Harlan Frymire, New Malden Survey, England, has volunteered his services to an American-Venezuelan project founded to help the slum dwellers of Venezuela solve their problems of crowded conditions, unemployment, and almost total lack of water, electricity, education and recreation.
"I haven't been accepted yet," Frymeir said, "but I will probably go with the group in June if my application is accepted."
FRYMIRE BECAME interested in the program while investigating the possibilities of joining President Kennedy's Peace Corps.
"I felt this project offered a better program for what I wanted." Frymire said. "It offers an opportunity for more individual initiative."
Frymire has been asked by the officials of the program to be the campus representative at KU, and to help introduce the program to other students who might be interested.
THE PROJECT IS called Americans for Community Co-operation in Other Nations. This is abbreviated to ACCION, the Spanish word for action.
ACCION is a private, non-profit organization affiliated with the Institute of International Education, the major student exchange agency in North America.
It is not affiliated with the United States government as is the regular Peace Corps, and is in no way connected with the Peace Corps.
ACCION RECEIVES its financial support from private individuals, and foundations and businesses in the United States, Canada, and Venezuela.
The organization was founded in 1961 by Joseph H. Blatchford, a political science and law graduate of the University of California at Los Angeles.
ACCION volunteers now operate 22 projects in 14 parts of Venezuela. Twelve community centers, two schools, and four water systems have been built under their direction. Three small industries have been successfully organized, and adult education classes for more than 2,000 have been initiated.
BE ON TIME to the KANSAS RELAYS
To make sure you have the correct time, stop by DANIEL'S today. DANIEL'S specializes in quality and precision watch repair work.
GOLD-RHODIUM
PLATING
EXPERT WATCH REPAIR
JEWELRY REPAIR
ENGRAVING
You will appreciate the reasonable prices and prompt service at
DANIEL'S JEWELRY 914 Mass.
VOLUNTEERS ARE chosen on the basis of initiative, ability to solve practical problems, and capacity to lead and enjoy people, according to Blatchford.
Technical skills are helpful, but not required. Fluency in Spanish is an important but not determinate factor in selection.
All expenses are paid by ACCION. Volunteers usually serve for 18 months, although students who wish to return to school in September 1964 may serve a shorter term.
A two-week orientation course, previously held at Stanford University, University of California at Berkeley, and Harvard University, will begin in late June. It will be followed by a two and one-half month course in Caracas and Valencia which includes intensive language study.
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
Applicants or individuals desiring additional information on the project may write to ACCION, P.O. Box 3005, New York 17, N.Y., or contact Frymire at 945 Emery Road, V13-7922.
Law School Test Planned for Tomorrow
The Law School admissions test will be given Saturday in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
The test is also required of propective students of the KU school
Students of the KU school. Applications for Saturday's test were to be obtained by April 6. The next test will be given Aug. 3 in Topeka. Applications for the August examination must be submitted by July 20.
A high-ranking official of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration will speak at the Engineering Exposition Awards dinner Saturday.
Shea to Address Awards Dinner
The principal speaker at the dinner will be Joseph Shea, deputy director for systems of NASA's Office of Manned Space Flight.
The dinner will be held at 7 p.m. in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union.
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will make the presentation of awards. Several United States and Kansas senators and other state and national legislators are expected to attend the dinner.
Capt. Joe H. Engle, a KU graduate, who is training for a future role in manned space flight, will also speak at the dinner.
Shea, who assumed his present position Jan. 8,1962, is in charge of the entire systems engineering effort for the manned space flight program.
He was space program director at the Space Technology Laboratories in Los Angeles before going to NASA. He earned his B.S., M.A., and Ph.D. degrees from the University of Michigan.
Capt. Engle, who graduated in 1956 in aerospace engineering, is one of 10 students now attending the Aerospace Research Pilot's School at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif.
Capt. Engle, who also is a graduate of the Air Force experimental test pilot course, will graduate in May.
Although not given any specific assignment thus far, the KU graduate will become part of a pool of astronauts available for a variety of assignments.
Tickets for the dinner may be obtained at the Tau Beta Pi, professional engineering fraternity, booth at the Engineering Exposition in Allen Field House.
ENDS TONITE
"MIRACLE OF THE WHITE STALLIONS"
GRANADA
THEATRE ... Telephone VKKMS 3-5783
STARTS TOMORROW MAT. 2 p.m.
EVE. 7 & 9
Everybody's 'choice' for a great big wonderful time!
M
Everybody's choice for a great big wonderful time!
He could never stop being a critic... even on his wedding night!
BOB HOPE
LUCILLE BALL
CRITIC'S CHOICE
BOB HOPE LUCIFIE BALL CRITIC'S CHOICE
WBJ
---
Conducting MARION
MAXWELL • TORN • LANDIS • BACKUS
Directed by DON WEIIS
Produced by FRANK P. ROSENBERG
Directed by JACK SIER • From the ideas started by MA LEVIN • PANAVISION • TECHNICOLOR
SOON
Gregory Peck "To Kill a Mocking Bird"
Spring Sing Provides Potpourri of Harmony
All kinds of music, ranging from "Old Tom Wilson" and "Fraulein Bo-Peepen" to "Music When Soft Voices" will be presented Sunday at the annual Inter-Residence Council Spring Sing.
It will be held at 3 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Templin Hall, with "Old Tom Wilson," a Kentucky mountain ballad, and "Lowlands," a sea chanty, will attempt to win the large men's ensemble trophy for the third consecutive year. Templin would then retain possession of the traveling trophy.
JOSEPH R. PEARSON Hall will compete for the same trophy. Its songs are "Die Lorelei" and "Ring de Banio."
JRP's small ensemble will sing a medley of nursery rhymes, "Songs Mein Grossmama Sang," including "Fraulein Bo-Peepen," "Jack der Spratt," "Jack und Jill," and "Johann Horner."
Tonight & Saturday
Adults 85c Kiddies Free
SUNSET
DRIVE IN THEATRE ... West on Highway 40
"Jack the Giant Killer" and "Zotz Plus two Bonus Hits Saturday!
A
STARTS SUNDAY!
GIANT OSCAR WINNING PROGRAM!
Best Actress
Best Supporting Actress PATTY DUKE
ANNE BANCROFT
Ceruleus
the Miracle worker starring ANNE BANCROFT introducing PATTY DUKE
ALSO ___
x
NOMINATED FOR BEST ACTOR. . . .
NOMINATED FOR BEST ACTOR...
HAROLD HECHT PRESENTS BURT LANCASTER
BIRD MAN OF ALCATRAZ
RELEASED THRU UNITED ARTISTS
I
4.4
Tonite and Saturday Elvis Presley "It Happened at The World's Fair"
VARSITY
THEATRE ... Telephone VIKJ6G 3-1065
STARTS SUNDAY
WILLIAM TREVOR
HOLDEN HOWARD CAPUCINE
a Samuel G. Engel production
THE LION
TWO MEN
OBSESSED
BY A WOMAN
WHO DESIRED
THEM BOTH.
EACH TRYING
TO CLAIM
HER CHILD —
WHO CALLED
THEM BOTH
FATHER!
co-starring DAMELA FRANKLIN
Directed by HONORE DERRIE
Scenography by
A. J. B. M.
BROOKLYN PRESS
TRENDING
I
SAMMY
Directed by
SERCETARY BY
PAMELA FRANKLIN • JACK CARDIFF • IRENE KAMP & LOUIS KAMP
Based on the novel by
JUSTICE NESSEL
CINEMASCOPE COLOR BY DE LUXE
PLUS
"The Adventures of a Roadrunner" 30 Minutes of Roadrunner Fun!
re- ling
will Its King
g aongslingderJo-
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 re-
TYPING
Experienced typist. Fast accurate service on term papers, theses, etc., reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Floyd. VI 2-1582. 4-25
Good typist. Would like to do term papers, and theses. Mrs. Oxford. VI 2-0673. tt
Will do neat and accurate typing in my home. Experienced in themes, theses, and term papers. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Adcock. VI 2-1795. tt
"GOOD TYPING CREATES a favorable impression with instructors." For excellent typing of theses and term papers, call Miss Louise Pope, VI 3-1097. tt
Fast, accurate and work by experienced typist. References. VI 3-6506. tt
Secretary and English major will do expert typing of papers. Mrs. Compton, upstairs apartment, door on north side - NW. After 6 p.m. Particular attention to problems of foreign students. tt
Efficient typist. Would like typing in her home. Special attention to term reports, theses, letters. Call anytime at VI 3-2651.
Theses, term papers, reports, typed quickly and accurately. Experienced typist; electric typewriter. Marian Graham. 1619 Del. - IV 3-0483. tt
Discertations, theses, manuscripts and term papers typed on new electric typewriter with carbon ribbon — 35 special keys. Experience in education and sciences. Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. VI 2-1546. tt
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, and accurate work with an electric typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Pattil. VI 3-8379. tt
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, etc. Accurate work. Reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Mrs. McEdowney. 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568. tt
English major and former secretary will type themes and themes on electric typewriter. For neat and accurate work call Mrs. Melisand Jones. VI 3-8267. tt
Experienced typist. Contact Mrs. Hayes
at VI 2-0057.
4-30
MILLIKENS SOS — always first quality training on LB.M. Carbon ribbon machines. We also do tape transcriptions. Office hours—7 a.m. to 12 p.m.—1021½ Mass. Phone VI 5-5820.
Experienced typist does term papers,heses, manuscripts and dissertations on electric typewriter. Special symbols and signs. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs. Pimple Cook at 2000 Rhode Island Phone VI 5-3495.
Prompt neat accurate work on wide carriage electric typewriter. Journalism-Business secretary experience. Charlotte Weber VI 3-3495.
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast, accurate neat work, reasonable rates. Applicant with legal terms. Marsha Goff VI 2-1749.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type thes., term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Ms. Fulcher. VI 3-6558, 1031 Miss.
FOR RENT
Attractive 3 room furnished second floor apartment with private bath. Spacious decorated rooms. Fully furnished and clean. Walking distance to KU. $75.00, all utilities paid except electricity. Call VI 2-2593.
Crescent Heights Apartments, 25th & Redburn: Back entrances — Large utility room – Balconies — Sun decks — Concrete off street parking — Built in ranges. Retirement shelter — Bathroom, $400 ft. living area — Individualized Heating — Fully Carpeted and Draped Garbage disposals — Air-conditioned Showers — Competitive Rents — Discount for 1 year's Lease Manager, 2436 Redbud Lane, Ph. VI 2-3711.
WANTED
Western Civilization notes wanted. Will pay $2.00 per copy for this year's notes. Mail for I 2-1901 to have the notes picked up.
Used cars—highest prices paid. Call VI 3-9811, 601 Vermont.
American copper, silver and gold coins metal tokens, campaign badges and insignias. Also wanted — many foreign coins. American Coin Mart. 1025 Mass. Phone VI 3-5820.
FOR SALE
University Daily Kansan Page 13
FOR SALE
MOBILE HOME FOR SALE — 45'x8" 1961 Volkswagen, excellent condition. Would consider trade. See at 1244 La.
1954 Great Lakes Model — Two bedroom, in front of Skyline Trailer Court, 631 East 23rd.
1953 Ford Custom V-8 radio, heater, overdrive, 7 tires, new interior, recently painted, new engine, 20 miles per gallon. Excellent condition. $530.00. Call after 6 p. MI 3-1772 and ask for Carlos or Julio.
4-30
1961 Volkswagen, excellent condition. Would consider trade. See at 1244 La.
4-23
White. 1957 Ford Falcone convertible. V-8, new snow tires, radio and heater, Automatic transmission. Student must sacrifice. Call VI 2-3282.
4-25
1958 Chevy convertible, white, red interior, good top, radio-heater, power brakes, power steering and new tires $1,000 or other arrangements. Call VI 3-1772 for TeX, between 5-7 p.m.
4-22
1958 Karmen Ghia convertible, excellent condition. Call VI 3-2839.
4-24
1955 Ford — original owner — 2 door, radio and heater, 6 cylinder. 19 miles to the gallon. Well running car. Good price. Call VI 2-0180.
4-23
1961 Volkswagen, excellent condition. Would consider trade. See at 1244 La.
4-19
Navy Transmitter GP-7 by Westinghouse. Brand new, never used, many models. Bring $45.00 and someone help you carry it out of Stouffer Bidg. 6. Apt. 8.
4-23
1960 G.S. Vespa motor scooter. Good condition, new paint. Low mileage. See at 1094L 9th Ward.
4-23
1929 Ford model "A" in good condition Has fair seat covers, good tires and good brakes. Call VI 2-0446.
4-22
Microscope, German made, monocular, used 2 years, 4 objectives, accompanying lamp. $175.00. Fredd Faas, 5942 El Monte, Mission, Kansas.
4-22
Almost new men's black Dacron blend suit. Size 39 long. $25.00. Call VI 3-4085.
4-22
Friday, April 19, 1963
THIS is the starting gun
That starts many
A fine runner!
PARSONS
JEWELRY
725
MASS.
Is the starting
Gun for many fine
Watches . . . and a
Good coach that
KEEPS them running!
"Official Santa Fe Time Inspector"
starting gun
That starts many
A fine runner!
Student Specials—1953 Nash Ambassado,
A-1 mechanically, $150.00; 150.00 Plymouth,
clean, rebuilt motor, $100.00; 1952
mechanical condition, $40.00; 1950-
3 $40.ton Chevy metro, good mech-
neural condition, $150.00. Call VI 3-
1626 or see at 1902 Harper. 4-22
PARSONS JEWELRY 725 MAS
S&W.38 special, Walther P-28, Collectors German Luger, 32 H&R revolver, 22 Ruger automatic, 22 Remington auto-
carbine, 30 carbine, 9mm, 30-06-6 round. Also has gun case, 30-06 tracer. See at Stouffer 6, apartment 8, or call VI 3-1110. 4-24
PRE-MED SENIORS: 46' mobile home
3 blocks from Medical Center in Kansas
with rainshield with steel roof
Contact Harley Hartley, 3810 Brownd Bowl,
K.C. Kansas, JO 2-0951
4-23
BUSINESS SERVICES
New and used portables, standards and
electrics. Royal, Olympia, Smith Corona,
portable and portable. Portables. Botyping
papers. Lawrence Typewriter, 735
Mass. Phone VI 3-3644.
Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mincecographed and bound for $4.00 per book. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
YFING PAPER BARGAINS: Pink typing paper 85c per ream. Yellow typing paper 100c per ream. Per pound The Lawrence Outlook 1005 Massachusetts, open all day Saturday if
Printed Biology Study Notes: 70 pages
biospecific outline and definitions; revised
for all classes. Formerly known as the
Biology Case Book, Call VI 2-3701. Free
delivery $4.50. **Free** ff
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop —Pet phone V 3-2211 Modern, self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m weekdays.
All kinds of house plants. Potted . . .
including philodendron to be used for
room dividers and in picture windows.
Phone VI 3-4207. tt
Grass cutting, vard work and light hauling
reusable prices. Call VI 3-1858
VI 3-1859
Tutor — Mrs. William Birner, former children's librarian and school teacher,
administrator of the tutor children in speech English reading and history through May 29th Call at 6:30 p.m. except for evaluation appointment. Time and ties to be arranged. 9-26
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. ft
Transportation plus parking convenience is an option for a motor scooter of your choice, demonstrate and sell in your spare time. - Blevin's Bike Shop, 71st
and Michigan
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center, 1218
Comm. Personal service—sectionalized
birds, hammers, chameleons, turtles,
and etc., plus complete line ff
pet supplies.
DRESS MAKING and alterations. Formally,
etc. ola Smith
Mass. Call VI 3-2687
MISCELLANEOUS
4-19
JAZZ CONCERT featuring CHARLES KYNARN plus 3. Sunday, April 21. 3 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Community Building. Advance tickets $10.00. At the door. $12.5. Tickets can be obtained at Kief's Record Shop and at the Green Gables.
Alterations: All types women's clothing.
Call VI 5-1348. 4-24
Party time — School house available for
dances and meetings. Call V1 432-
7453
Free Bumper Stickers" "Not Bombs but Brotherhood" or "Speak Up for Peace"
Write Jim Masters, 8401; Ky—No obligation. 4-22
Will care for children in my home. 2
years old and older. Convenient to KU.
Fenced in yard, references. Phone VI 3-
6763. 5-2
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
ADD A NEW CHARM...
to the life you lead.
Do it with "Basque",
a hand braided flat.
as seen in
SEVENTEEN, GLAMOUR
and MADEMOISELLE
BONE SWEET KID
S, N, M, Width
4½ to 10
$9.95
california COBBERS
JC
CHARGE ACCOUNTS INVITED
ARENSBERG'S
819 Massachusetts
VI 3-3470
Page 16
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 19, 196
EVERY YELLOW DANDELION BLOSSOM on campus within five days will turn into a cotton-like blowball comprised of thousands of feathered seeds.
Spring's first few dandelion blooms are almost as welcome as the crocus, but as the seeds of the blow-balls are wind-deposited in yards, parkways and on campus lawns their popularity ends.
Dandelions have infested all of the campus lawns—with the exception of the bare plots near Watson Library. They form an almost solid carpet between Robinson Gymnasium and Malott Hall and between Malott Hall and Summerfield Hall.
Dandelion plants can be eradicated, but only by very deep cutting. In soft, rich soil the roots often penetrate more than three feet. Slicing close to the surface of the ground only encourages the plants to grow. They must be pulled up by their roots.
KU's south campus has one of the more advanced dandelion cultures, but the plant is not native here. It has the reputation of a troublesome weed throughout the world. It was brought to the United States from Europe by the early colonists.
The name, suggested by the coarse toothed leaves, comes from French words meaning "tooth of the lion."
Anderson to Helm of Interfraternity Council
William Anderson, president of Delta Chi fraternity, was elected president of the KU Interfraternity Council last night.
The Park Ridge, Ill., junior succeeds James Carr, Carthage, Mo. senior, also of Delta Chi.
Other officers elected include Stephen Stotts, Prairie Village junior, vice-president; Arthur Spears, Kansas City sophomore, secretary, and David Cain, Prairie Village junior, treasurer.
Five members of the IFC executive council were also chosen. The men will work in categories to be designated by the president.
An IFC Help Week was proposed to strengthen community-fraternal relations by providing beneficial service to the community.
The new executive council members are John Mays, Lyons freshman; James Johnston, Independence, Mo., sophomore; Clark R. Mandigo II, Kansas City special student; James Cook, St. Louis junior, and Charles Lanning, Lawrence sophomore.
Mays said that fraternities may work on any worthwhile project during the school year except a period before and during Greek Week. "It will not be just a two-week affair." Mays said.
A Help Week traveling trophy will be presented to a fraternity during Greek Week. The project will be judged on its merit and benefit to the community. The trophy will be sponsored in conjunction with Alpha Tau Omega service fraternity.
Commenting on the KU fraternity
Women's Editor Receives Honor
Mrs. Lois Smith, women's editor of the Ottawa Herald, was honored last night as an outstanding Kansas woman journalist.
The KU chapter of Theta Sigma Phi, professional fraternity for women in journalism, presented Mrs. Smith with a plaque last night at the chapter's annual Matrix Table dinner.
Mrs. Smith, a consistent winner in the Kansas Press Women's Club competition, won seven first place awards and several second and third place ratings last year.
Mrs. Margaret Sally Keach, author of several books on Africa, was the speaker at the dinner. In her speech, "The Price is High." Mrs. Keach told of the contributions her friends, family and even strangers had made to the publication of her two books, "White Mother in Africa" and "A New African Song."
system and the IFC, Anderson said "the system here is well-above average, but there is room for improvement.
"I feel our system could be better than it is now," he said. "My main interest will be to strengthen it (the IFC) as a whole."
Anderson said he is against tradition. "It keeps us from growing stronger. The fraternity system does not need complete revamping, rather analysis. For example, a lot of money is now being spent on Rush Week in an ineffective way," he said.
Adult Institute To Meet at KU
The thirteenth Adult Care Home Administrative Institute will be at KU April 30 and May 1.
The institute, joint project of the KU Extension and the Kansas State Board of Health, will be in Lawrence, Wichita, Parsons, Salina, Hays and Dodge City, April 8 through May 3.
Sessions on cleanliness, hip fracture patients, evacuation procedures and psychiatric patient after-care, and workshops on skilled nursing homes, housekeeping and occupational therapy will be the first day of the two-day institute.
The second day will be devoted to fire demonstration and preventative measures, physiological changes in the aging, "gadgets," and films on heart attack, strokes and high blood pressure.
The institute will be in Wichita (Broadview Hotel) April 8-9; in Parsons (Parsonian Hotel) April 10-11; in Hays (Hadley Memorial Hospital and Rehabilitation Center) April 23-24; Dodge City (Silver Spur Lodge Restaurant) April 25-26, and Salina (Lamar Hotel) May 2-3.
The Lawrence institute will be conducted by Mrs. Helen Johnson, The Menninger Foundation, Topeka.
KU Coeds Compete In Beauty Contest
Eight KU women and two Lawrence High School seniors will vie for the Miss Lawrence title in a pageant at 8 p.m. tonight in the Lawrence High School auditorium.
Mimi Frink, Lawrence freshman and the reigning Miss Lawrence, will crown the new queen who will represent the city in the Miss Kansas Pageant in June at Pratt.
The theme of the pageant is "When You Wish Upon a Star."
Contestants will appear in bathing suits and in formalms. Each will perform a talent act. The five finalists then will be asked two questions which they will answer extemporaneously.
The eight KU participants and the talent they will perform are: Carol Synovec, Morrowville freshman, singing; Joan Burger, Prairie Village sophomore, speech on modern art; Sherry Wickliff, Mission senior, dancing; Loretta Marcoux, Havensville junior, singing; Sharon Richmond, Louisburg freshman, reading; Mary Todd, Arkansas City junior, piano; Bonnie Ward, Topeka junior, opera selection, and Peggy Dewey, Kansas City sophomore, calypso dance.
The two Lawrence High School seniors participating are Jane Booth, 1931 Naismith Dr., comedy act, and Elaine Millett, 623 Indiana St. piano. The winner will receive a $100 scholarship and the two runners-up $50 scholarships from the Pepsi Cola Co.
Portraits of Distinction
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HIXON STUDIO
Haiku, a Japanese poetry form, was the subject of the Poetry Hour yesterday.
Bob Blank, Photographer
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Visiting Professor Reads Japanese Haiku
Grant Goodman, visiting assistant professor of history, discussed the poetry and read it in an English translation. Mitsuie Shibata, instructor of Oriental language and literature, read the verses in Japanese.
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Prof. Goodman said Haiku has been called the "concentrated essence of pure poetry."
He said Haiku demonstrates the influence of Zen Buddhism on the Japanese.
HE EXPLAINED it has a rigid literary form of 17 syllables in a five-seven-five pattern.
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"Haiku is concerned with the immediacy of the experience and the 'thisness' of that description," he said.
VI 3-4242
"This form of poetry is marked by startling simplicity and marvelous
directness with no moral lesson or symbolic meaning," he said.
"It is designed to give the listener a moment of perception. It indicates rather than explains and suggests rather than describes," he said.
He illustrated that Haiku is not as remote from American traditional form as is often thought by reading "Wood Odors" by Walt Whitman, which is written in much the same vein.
PROF. GOODMAN called Haiku a kind of Japanese national pastime. He said well over one million Haikus are published annually and this is only a fraction of those written.
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SPORTS
Daily Hansan
60th Year, No.124
SECTION B
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
SPORTS
Friday, April 19, 1963
Relays History Thrill-Packed
N.S.
LAST RELAYS—Running in his last Kansas Relays as a Jayhawker is senior Kirk Hagan. Much of KU's hopes will be riding on the lanky middle-distance ace. He is a three-time Big Eight indoor 1,000 yard run champion and won the 1961 conference outdoor title in 1961.
Student's 'Dream' Leads To One Of Nation's Top Track Carnivals
Merely a "dream" some 40 years ago, the Kansas Relays has grown until today only the Drake and Texas Relays equal the annual University of Kansas outdoor track carnival.
Dr. John Outland, the "dreamer" and a former KU student, graduated from the University of Pennsylvania where he became an avid fan of the Penn Relays, held annually since the early 20's.
DR. OUTLAND dreamed of a comparable carnival at KU and persuaded the then director of athletics. Dr. Forrest C. (Phog) Allen to allow his dream to come true.
The only track at KU in 1920 circled McCook Field, located north of the present Memorial Stadium, site of the 38th annual Kansas Relays.
Plans for a replacement for the inadequate McCook Field were underway in 1920 and Dr. Allen made sure the replacement, Memorial Stadium, had a track suitable for the staging of a gigantic track carnival.
WHEN FINISHED in 1923, the Memorial Stadium track boasted one of the four longest straight-aways in the country exceeded only by Harvard, Yale and Princeton.
KU dominated action in the inaugural of the Kansas Relays in 1923. Competing in a 20-school field, KU won the 440-and 880 yard relays events, placed second in the mile relay and nabbed third place in the two-mile relay. Participants in the first Relays included schools of the Missouri Valley, Big 10, Southwest Conference and Dr. Outland's University of Pennsylvania.
KU's 440 and Illinois' 880-yard relay crews set world records during the 1925 Relays. Knute Rockne, the famed Notre Dame football coach, officiated the third annual Relays which were insured for $5,000 from rain. No rain fell.
SIX RELAYS RECORDS fell in 1931 as KU's Jim Bausch equalled the American record in the decathlon. A 480-yard shuttle relay team from Kansas State shattered the world's best in that event in 1934.
Glenn Morris, of the Denver Athletic Club, established an American record in the decathlon before 10,000 spectators in 1935. Emporia State's distance medley relay foursome set a new world record at the same Relays.
In 1948, 10.000 fans watched the establishment of world records in the shotput and 120-yard high hurdles.
A national collegiate mark posted in the 1951 Relays lasted only two hours. Nebraska's Don Cooper went 15-1$ _{18}$ in the Relays' pole vault event for a new collegiate record. Then, two hours later, Illinois' Don Laz leaped $ 15-1_{34} $ in a triangular meet at Los Angeles after he learned of Cooper's record performance.
A TEXAS QUARTER-MILE relay team clipped the existing mark in the 1954 relays. Another Texas quartet bettered the world mark in the 440-yard relay in 1956 and set a record which was lowered by two-tenths of a second by still another Texas crew in the Relays the following year.
Oklahoma won one of the most exciting spring medley relay races in track history in the 1958 Kansas Relays. The three teams that finished behind the Sooners in that race all finished faster than the intercollegiate record.
Only one Relays record fell in 1960. East Texas State's Jim Baird went $25-5^{1/2}$ in the broad jump to break the oldest Relays record, $25-4^{1/4}$ set 29 years earlier. Also in the 1960 Relays, former KU miler Bill Dotson nudged his high school rival Archie San Romani in the 1500 meter race with a 4:00.4 clocking in one of the Relay's most exciting races.
Baylor dominated the 1961 Relays by cleanly winning six titles and tying for the seventh before a crowd of 13,500.
NATIONAL INTEREST in the Kansas Relays over the years has remained high largely because of KU's own track standouts.
Glenn Cunningham was the first in the long line of great KU Relays performers. Cunningham captured the Relays' first 1500-meter title in 1932, repeated in the same event in 1933 and won the mile in 1934 with a 4:12.7 effort. In 1935, 1937 and 1938 Cunningham was beaten in the mile but came back to win in 1939 before 12,000 persons.
Another crowd of 12,000 looked on in 1940 as the by then famous Cunningham ran his last Relays mile race. He lost the race. Cunningham placed fourth in the 1932 Olympic 1500-meter run and second in the 1935 Olympics in the same event.
Wes Santee's attempt at the four-mile barrier places him as one of the all-time KU greats.
SANTEE POSTED the second fastest clocking in the mile event up to that time in the 1954 Relays. Santee raced to a 4:03.1 effort before a record crowd of 16,000. Santee turned in a 4:11.4 clocking
(Continued on page 5)
Bill Easton's Accomplishments Are Many
Latest honor to befall Bill Easton, now in his 16th year as KU track and field coach, was his selection to the Helms Foundation Hall of Fame last year.
This followed his designation as the nation's top collegiate coach in 1960 by the U.S. Track Coaches' Association, for which he became that body's first awarded of its gold track shoe trophy.
LITTLE WONDER Easton has been so honored. Few, if any, coaches in the land have been more successful. For one coach he is only the second coach in history to guide the same school to NCAA championships in both cross-country and track. His 1953 harriers, led by Wes Santee, captured the hill-and-dale flag . . . he previously guided three Drake units to this title . . . and his 1959 and 60 ensembles bagged the cinder crown. Easton's college coach, the late Billy Hayes of Indiana, is the only other tutor to forge this rare double.
Only two other schools, USC (several times) and Illinois (1946 and 47) ever have put together back to
back NCAA track and field championships.
NO BIG EIGHT team ever has risen so high for so long on the national scene. Nor has one dominated the conference so thoroughly. The Jayhawkers have won 11 of the last 14 league indoor championships; nine of the last 11 outdoor crowns, and 14 of the last 16 cross-country derbies. Furthermore, they have finished out of the first division only once in these combined fronts.
Easton's squads also have managed finishes of two seconds, a third and a fourth, ahead of their two titles years. His cross-country clubs have picked off three runner-up spots and two fourths in addition to the '53 championship.
Easton-coached performers have broken three world records . . . Bill Nieder in the Shot Put twice and Al Certer in the Discus throw . . . 14 American records and tied three; 14 Intercollegiate records; seven NCAA meet records and tied one; three Olympic records, and two national
Here is the log on further Easton accomplishments;
Bill Easton
freshman marks.
His Kansas clubs have harvested 74 baton championships and 61 individual gold medals on the Midlands' Grand Circuit of Texas, Kansas and Drake Relays, while breaking 16 (and tying one); 12 and 11 records in those respective meets. This surge moved the Jayhawkers past Texas last year as the winningest team of all-time in these three combined carnivals.
His 1957 four-in-nie relay team was the first collegiate unit to crack 17.00 with a 16:57.8 canter at the Kansas Relays. Nieder was the first collegian to break past 60-feet in the Shot in 1956.
He has developed 30 all-Americans and six Olympians, two of which, Oerter and Nieder, were two-time selections, the former a double champion, the latter 1960 king.
His cross-country teams finished the 1962 season with a streak of 39 consecutive dual wins over conference opposition, another skein of 17 over all opposition and a 16-year dual record of 63-3. His indoor ensembles own an unbeaten string
(marred by one tie) of 19duals and triangulars. His outdoor squads put together a chain of 24 consecutive dual-triangular wins beginning in 1951, which was fractured by San Jose State last April in a triangular also involving Stanford. A companion streak of 22 over conference foes was hailed by Oklahoma. 59-77, at Norman last May.
His teams wrought unprecededed streaks of six straight Central Collegeate conference outdoor championships (1536-'61) and five straight ACC Invittional titles (1958-'62).
The former Hoosier quartermiler began his winning ways at Hammond, Ind., high school before moving up to Drake, where he served an eight-year stint. He served a four-year term as secretary-treasurer of the National Track Coaches Association, and is past-president of the CCC and NCAA cross-country associations. He is married to the former Adamarie Scharbach of Hammond, They have a son, Dick, 23, a '62 graduate of the University of Kansas medical school, and a daughter, Lindsey, 20, a senior in music education at Kansas.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 19, 1963
Small Texas School Sweeps '62 Relays
Representing a small Texas school, a coach and 11 men arrived on a Friday morning last year to compete in the Kansas Relays.
The same 11-man team and coach left Lawrence the next night to return to the small Texas school, but not until establishing two KU Relay records, and becoming the first team in Relays history to win six relay events and have one of their team members voted the meet's outstanding performer.
TEXAS SOUTHERN, the small Texas school, and its coach Stanley Wright also left Mt. Oread with a great deal of admiration from a crowd of 15,000 persons.
In all, eight KU Relays records were broken in the 37th annual Kansas Relays carnival.
Texas Southern competing in the college division started its record assault on Friday when Ray Sadler, Homer Jones, T. J. Bell and Major Adams finished the sprint medley in 3:19.8, two and eight-tenths seconds better than the previous record.
SOUTHERN'S other records came in the mile relay on Saturday, when
Mevlin Houston, Wesley Blackmoon, Saddler and Lester Milburn finished in 3:11, knocking six-tenths of a second off their own record set Friday in the preliminaries.
Southern's first place finish in the distance medley came with two and three-tenths seconds of the listed Relays record and their 400-yard relay effort was two-tenths of a second slower than the record.
Texas Southern's first in the half-mile relay was sixth-tenths of a second off the record and the two mile relay team finished 11 and one-tenths second off the Relays mark.
Southern's Saddler, who ran the first leg on the spring medley crew, anchored the two-mile victory and ran the third leg in the mile relay, was selected the meet's most outstanding performer by the sportswriters.
SADDLER had 10 1/11 votes and Pat Clohessy, Houston, who won the three-mile run and the Glenn Cunningham mile, was second with four votes.
KU's track team won one first at the meet. The Jayhawker four-mile
team of Mike Fulghum, Bill Thornton, Ted Reisinger and Bill Dotson set a new Relays record with a 16:53.1 time. Their effort was the fastest ever in the Big Eight and five-tenths of a second better than the collegiate record.
Bill Miller, of McMurray, set a new record in the broad jump with a 25-6 leap. The mark, according to the field judge, came when wind was below the maximum 4.5 miles per hour, even though winds between five and ten m.p.h. prevailed throughout the meet.
THE FAVORED JAYHAWKERS fell behind Missouri in the two-mile relay as the Tigers finished in 7:24.2, two-tenths of a second faster than KU and good enough for a new Relays record.
In that race KU's Kirk Hagan gained a first leg lead with a 1.53.2 half-mile compared to Jerry McFadden's 1:53.7. The Tigers' Gilperte outran Ted Reisinger 1:50.8 to 1:51.6 but Bill Thornton brought the Jayhawkers even with his 1:49.2 half mile compared to Bill Rawson's 1:49.5.
Missouri's anchor man Jim Baker,
finished with a 1:50.2 mile miler
KU's Bill Dotson ran a 1:55.3. Baker
crossed the line with a 15-ward lead
Fred Hansen of Rice set a new Relays record of $15 - 6\frac{1}{4}$ in the pole vault outperforming John Uelses and Henry Wadsworth, who tied at $15 - 1\frac{3}{4}$ in their exhibition.
WITH 5,000 FANS remaining,
Hansen cleared the bar on his third
ry. Hansen also tried unsuccessfully
for the collegiate record of 15-10%
and it was 6:18 p.m. before the 37th annual Relays was completed.
Phil Mulkey, competing unattached, successfully defended his decathlon titles and became the winningest athlete in Relays history. Mulkey now owes six first place finishes in the decathlon, placing him ahead of Glenn Cunningham, who owns five firsts in one event.
Mulkey piled up a total of 7,480 points to break his record of 7,268 set the year before.
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'Rocket' Heads Century Field
Omaha's Roger Sayers is one of the nation's better sprinters, maybe just a shade below the frontline greats who dominate the national scene.
He wins a lot, but he loses some because of the company he keeps. As a sophomore last year, he was defeated for the Kansas Relays title by a long-time antagonist, Nebraska's Ray Knaub. He beat Knaub the next week at Drake, but was third behind Florida A & M's world 100 co-record holder, and Nate Adams of Purdue.
IN THE NCAA, he whipped another worthy, Villanova's Paul Drayton, but trailed Oregon's Harry Jerome and Villanova's Frank Budd, who share the .09.2 world mark with Hayes, plus San Jose State's Dennis Johnson. He was fifth in the 220 behind Jerome, Drayton, Adams and Texas Southern's Homer Jones.
In between Drake and the NCAA,
he upset Hayes for the NAIA century
crown as both were clocked in :99.5.
Jones was third. Sayers was third
behind Jones and Hayes in the 220.
The "Rocket" as he is affectionately called, earned spots on the U.S. team which met Russia and Poland in international duels, by edging Drayton for third in the NAAU 100 behind Hayes and Jerome. The latter being a Canadian could not qualify for a U.S. berth. Sayers edged Jones out of second behind Drayton to claim his 220 slot.
ALL THIS PROVES Sayers is a good one. But, in a good field, he may fall to third, fourth or fifth. He has run :09.4 a couple of times; :09.5 a couple of dozen. How does a guy, hanging on the fringe of near-greatness, fight the frustrating battle of trying to cross the threshold? What does a :09.4 spinner think when he must tackle the :09.2 and :09.3 sprinters.
"I've got a set routine I follow ahead of the race. I spend more time than most with calisthenics. Then I do some jogging. I'm always conscientious about warming up because I know what it feels like not to be able to run because of a muscle pull.
"I try not to think about the race," explains Sayers. "If I feel myself getting tense I just tell myself . . . You don't have anything to worry about. Just do your best.' I know who I'm running against. They can be beat the same as I can.
"AHEAD OF ALL" this I always check the track. I find out if it's soft or hard. Sometimes there are soft spots in certain lanes. For instance, if the front of my lane is soft I know I can't come out with a lot of power on my start.
"No, I don't mind watching my opponents run in the heats. I'm fascinated watching any good boy run whether it's the sprints or any distance. I just love running. When I'm not running I like to watch good boys perform."
Dissatisfied with his start last year, Sayers changed it radically during the indoor campaign. "I had trouble in the first 25-30 yards last year," he explains. "I was coming out fast enough, but I wasn't reaching maximum speed in the first quarter of the race. Last year I started with my feet only four inches apart. Now I've spread them 15 inches. Judging from the few indoor meets I've had, I think this change has helped."
IF YOU DIDN'T already know, Roger is the older brother of Kansas' all-Big Eight football halfback, Gale, not a bad track man himself. Roger is a better than ordinary halfback too, earning all-CIC varsity selection as a sophomore despite his 5-8, 155-pound physique.
"I never did beat him in a race," laughs Gale, a :06.2 sprinter in the indoor 30 yard dush.
Savers . . . . Roger, that is . . . could bring down Omaha's first Kansas Relays gold medal. However, he will have to beat two champions: Knaub, who edged him in the final five yards last year, and Baylor's Bill Kemp, who won the 1961 race.
The "Rocket" also will be anchoring 440 and 880 relay teams which figure to be much improved over last year's fourth-place finishers. Bruce Hunter, a capable No.3 man returns. The 1-2 spots will be filled by freshmen Terry Williams, who clocked 97.4 in the indoor 75, and Melvin Wade, both Omaha Central products.
Relays Referee Is No Stranger
Noah, in his 16th year at the Denton, Tex., school, has coached nine relay teams to first place in the KU Relays. The present distance medley record was set by an Eagle team in 1961, the first year North Texas State competed in the university division
Winton (Pop) Noah, track coach at North Texas State and referee of the 38th annual KU Relays, is no stranger to the Mt. Oread track carnival.
Noah was track coach for 20 years at Adamson High School in Dallas before returning to his alma mater in 1947. His high school teams won 11 district championships.
He was named to the Hall of Honor of the Texas High School Coaches' Association last summer.
As an undergraduate at North Texas, Noah lettered four times in track and three times in football. He was graduated in 1827.
North Texas placed fourth in the Missouri Valley Conference track meet last year. The Eagle freshman squad won the conference first-year championship.
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Page 3
Lonborg's Career Reflects Achievement and Expansion
Consistent success on the conference and national scene and considerable improvement and expansion of the physical plant have marked Dutch Lonborg's 12-year regime as KU athletic director.
Erection of Allen Field House, with its multiple facilities for basketball, indoor track, and baseball, is the major item in expansion of the physical plant.
A total of 35 Big Eight championships have been harvested during this period. These have been garnished by four NCAA titles, basketball, 1952, Cross-country, 1953, and track, 1959 and 1960, plus two runners-up in each of the three.
THE JAYHAWKERS also have won two league all-sports championships (1956-57 and 1959-60) while finishing second seven times during this span.
QUIGLEY FIELD, named for Lonborg's predecessor here, was completed in time for the 1959 season. It is the only completely enclosed park in the Big Eight.
Latest improvements were refurbishing of the indoor and outdoor tracks during the past year and addition of a scoreboard for Quigley field, the Jayhawkers' baseball park, to match construction of dugouts, a gift from the 1960 graduating class.
Friday, April 19. 1963 University Daily Kansan
A football parking lot was constructed ahead of the 1958 season, on the old baseball field southeast of the stadium. Previously stadium walkways were asphalted inside and outside, concession booths were improved, relocated and expanded; a new electric scoreboard with attachment for the Kansas Relays was installed; the dressing and shower rooms were improved and the official's dressing room modernized.
Lonborg also has inaugurated a program of scholarship aid for baseball, swimming, tennis and golf.
LONBORG'S ATHLETIC background is one of the most extensive in the land. As a competitor, he is one of only 33 Jayhawk athletes to
earn letters in three sports. He also is one of a handful who rated first-string all-conference selection in football and basketball. He demonstrated further versatility by earning his grid plaudits at end in 1917 and 1919 and at quarter in 1920. He was an all-Missouri Valley guard in basketball, later meriting All-American AAU acclaim with the old KCAC five. He was a three-year baseball regular at third base.
His first job was at McPherson college as the Bulldogs' first full-time coach. He handled all sports there, but was most successful in basketball, guiding his teams to 23 wins in 27 starts. This earned promotion to Washburn in the fall of 1923.
The Horton native graduated from the KU Law School in 1921, but never has practiced a day. Instead he spent 29 years in the coaching ranks before assuming the reins from the retiring E. C. Quiglev in 1950.
AT THE TOPEKA school he put together his famous 1925 team which won the National AAU in Kansas City, the last collegiate undergraduate unit to bag that title. His 1927 club was a semifinalist in the same tournament. Overall, the Ichabods won 63 of 80 games under the sidetracked barrister. Lonborg also doubled as a football assistant.
Northwestern beckoned, following the four-year run at Washburn, and Lonborg moved up to the Big Ten to serve under Tug Wilson, now Big Ten commissioner. There he remained for 23 years posting an overall 237-198 won-lost record, while winning the 1931 championship and tying for the '33 flag.
During his tenure at Evanston, Lonborg piloted the College All-Stars to six victories in nine starts against the professional champions.
BEST-KNOWN Lonborg products at Northwestern include Otto Graham, one of the finest multi-sport athletes in Big Ten history; Waldo Fisher, formerly Northwestern basketball coach; Rut Walter,
present Wildcat track coach; and basketeers Frank Marshall, Joe Reiff, and Max Morris.
During this period, Dutch also served on the football staffs of Dick Hanley and Lynn Waldorf, handling much of the scouting.
Lonborg's basketball successes over an extended period earned him selection to the National Basketball Hall of Fame. He served 13 years as chairman of the NCAA basketball tournament committee, resigning from that post this past year, while doubling as chairman of the United States basketball committee for the 1959 Pan-American Games and the 1960 Olympic Games.
He was manager of the United States basketball team for the 1960 Olympic Games in Rome.
Relay Briefs
Of 14 Texas Relays individual champions at least seven are expected to compete in the 38th Kansas Relays. Most prominent of these are McMurray's Bill Miller, who set a 25-6 Kansas record here last year en route to a Grand Slam of the Texas-Kansas-Drake circuit, and Omaha's Roger Sayers who blazed a :09.6 100 at Austin against a 10-mile wind.
***
Texas Southern, which slammed college division relays at Texas and Kansas in 1962, will be shooting for a repeat of all six Mt. Oread baton crowns. Stan Wright's Houston club opened the 1963 Grand Circuit by slamming the Texas Relay field. Among Tiger returnees is quarter-miller-halfmiler Ray Saddler, who won the most outstanding athlete award at Kansas last year as a freshman.
KU came away from the Texas Relays without a gold medal for the first time since 1948, but hopes to be closer to full strength for its own meet. Four of KU's top hands missed the affair due to injuries.
A. C.
A PROSPEROUS CAREER—Since coming to KU in 1950, Athletic Director A. C. (Dutch) Lonborg has guided the Jayhawkers to success on the conference and national scene and to gigantic expansions in the physical plant.
Horned-Rimmed Specs Aids Jumper
If you think that 6-10^1/4 leap by Colorado's Leander Durley for a new Big Eight High-jump record was a good one, wait until he gets his eyes focused through his new horned-rimmed glasses.
Near-sighted since his prep days at Denver Manual, Durley redomed specs soon after soaring to his new league mark last month in Kansas City.
"I couldn't see the bar very well," he told Buffalo sports publicist Fred Casotti. "It looked like a black and yellow blur."
En route back to Boulder he told his troubles to Coach Frank Potts, who urged him to give glasses another try. Durley had used them in high school until he broke a lens which imbedded glass chips in one eye. He shucked them after that.
Trying at 6-8 in the Colorado Indoor Invitational, Durley missed his first effort. Snapping on his new glasses ahead of the second try he cleared with ease. Then he barely missed 6-11.
"He's sold on 'em now." laughs Casotti.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 19, 1963
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Friday, April 19, 1963 University Daily Kansar
Page 5
Kansas Relays Records
Special Events
120-yd. High Hurdles, :13.6, Harrison Dillard, Baldwin-Wallace 1948
100-yd. Dash, :09.4, Cy Leland, Texas Christian 1930
and Bobby Whilden, Texas 1956
Mile Run, 4:03.1, Wes Santee, Kansas 1954
Two Mile Run, 8:59.2, John Macy, Houston 1959
Three Mile Run, 14:12.2, Jack Nelson, Arkansas 1961
1500 Meter Run, 3:53.3, Glenn Cunningham, Kansas 1933
3000-Meter Steeplechase, 9:12.5, John Macy, Unattached 1958
10.000 Meter Run, 30:46.5, Denis Moore, Abilene Christian 1962
400-Meter Hurdles, :50.4, Dick Howard, New Mexico 1959
High Jump, 6' 8 3/16", Robert Walters, Texas 1949
Broad Jump, 25' 6", Bill Miller, McMurry 1962
Pole Vault, 15' 6/4", Fred Hansen, Rice 1962
Shot Put, 59' 77's", Bill Nieder, Kansas 1956
Discus Throw, 178'1", Al Oerter, Kansas 1957
Javelin Throw, 254'9", Bill Alley, Kansas 1959
Hop-Step-Jump, 50'3", John Kelly, Unattached 1961
Decathlon, 7480, Phil Mulkey, Unattached 1962
Relays-University Class
Quarter-mile Relay, :39.9, Texas ...1957
Wally Wilson, Eddie Southern, Hollis Gainey, Bobby Whilden
Half mile Relay, 1:23.5, Oklahoma State ...1958
Orlando Hazley, Ken Covert, Vernon Haddox, Bob McFarling
Mile Relay, 3:09.1, Texas ...1958
Wally Wilson, Drew Dunlap, Jim Holt, Eddie Southern
Two-mile Relay, 7:42.2, Missouri ...1962
Jerry McFadden, Greg Pelster, Bill Rawson, Jim Baker
Four-mile Relay, 16:53.1, Kansas ...1962
Mike Fulghum, Bill Thornton, Ted Riesinger, Bill Dotson
Sprint Medley Relay, 3:19.5, Oklahoma ...1958
Gary Parr, John Pellow, Dee Givens, Gail Hodgson
Distance Medley Relay, 9:49.3, North Texas State ...1961
Richard Bothmer, John Spencer, Richard Menchaca, John Cooper
Relays—College Class
Quarter-mile Relay, :41.0, Texas Southern 196
Homer Jones, Barney Allen, Charles Frazier, Lester Milburn
Quarter-mile Relay, :41.0, Texas Southern ... 1961
Homer Jones, Barney Allen, Charles Frazier, Lester Milburn
Half-Mile Relay, 1:24.2, Texas Southern ... 1961
Homer Jones, Barney Allen, Charles Frazier, Lester Milburn
Mile Relay, 3:11.0, Texas Southern ... 1962
Melvin Houston, Wesley Blackmon, Ray Saddler, Lester Milburn
Two-mile Relay, 7:32.0, Howard Payne ... 1961
David Noble, Frank Santiago, Lowell Bishop, Glenn Petty
Half-Mile Relay, 1:24.2, Texas Southern ...1961
Homer Jones, Barney Allen, Charles Frazier, Lester Milburn
David Noble, Frank Santiago, Lowell Bishop, Glenn Petty
COMMONWEALTH THEATRES
Welcomes Everybody to the 38th Annual Kansas Relays
We hope that all contestants and spectators will enjoy their stay while in Lawrence.
We welcome all of you to visit any of our fine Lawrence Theatres.
George Willhoite Manager
Commonwealth Theatres
Varsity Granada Sunset Drive In
Sprint Medley Relay, 3:19.8, Texas Southern 1962
Distance Medley Relay, 10:06.9, North Texas State ...1939 Alvin Chrisman, Harvey Bryant, Wayne Rideout, Blaine Rideout
Ray Saddler, Homer Jones, T. J. Bell, Major Adar
Relays—Junior College Class
Sprint Medley Relay, 3:32.4, Coffeyville ... 1958
Wendell Goodwin, Mike Nichols, Dave Ford, Larry Wagner
Mile Relay, 3:22.5, Coffeyville ... 1958
Wendell Goodwin, Eddie Black, Mike Nichols, Larry Wagner
Relays—Kansas City, Missouri, High School Class
Half-mile Relay, 1:28.8, Southwest H.S. ...1958
Jack Shipman, George Mansfield, Jack Prather, Stuart Paterson
Kansas Relays Interscholastic Records
120-yd. High Hurdles, :14.6, Henry Wiebe, Newton ... 1955
100-yd. Dash, :09.8, Dick McGlinn, Immaculata of Leavenworth ... 1950
220-yd. Dash, :21.3, Henry Wiebe, Newton ... 1955
440-yd. Dash, :49.6, Bernie Perrine, Derby ... 1956
880-yd. Run, 1:58.2, Bob Tague, Rosedale ... 1956
Mile Run, 4:17.4, Archie San Romani, Wichita East ... 1959
180-yd. Low Hurdles, :19.9, Rex Stucker, Effingham ... 1956
Quarter-mile Relay, :43.0, Wichita East ... 1962
Jim Winters, Tim Boyle, Ken Stephens, Bob Hansen Half-mile Relay, 1:29.7, Topeka ... 1962
Joe Phillips, Tcm McBride, Andy Williams, Bill Harris
Mile Relay, 3:21.8, Wichita East ... 1962
Tim Boyle, Keith Thompson, Joe Henderson, Bob Hansen
Two-mile Relay, 7:57.0, Wichita East ...1958
Lowell Charlten, Bob Holgerson, Bill Stone, Archie San Romani Sprint Medley Relay, 3:34.0, Lawrence ... 1961
Bob Kimball, Charles Lanning, Jim Smith, Bill Cottle
Pole Vault, 13' $6\frac{1}{4}$", Bill Reinecker, Osawatomie ... 1962
High Jump, 6' $5\frac{1}{2}$", Steve Straight, Shawnee Mission North ... 1962
Broad Jump, 23' $3\frac{1}{2}$", Albert Woods, Coffeyville ... 1940
Shot Put, 58' 10", Elwyn Dees, Lorraine ... 1930
Discus Throw, 170' 4", Jim Waskiewicz, Wichita East ... 1962
Javelin Throw, 209' $2\frac{1}{2}$", Pete Talbott, McPherson ... 1959
Relays History-
(Continued from page 1) in the 1955 weather-hampered Re- laws.
In 1956 Bill Neider tossed the shot put 59-77 s for a new Relays mark. Just a week before, the Jayhawker had become the first college athlete to break the 60-foot barrier.
After earning a bronze medal in the 1956 Olympics, Neider entered the KU Relays and made the best shot put effort during 1957 with a 62-2 heave.
Competing as a Marine in the 1960 Relays, Neider warmed up with a tremendous $66-1\frac{1}{4}$ heave and set a new Memorial Stadium mark of $63-1\frac{1}{4}$ in actual competition.
NEIDER GAINED a gold medal for the United States track team in the 1960 Olympics.
Three other Kansas greats, Bill Alley, javelin, Ernie Shelby, broad jump, and Charlie Tidwell, 100-yard dash, were at their best in the 1959 Kansas Relays.
KU's Al Oerter, gold medal winner in the 1956 and 1960 Olympics won three straight Relays crowns in the discus event. Oerter captured the 1956, 1957 and 1958 titles.
Tidwell earned the "most outstanding athlete" title and turned in a 169.9 posting in the 100. Alley hurled the javelin 254-9 shattering the previous Relays best by 22 feet. And, Shelby came within seven-eights of an inch of the oldest Relays mark with a 25-3¼ leap.
All three of the KU 1959 Relays stars became NCAA champions two months later.
EVERYONE READS AND USES WANT ADS
KANSAS FRATERNITY MANAGEMENT
204 Lawrence National Bank Bldg. VI 3-0551
We are now assisting some 50% of the organized houses of KU with their financial problems.
Since 1929 we have offered a service in budgeting and auditing for fraternities and sororities on a private service basis.
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We are proud to have been part of the growth of KU during the last 34 years.
GO - KANSAS - GO
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THE FIRESHORT
Friday, April 19, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Order of Events
TODAY
Track Events
1:15 High School Bands
1:25—Flag Raising Ceremony—R.O.T.C. Units
1:30 120 Yard High Hurdles—High School—Finals
1:35 120 Yard High Hurdles—University and College—Preliminaries
1:50 Four Mile Relay—University and College—Finals
2:10 100 Yard Dash—University and College—Prelims
2:25 100 Yard Dash—High School—Finals
2:30 Sprint Medley Relay—University Invitational—Finals
2:40 Sprint Medley Relay—College Invitational—Finals
2:50 Sprint Medley Relay—Freshmen-Junior Col—Finals
3:05 One Mile Run—High School Invitational—Finals
3:15 Quarter Mile Relay—University—Preliminaries
3:30 400 Meter Hurdles—A.A.U.—(2 sections—Time
Basis)—Finals
3:45 Three Mile Run—University and College—Finals
4:00 Half Mile Relay—University—Preliminaries
4:15 One Mile Relay—High School—Preliminaries
4:30 One Mile Relay—College—Preliminaries
4:45 One Mile Relay—University—Preliminaries
Field Events
1:00 Pole Vault—High School—Preliminaries—Finals
1:30 High Jump—High School—Preliminaries—Finals
2:00 Broad Jump—Univ. and College—Prelims—Finals
2:30 Discuss—University and College—Prelims—Finals
TOMORROW MORNING
Track Events
Track Events
9:00 110 Meter Hurdles—Decathlon
9:30 Quarter Mile Relay—High School—Preliminaries (Time Basis)
10:30 One Mile Relay—Freshmen-Iunior College—Prelims
Field Events
Field Events
9:15 Discus Throw—Decathlon
10:00 Pole Vault—Decathlon
10:00 Discus Throw—High School—Prelims—Finals
10:00 Broad Jump—High School—Prelims—Finals
10:45 Javelin—Decathlon
11:30 1500 Meter Run—Decathlon
TOMORROW AFTERNOON
Track Events
1:10 University of Kansas Band—Flag Raising Ceremony —R.O.T.C.
1:20 Presentation of Kansas Relays Queen
1:30 120 Yard High Hurdles—Univ. and College—Finals
1:35 Distance Medley Relay—College—Finals
1:50 Distance Medley Relay—University—Finals
2:05 100 Yard Dash—University and College—Finals
2:10 Girls 100 Yard Dash
2:15 Sprint Medley Relay—High School—Finals
2:20 Glenn Cunningham Mile Run—A.A.U.—Invitational five to six men—Finals
2:30 Quarter Mile Relay—High School—Finals
2:40 Special—Girls Matched 440 Relay—Finals
2:50 Quarter Mile Relay—College Finals
2:55 Quarter Mile Relay—University—Finals
3:00 Two Mile Relay—High School—Invit.—Finals
3:15 Two Mile Relay—College—Finals
3:25 Two Mile Relay—University—Finals
Lawrence Grade School Shuttle Relay
3:35 Half Mile Relay—Kansas City, Mo., H.S.—Finals
3:45 Half Mile Relay—High School—Finals
3:55 Half Mile Relay—College—Finals
4:00 Half Mile Relay—University—Finals
4:10 3000 Meter Steeplechase—A.A.U.—Finals
4:25 One Mile Relay—High School—Finals
4:30 One Mile Relay—Freshmen-Junior College—Finals
4:35 One Mile Relay—College—Finals
4:40 "Chuck" Cramer One Mile Relay—Univ.—Finals
Field Events
Field Events
1:00 Pole Vault—Univ. and College—Prelims—Finals
1:30 Shot Put—Univ. and College—Prelims—Finals
1:30 Carl V. Rice High J.—Univ., Col.—Prelims—Finals
1:30 Hop, Step and Jump—A.A.U.—University and College—Prelimaries and Finals
2:30 Javelin Throw—Univ. and College—Prelims—Finals
Welcome Alums
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Southern Illinois Shotputter Excels Despite Hunting Injury
George Woods' 55-foot shot putting for Southern Illinois would draw little comment on the Midwest track circuit this spring, except for one small item. He's doing it with part of a foot shot away.
Goose hunting in the woods around Crab Orchard Lake near Carbondale last November. Woods was carrying an ancient-make 12-gauge shotgun. As he started up a slight knoll, the safety slipped and discharged a load of shot into his left boot. The boot was ripped to ribbons and a fat chunk of the left instep with it.
Now, three operations and a set of crutches later, Woods is almost back to his freshman peak of $56-21^{\circ}$. Two weeks after discarding his crutches, Woods made his varsity debut with $51-51^{\circ}$ in a February 9 indoor dual against the Kansas Jayhawkers. Since then he's progressed to 55-7 at the Kansas State Indoor Invitational and 55-4 in the Western Michigan Indoor Games.
"GEORGE WAS in the hospital three weeks," says Coach Lew Hartzog. "We didn't think he'd be ready until our outdoor opener, the Arkansas Relays. But George told me after the first operation . . . 'Coach, this will be just an interruption. It won't stop me. You don't need to worry about holding me out this year.'"
"He's staving up there good."
smiles Hartzog. "Ten of his last 12 throws have been over 55 feet. We think he'll be up to 58 or 59 during the Belays season."
ONE OF THOSE STOPS is the 38th Kansas Relays. The Salukis scored their first Mt. Oread victory in history here last year with a 9:53.9 time in the Distance Medley.
The truth is Wood's hasn't recovered yet. When he threw against KU's Yul Yost here, you could have fit a fat gas pipe into the raw slot in his left foot. He threw in a pair of oversized 13 tennis shoes. After three grafting operations he still shows a $2\frac{1}{2}$ by $\frac{1}{2}$ inch wound. He still is carrying 20 shotgun pellets in his foot too.
"If anybody can come back from an accident like that and do well Woods can," continues Hartzog. "The doctor said he's never seen such a determined guy. I haven't either. After he get out of the hospital he'd hop down every day and do his weight work. He couldn't work his legs but he actually increased his arm and upper body strength while he was recovering."
"I CAN'T FEEL 'em much." Woods remarks airily. "Now and then they sort of tickle the bottom of my foot." Since Woods was so willing, Hartzog started him on an 18-pound shot during the winter.
"He's got up to 53-0 with it."
Hartzog explains, "If he can do that he should add three or four feet with the 16-pound. We found out though, that he's getting his body ahead of the shot on the lighter one so we're going to quit working him across the ring with the 18-pound."
If the 6-3, 230-pound Sikeston, Mo., native continues to move up he'll be challenging the favorites here. An early checklist shows two Southwestern conference aces, Danny Roberts, Texas A & M, and Jim Lancaster, Baylor, over 56-0. A third, Lancaster's stablemate, Frank Mazza, is over 54-0.
Yost, 1963 Big Eight Indoor champion, has pressed his career high out to 57-6. Oklahoma's defending conference outdoor king, Dick Inman, hit 58-10 last year as a sophomore, and is approaching 54-0 coming back from a knee operation. His two stablemates, Preston Smith and Mike Miers, worked up to that range during the indoor season as did Colorado's Tom Galbos. Drake's Dave Magrane, who trailed Yost and Woods at K-State two weeks ago, has pushed his own school record out to 55-3.
Inman was runner-up for the Kansas crown last year at 55-31, behind Missouri's departed Don Smith, who scored a slam of the Midlands' Grand Circuit of Texas-Kansas-Drake. Mazza was fourth.
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Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday. April 19, 1963
Sigma Alpha Epsilon
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KU FRATERNITIES WELCOME
Friday, April 19. 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Lambda Chi Alpha
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan
E-State Aims at Record
Florida A & M was the only team to halt Texas Southern's majestic march through the college division of the Midlands' Grand Circuit last year. With Bob Hayes, world 100 yard dash co-record holder running the anchor carry, the Rattlers halted the Tigers drive at Drake by winning the 440- and 880-yard relays.
Even so, Texas Southern won the four other baton hauls offered at the Drake Relays to finish the circuit with 15 gold medals in 17 tries. Southern had won all five relay events at Texas and all six events at the KU Relays, the latter an unprecedented feat.
NOW EMPOIRIA STATE'S veteran track coach Fran Welch is building a blockade with which he hopes to snap the Tigers' dominance at the KU Relays and nail a record as well. It is anchored by veterans Ireland Sloan and John Camien, who are taking rank as two of the finest distance runners in Sunflower state history.
With Sloan in the 1320 and Camien the anchor mile, the Hornets beat Southern Illinois 31 seconds to win the Arkansas Relays Distance Medley in 10:07. The Salukis, defending KU Relays class champions, did not load the gun for this one. But it still was a hefty victory for the Emporians. Furthermore, their time was just a tenth removed from the Relays record held by North Texas State since 1939. All other Mt. Oread relay marks go back no further than 1957.
The Hornets almost clipped Southern in this haul at Drake last year, losing an eyelash decision in which both were timed in 10:01.2. They were within six seconds of that clocking in their first 1963 outdoor start at Fayetteville even with Sloan coasting no better than 3:10 in the third three-quarters carry. Camien unwrapped an unpressed 4:13 anchor mile Sophomore Dick Vininski, running his first quarter of the year, led off in :60. Senior Peter Clark contributed two 1:54.6 halves.
THE TWO ACES carry better credentials. Sloan, a transfer from Morehead State, ran the swiftest indoor Two-Mile, 8:58.7, ever clocked by a Sunflower State athlete, in winning the CIC at Omaha. Fact is, only one Kansan, KU's Wes Santee, ever has run faster anywhere, hitting 8:58 for a then intercollegiate record in a 1934 triangular against Arkansas-Drake in Lawrence.
Sloan won the NAIA cross-country crown last autumn and was third in the NCAA small college meet. He was sixth in the NAAU Six-Mile last June.
"This is his best distance," remarks Welch. "He gets better at anything over a mile. We feel he can run around 4:10 on the end of that distance medley though."
The 5-6 130-pounder was uncruited. "I never knew him or heard from him until he walked in," Welch claims.
CAMIEN DIPPED to 4:07, a new Ahern Fieldhouse record to win the Kansas State Indoor Invitational Mile. Only five Kansans ever ran faster miles, Bill Dotson, Santee and Glenn Cunningham of KU; Tom Rodda, Kansas State, and Camien's predecessor at Emporia, Bill Tidwell. Only Santee and Tidwell own swifter indoor clockings.
Camien was runner-up to Houston's Pat Clobessy in the Glenn Cunningham Mile here last year with the Cougar veteran clocking 4:10.6. The former won the NAIA crown in 4:09.7. He was runner-up, two seconds ahead of Sloan in the NCAA college division cross country race.
Camien was guided to Emporia by one of Welch's former fullbacks, Pat Fraley, the same coach who tutored Al Oerter, KU's two-time Olympic disc champion, at Sewanhaka High of Floral Park, N.Y. He had hit 4:10.1 at a prep and now is a threat to Archie San Romani's long-standing 4:07.2 school outdoor record every time out. He owns a 2:59 three-quarters practice spin already this spring.
"This is the best pair of distance runners we've ever had at the same time," Welch remarks. "They are two of the most coachable boys I've ever had and work like horses. We were crippled last year or we would have given somebody a good run at both Texas and Kansas. We weren't well enough to run a relay team until we got to Drake."
Succeeding Bob Lawson, now head coach at Iowa State, as Kansas assistant track coach is Dean Brittenham, former Nebraska javelin-thrower.
Brittenham Is Track Aide
Brittenham joined the Jayhawker staff last September after a four-year hirth as head coach of track and cross-country at North High of Bakersfield, Calif., where his 1960 harrier squad won the South Yosemite league championship. Brittenham also served one year as assistant at Colorado while completing work toward his master's degree in
Education, following graduation from Nebraska in 1957.
Brittlenham competed at NU in 1952, '56 and '57, his career being interrupted by Navy service following his sophomore year. His top competitive heave for the Cornhuskers was 199-feet.
He is married to the former Beverly Jones from his home town of Brady, Neb. They have two sons, Steve, eight, and Gregg, three.
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 19, 1963
Page 11
SANDY'S
THRIFT AND SWIFT DRIVE-IN
WELCOMES YOU TO THE 38th ANNUAL KANSAS RELAYS
I am an Irish dancer. I love to dance and perform. I am a member of the Irish Dancing Society. I hope you enjoy my performances.
Take A Break And Enjoy Your Meals at Sandy's- Across From Hillcrest At 2120 W.9th
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VISIT US ANYTIME-BEFORE, DURING OR AFTER THE RELAYS
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 19, 1963
KANSAS RELAYS ORDER OF EVENTS
19 63
KU
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SATURDAY MORNING
TRACK EVENTS
9:00 110 Meter Hurdles—Decathlon
9:30 Quarter Mile Relay—High School—Preliminaries (Time Basis)
10:30 One Mile Relay—Freshmen-Junior College—Preliminaries
FIELD EVENTS
9:15 Discus Throw—Decathlon
10:00 Pole Vault—Decathlon
10:00 Discus Throw—High School—Prelim-
inaries—Finals
10:00 Broad Jump—High School—Prelim-
inaries—Finals
10:45 Javelin—Decathlon
11:30 1500 Meter Run—Decathlon
SATURDAY AFTERNOON
TRACK EVENTS
1:10 University of Kansas Band—Flag Raising Ceremony—R.O.T.C.
1:20 Presentation of Kansas Relays Queen
1:30 120 Yard High Hurdles—Univ. and College—Finals
1:35 Distance Medley Relay—College—Finals
1:50 Distance Medley Relay—University—Finals
2:05 100 Yard Dash—University and College—Finals
2:10 Girls 100 Yard Dash
2:15 Sprint Medley Relay—High School—Finals
2:20 Glenn Cunningham Mile Run—A.A.U. —Invitational five to six men—Finals
2:30 Quarter Mile Relay—High School—Finals
2:40 Special—Girls Matched 440 Relay—Finals
2:50 Quarter Mile Relay—College Finals
2:55 Quarter Mile Relay—University—Finals
3:00 Two Mile Relay—High School—Invit. —Finals
3:15 Two Mile Relay—College—Finals
3:25 Two Mile Relay—University—Finals Lawrence Grade School Shuttle Relay
3:35 Half Mile Relay—Kansas City, Mo., H.S.—Finals
3:45 Half Mile Relay—High School—Finals
3:55 Half Mile Relay—College—Finals
4:00 Half Mile Relay—University—Finals
4:10 3000 Meter Steeplechase—A.A.U.—Finals
4:25 One Mile Relay—High School—Finals
4:30 One Mile Relay—Freshmen-Junior College—Finals
4:35 One Mile Relay—College—Finals
"Chuck" Cramer One Mile Relay—University Finals
4:35 One Mile Relay—College—Finals
4:40 "Chuck" Cramer One Mile Relay— University—Finals
FIELD EVENTS
1:00 Pole Vault—University and College—Prelims—Finals
1:30 Shot Put—Univ. and College—Prelims—Finals
1:30 Carl V. Rice High J.—Univ., Col.—Prelimins—Finals
1:30 Hop, Step and Jump—A.A.U.—University and College—Preliminaries and Finals
2:30 Javelin Throw—Univ. and College—Prelims—Finals
63
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Friday, April 19, 1963 University Daily Kansan Pag
Kirk Hagan Co-Captain
Pete Talbott
Co-Captain
(
Charles Hayward
A. M. C.
Doug Stoner
A. A.
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KU
JANUARY 25, 1976
Barry Hanratty
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MUHAMED ALSAFRA
Tonnie Coane
Yul Yost
MAUPINTOUR
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Page 14
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 19, 1963
Southern "White Enemy" Respected By McClinton
ANSA
PROFESSIONAL STAR—Former Kansas Jayhawker football star Curtis McClinton was chosen the American League's Rookie of the year last year with the Dallas Texans. McClinton is at KU during the spring semester studying business.
By Vinay Kothari
Nobody loves the Southern white man more than Curtis R. McClinton, a 24-year-old All-American Negro football player.
"I find the South and its people very interesting," McClinton said. "I have a great degree of respect for the Southern white man because of his frankness and honesty and because he doesn't hesitate to tell me that he is my enemy."
He said, "I am able to learn more from the Southern white man because of his face value than the one in an environment such as this where it is customary to have double standards."
"Observing people helps me understand the community in which I live as a Negro," he said.
LIKE MANY sportsmen, McClinton likes people and enjoys observing them.
According to McClinton, the lack of communication between a white man and a Negro is the cause of discrimination and prejudice.
"Because of this lack of communication, people don't understand each other," he said. McClinton said he was convinced that the "only alternative for Negro is to force the communication and break down the barrier of misunderstanding."
"THE SOCIETY should judge the person as an individual but not as a particular group member," he said. "The American society has treated the Negro as a second class citizen despite his loyalty to the society."
He said he is not bitter about the segregation but there are several who are very bitter. He said there is a problem of human dignity involved.
"WHEN THE human dignity is involved, the society leaves me only one choice and that is to defend my community and self-preservation," he said.
McClinton said sometimes the society's treatment becomes so intolerable that "there is a temptation in the group to lean toward communism for recognition and power."
Commenting on the Negro's achievement in sports and music, McClinton said from the ancient period the white man used Negroes for his entertainment and gave them opportunity to develop their skills in these two fields. He said there was a period of cultural lag for Negroes.
But, he said, he would not make football a lifetime profession.
Speaking on his athletic career, McClinton said he gets opportunity to travel and interact in different geographical locations in the United States. He considers his athletic career very fortunate.
He said, "Football has its physical limitation. One is limited to consider it a lifetime occupation."
DESCRIBING football as a mere spring board for the economic, cultural and social future, McClinton said he would like to have a business through which he can render a personal service to Negroes and Negro community, which is considered non-parallel to the society."
A genial 230-lb. fullback for the Dallas Texans, McClinton was drafted as early as his sophomore year at the University of Kansas by the Los Angeles Rams and the Dallas Texans. But he signed a professional contract with the Texans of the American Football League, following his graduation at KU.
HE WAS named the best running back in the country in 1961 by a N.Y.
Giant professional football talent scout. He also earned a berth as the "American League Rookie of the Year."
Speaking on Texans, McClinton said the team is very good and has "sound financial base with youth and determination to succeed in its business." The team will be moving from Dallas to Kansas City, he said, because the team got a very favorable economic offer.
He said this change would be beneficial to the players as there will be more off season jobs available in Kansas City than in Dallas.
Unlike many football players, McClinton did not come to KU just to play football. He wanted to play football and also wanted to get a sound education.
The All-Big Eight halfback and a man with combination of speed and power, led the Kansas Jayhawkers in rushing in 1959 with 472 net yards — seventh in the Conference and 10th best single season total in Kansas history.
HE SCORED 40 points in 1959 and swept his 212-lb. bulk over the 60-yard indoor high hurdles in :7.4 to win the Big Eight championship. He was runner-up over 120 yards in conference outdoor highs, clocking as low as :14.3.
At KU, he proved himself a good catcher, ferocious cornerman, and frequently pinned ball-carriers for long losses in critical situations.
He was Big Nine Hurdle champion in 1960 and Sporting News All-American in 1961.
College coaches watched him play football in high school and were amazed at his performance. Several schools eagerly sought McClinton's services for pay, of course. He was offered different scholarships, but he accepted a KU scholarship which included tuition, books, room and board plus $15 a month.
After graduating from Wichita North High School, he came to KU and earned a bachelor of science degree in Education in 1962. At present, he is a student in the School of Business.
At Wichita North High School from where he graduated in 1958, he was selected the first Negro in the school's history as "Pigskin Pete." He was All-State champion in the high hurdles and was All-State in football and basketball. He was also YMCA, Wiseman High School All-American.
THE SON OF Curtis R. McClinton Sr., a real estate broker, he was born June 25, 1939, in Muskogee, Okla. The family moved to Wichita when he was 2-years-old.
McClinton has different views about marriage.
"I am not married because I am occupationally unstable and psychologically immature for a step which is very complex and delicate," he said.
WHEN HE was in high school, he participated in state-wide competition in voice and received a superior rating. He sang at the State Democratic victory dinner for President Kennedy and Vice-President Johnson at Topeka where his father was the State Representative of the 67th District, Sedgwick County. He had participated actively in numerous vocal concerts for Mu Chapter, Kappa Alpha Psi Scholarship Fund, the University of Kansas.
Don Pierce, public relations man for the KU athletic department, said McClinton is quiet and friendly. Some of his friends say he is very alert and has initiative.
McClinton said the secret of his success is his self-confidence and determination.
Portraits of Distinction
POLICE
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass. V. 3-0330
You're Always Welcome
For the best burgers in Lawrence come down to
down to
THE OLD MISSION INN
The club played matches with the cricket teams of Kansas City. St. Louis, Kansas State University and Fort Leavenworth the last two years and lost only six of 20 games.
Lalit Kothari, Bombay, India senior, has been elected president and captain of the club for the year 1963. The other officers are Ramesh Gandhi, Bombay, India, junior, vice-president and vice-captain, and Pravin Kothari, Bombay, India, sophomore, acting secretary.
Matches will be held with the University of Missouri, Kansas State University, Fort Leavenworth Cricket Club, Kansas City Cricket Club, and St. Louis Cricket Club. The club is also planning to go to Canada during the summer to play several games there.
GERHARDT ZUTHER, assistant professor of English, has been selected as faculty adviser to the club
1904 Mass.
Cricket was brought to the Lawrence community during the summer of 1691. The team, formerly known as Lawrence Cricket Club, played its first game with the Kansas City Cricket Club in September 1961 and lost the game by a few runs. Despite heavy studies, 35 enthusiastic cricketers participated in the early games last year.
KU Cricket Club Plans Games With Five Midwest Teams
The KU Cricket Club will open its season shortly after the second week of April.
The team has a mid-west record of scoring more than 200 runs against the Fort Leavenworth Cricket Club. The highest scorer was Gandhi, who made 100 runs and remained not out,
The outstanding batsmen are Gandhi, Lalit Kothari, Pravin Kothari; Ramesh Doshi, India; Nerurkar; Syed Ali Hassan, Hyderabad,India, freshman, and Ramesh Bhuta, Bombay, India.
Among the top bowlers of the team are Lalit Kothari; Subhash Nerurkar, Bombay, India, graduate student; Gandhi; Vinay Valia, Bombay, India; Niranjan Vora, Calcutta, India, sophomore, and Navin Sanghvi, Bombay, India, graduate student.
GUY DALBY, employee of the Maupintour Travel Agency, introduced the game with the able cooperation of the British Consulates. The necessary equipment was imported from Canada and the ground was made available to the team by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe at the east side of the Memorial Stadium
The team players included KU
faculty members, students and Lawrence citizens.
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Friday, April 19, 1963
University Daily Kansan
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Page 15
WELCOME TO THE K.U. RELAYS
Stop By Any of These Stations for Fast and Efficient Service
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Page 16
University Daily Kansan Friday, April 19.1963
WELCOME VISITORS, TO THE 38th ANNUAL KANSAS RELAYS
Friday, Saturday - April 19-20, 1963 Memorial Stadium, Lawrence, Kansas
★
Watch & Thrill to the performance of America's great track & field stars
★
MEMO:
Welcome Visitors,
The University of Kansas Athletic Department extends a hearty & cordial welcome to every High School, Jr. College, & College competitor who visit our campus this weekend.
We hope that each & every visitor will return again soon.
Cordially,
A. C. 'Dutch' Lonborg
Director of Athletics
KU
OPENING CEREMONIES Friday & Saturday, 1:25 p.m.
University, College & High School Finals on both Friday and Saturday.
Friday — General Admission ___ $1.00
High School & Grade ___ .50
Saturday — General Admission $1.50
High School & Grade .75
- ORDER TICKETS NOW -
KU Ticket Office, Allen Field House
SEE the Downtown Parade of Floats, Saturday, 10:00 a.m. and plan to attend the 43rd Annual Engineering Exposition Friday and Saturday.
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60th Year, No. 125
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Space Official Sees 1970 Moon Flight
Monday, April 22, 1963
America probably will have a man on the moon by 1970, a National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) official said here Saturday.
Joseph Shea, deputy director for systems of NASA's Office of Manned Space Flight, discussed Project Apollo at the Engineering Exposition dinner in the Kansas Union.
Shea said the space craft will be launched from a "vertical assembly building." He said the building will have 350 million cubic feet under its roof and will be the largest building in the world.
HE SAID THREE men will ride to the moon to study its geological structure. After landing, they will be able to spend about six or eight hours a day outside the craft.
During lunar exploration, the men can venture about one mile from the point of touchdown. They will prepare maps and return to Earth, Shea explained.
HE SAID THE trip to the moon will take about three days, but the return trip will take only two and one-half days. The craft probably will land on a continental land mass, rather than in the ocean.
"We have talked about the biggest and the best since the Soviets shocked us in 1957 by launching a satellite."
Shea said we have taken up the challenge, but he was disturbed to note that enrollment in engineering courses has steadily declined in recent years.
"WE MUST convince our young people that engineering is important," he said.
Shea's speech was a part of the 43rd annual Engineering Exposition. The two-day affair, held at Allen Field House, featured displays by the departments of the School of Engineering and Architecture. This year's theme was "Project Apollo."
The departments competed for three trophies, and the department of electrical engineering emerged with two of the awards. Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe made the presentations.
THE ACADEMIC display plaque went to the metallurgy and materials department. That display showed the history of metals and materials technology leading up to the Apollo project.
The electrical engineers demonstrated some of the problems involved in control of the spacecraft's motion.
Sigma Tau, honorary engineering fraternity, sponsored the trophy for best overall display. The other two trophies were awarded by the engineering council.
Pearson Takes Over in Canada
OTTAWA — (UPI) — Liberal leader Lester B. Pearson today became Canada's 14th Prime Minister promising he would acquire nuclear warheads for the nation's armed forces.
He pledged the "friendliest possible" relations with the United States.
The Nobel Peace Prize-winning diplomat, who will be 66 tomorrow, took the oath of office at the bedside of Governor-General George Vanier who is recovering from a minor heart attack.
WITH PEARSON were the members of the new Liberal cabinet which will manage the country's affairs in the days ahead. They too were sworn in by Vanier.
About 20 ministers were appointed during the mid-day ceremony. The key portfolios — foreign affairs, de-
(Continued on page 12)
Some cloudiness and considerably cooler temperatures are expected today and tonight, but little or no rain is predicted.
Weather
High temperatures were expected by noon today, the highs ranging from 75 to 80. The low tonight will be in the 40's.
Phi Beta Kappa Honors Go to 44 In Senior Class
Forty-four KU seniors have been elected to membership in Phi Beta Kappa, national honorary society in the liberal arts and sciences.
The 44, along with seven juniors announced last week, will be initiated before the annual banquet May 7.
THE PHI BETA KAPPA honors are held by only eight per cent of the senior class in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
The seniors honored by the KU Phi Beta Kappa chapter this spring are:
Thomas D. Beisecker, Topeka;
Carol Jean Betlock, Leoti; Larry L.
Blackman, Leavenworth; William
Breckenridge, Louisburg; Barbara
J. Brooks, Hays; Pamela F. Brown,
Suffern, N.Y.; Thelma Kruse Carney,
Carbondale; Harrie R. Clyde, Kansas City; James L. Devall, Overland Park; Roger B. Doudna, Baldwin.
MARSHA L. DUTTON, Colby;
Sondra Sue Ewald, Kansas City,
Mo.; Ronald D. Glotta, Liberal; Fred
K. Green, Prairie Village; Vern B.
Grimsley, Garden City; Marjorie
Ann Hoy, Kansas City; Carolyn
Ruth Hunnicott, Sabetha; Dixie L.
Laufman, McPherson; Warren D.
Keller, Winfield; Larry L. Laudan,
Shawnee Mission; John K. Letton,
Pittsburg; John R. Light, Lawrence;
John H. Magill, Shawnee Mission;
Susan F. McCalla, Lawrence; David
H. Michener, Lawrence; Sharon L.
Moore, Leavenworth; Dianne E.
Mullane, Oklahoma City; Jon David
Muller, Salina; John E. Neal,
Hutchinson; Linda Nelson, Kansas
City, Mo.
CHARLES E. PATTERSON, Rockford, Ill.; Charles S. Patterson, Shawnee Mission; Laird G. Patterson, Larned; Kenny Peterson, Topeka; Sara Pfeiffer, Parsons; Linda S. Power, Shawnee Mission; Christina Robinson, St. Mary's; Paul C. Schaich, Topeka; Martha E. Schwartz, Manhattan; Susan Shotliff, Kansas City, Mo. Joanne Kay Stover, Colby; Allan W. Wicker, Independence; (Marilyn) Sue Hardisty Worley, Salina; Catherine L. Zelif, Baldwin.
THE MEMORIAL
MISS LAWRENCE - Joannie Burger, Prairie Village sophomore, has been awarded the title of Miss Lawrence of 1963. She took this honor in the local pageant Friday night and will now go on to compete in the Miss Kansas contest which could eventually lead to the Miss America title.
Miss Lawrence Title To Sophomore Beauty
Miss Lawrence of 1963 was crowned Friday night by the outgoing Miss Lawrence, her sorority pledge daughter.
Joannie Burger, Prairie Village sophomore, won the title in the local pageant succeeding her pledge daughter, Mimi Frink, Lawrence freshman and Miss Lawrence of 1962.
MISS BURGER'S OFFICIAL duty as Miss Lawrence was to take part in the Kansas Relays parade Saturday morning.
Her most important role will come as the representative of Lawrence in the Miss Kansas contest June 6-7 in Pratt which could lead to the Miss America Pageant.
Miss Burger is an auburn-haired, blue-eyed art major who displayed and discussed five of her original paintings as her talent presentation.
MARY TODD, ARKANSAS CITY junior, and Peggy Dewey, Bethel sophomore, were first and second runners-up respectively. *Mias Lawrence received a $100 scholarship and the two runners-
up were given $30 scholarships by the Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co. Other finalists were Sherry Wickliff, Mission senior, and Elaine Milett, Lawrence High School senior.
THIS IS THE EIGHTH year for the Miss Lawrence contest, which is sponsored by the Lawrence Junior Chamber of Commerce. Two Miss Lawrence winners have gone on to win the Miss Kansas title.
Contest chairman Tom Kumpf said he is extremely optimistic about Miss Burger's chances in the Miss Kansas contest.
"We really think we have a Miss Kansas winner," he said.
Civil Rights Groups Promote Equality
(This is the first in a four-part series on local and campus civil rights groups.)
By Jackie Helstrom
"I, as a white man, owe it to the Negro to help him in his fight for equality, because it is my race that is discriminating."
They want to help improve the situation of the Negro, and through their efforts steps have been taken toward this goal in Lawrence during the last thirty years.
This is the justification many civil rights workers give for their interest in the area.
In the 1930's Negro students going to the University of Kansas had almost everything but the classrooms closed to them. They were allowed to sit in only one booth in the Hawk's Nest in the Kansas Union, and they were denied access to the gymnasium.
BY 1850, THE University was completely integrated, but Negro
students were still discriminated against in Lawrence restaurants, theaters, barbershops, rooming houses and taverns.
it was to open these areas that the activities of a series of campus and Lawrence civil rights groups, founded in the '50's and '60's, have been directed.
The Lawrence League for the Practice of Democracy was the earliest of these groups. It was founded in 1945 and is in operation today with a large membership of Lawrence citizens.
Its purpose is "to foster and encourage by whatever means possible, the actual practice of the declared American principles of democracy, justice, and complete equality of opportunity, with particular emphasis upon better interracial understanding, cooperation, and good will, since it is in this field that those principles are at present most frequently violated."
ONE OF THE BIGGEST steps the
group took was to establish and maintain an integrated nursery school for Lawrence children.
League members have also tried to promote better housing and recreational facilities for Negroes, especially a desegregated, public Lawrence swimming pool. They have worked for civil rights legislation and for the integration of Lawrence business places.
According to the LLPD, there are at least two approaches which a civil rights group is able to take in attempting to eliminate discrimination. First, it can sponsor public education through meetings and clinics. The group tries to inform people with the facts of successful non-discrimination. Second, it tries to take direct action in discrimination cases to bring about a change in policy and practice.
During the '50's three campus civil rights groups were organized which disappeared quickly.
IN 1950 SOME students tried to
organize a Civil Rights Co-ordinating Committee consisting of representatives from all campus organizations. The committee was to act as an educational and investigating committee to study racial discrimination on campus.
The group never got off its feet. The organization movement began in March 1950, but the group was not on campus the following fall semester.
Two other groups which came in 1953 and 1957 were founded primarily to fight discrimination in local restaurants and movie theaters.
The Jayhawk Brotherhood was founded in 1953 "to fight discrimination as it relates to students, and to promote better University spirit by eliminating color barriers, especially the segregation problem in downtown restaurants and theaters."
IT CONDUCTED a survey of student attitudes on discrimination and found that three out of four University students favored serving and
seating Negros in restaurants and theaters.
When it found that only five of the 38 Lawrence restaurants would serve Negroes it tried to eliminate this discrimination. The organization sponsored "Operation Appreciation," a project to sell mealtickets to a restaurant which began serving Negros during their campaign, and the proposal that the University sponsor a non-discriminatory restaurant.
During the operation of Jayhawk Brotherhood, downtown theaters eliminated the practice of segregated seating.
In 1957, the Group for the Improvement of Human Relations tried to persuade Lawrence restaurant owners to desegregate.
They sent groups of Negro and white students into downtown and campus restaurants.
Before this group disappeared,
most of the problems with segregated
(Continued on page 12)
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Monday, April 22, 1963
It's Hot in The Kitchen
It was my pleasure to attend the All Student Council meeting last week when the new student body president, vice-president and council members were sworn in.
As is traditional, outgoing members with words of wisdom were invited to speak. Two members did; Dean Salter, council chairman, and Raib Malik, a graduate foreign student.
SALTER RECOMMENDED that the council concentrate on dealing with matters that directly affect KU students. He suggests this as the best way for the council to become consequential in the students' lives.
Malik expressed a feeling of frustration—free from rancor or bitterness—over the attitudes displayed by the old council in regard to considerations of human relations. Malik said he is forced to assume, that from past council positions, the members believe either that there are no problems of human relations at KU, or that all the problems have been solved. Either assumption, Malik said, is inaccurate.
With the good intentions which always exist at times of inaugurals, it would have been easy to feel that a new avenue of council action for the future had been blazed.
BUT IN REFLECTION, the weight of history makes such an assumption unrealistic.
This aura of good intentions is quickly destroyed by recalling what happened during the business meeting before the swearing in of new officers and members.
The council was concerned with the procedure used to appoint the 150-odd members and chairmen to ASC committees. One group wanted to lessen the power of the student body president to appoint; another group felt the proposed change to committee recommendation would prove cumbersome.
THE DECISION made (old system retained) is less important than the very nature of the question. The council consumed its interests on a matter which clearly demonstrated partisan motivation—by both sides.
Both Salter and Malik expressed ideas which could make the All Student Council something more than the end result of machinations by campus political organizations. But again looking to past performances, the ASC of present likely will follow the pattern of partisan idioce.
And that, in part, explains why students care as little as they do about the business of student government.
JERRY DICKSON, outgoing student body president, had a closing statement which reflects another malady which afflicts the council. He displayed a sensitively thin skin, especially for a man who aspires to real-life political pursuits.
Dickson reminded the council that the University Daily Kansan is, constitutionally, a committee extension of the council.
After letting this delicious consideration settle through the room, he hastily added that he was not advocating censorship of the Kansan, but the message was clear:
The Kansan and its hotrod editors can be knocked down a notch.
AFTER THE MEETING, Dickson was asked what, specifically, was on his mind. He suggested that it is far simpler to sit down at a typewriter and criticize than to try to do something constructive. He is so right.
Pressed further for specific causes of complaint, he mentioned an editorial printed first semester which suggests that the student body president apparently has nothing better to do than run around in a white shirt and tie.
Dickson feels this is not a very meaningful criticism, and just as well could have been done without. Dickson is right. It was not a positive criticism, and doubtlessly more than a little unfair.
While it may be presumptuous and irresponsible to do so, I have a word of wisdom for Dickson. He cannot publicly criticize (even irresponsible Kansan editors) and expect it to be confined to his favorite battleground.
BUT GIVEN THE nature of editorial writers and their guaranteed privilege to comment on and criticize public officials, Dickson could do well to heed the advice of Harry Truman: "If you can't stand the heat, get out of the kitchen."
Then after having aired his views on the irresponsibility displayed on the Kansan's editorial page, he conjectured that his parting shot was "off the record."
IF THIS SEEMS to have an air of vindictiveness toward Dickson, so be it. If he doesn't know it by now, he should soon learn that as an elected, public official, he has chosen a limelit path not famous for bringing its travelers words of adulation from the press.
No one forced him to run for student body president. The man on the street faces no such criticism by "irresponsible" editors. Nor any of the enjoyable limelight. The facts are that you can't have the limelight without the criticism.
To return to the new ASC for a moment, here is another bit of unwelcome advice. Whatever you do as council members is likely to draw fire. But you stepped onto the battleground of your own free will.
DICKSON (AND OTHERS) displayed a displeasure with other positions and opinions expressed on the editorial page of the Kansan. The Wichita University issue was such an instance. It has been suggested that Kansan editorial position was harmful to the welfare of KU.
What Dickson must want the Kansan to do is fall in love with whatever may be his point of view. It is not surprising that Dickson felt no compulsion to criticize the Kansan when it decided to back him for student body president.
Well, that's how it goes; you win a few and lose a few. It is the same for the editors of the Kansan. If you doubt it, check the letters to the editor. I will pay a dollar for each word of praise from readers if Dickson will pay a nickel for each word of abuse. I will even leave out the words of "unfair" criticism.
— Terry Murphy
BOOK REVIEWS
A HISTORY OF SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, by R. J. Forbes and E. J. Dijksterhuis (Pelican, two volumes, $1.25 each).
From the beginning of Greek science to the coming of modern industrial chemistry, these two Dutch professors of the history of science—R. J. Forbes and E. J. Dijksterhuis—have written a readable history that for the most part can be understood by the layman. Their approach is not social, not concerned with the ultimate impact of science and technology on society but with science and technology in a pure sense.
The first volume actually starts before the Greeks, showing how man in his most primitive state was experimenting and becoming interested in what he saw about him and what it might mean. The authors treat Greek and Roman engineering and technology, the rise of astrology and alchemy, science in the Middle Ages, the developments of medieval technology, the impact of Galileo, Descartes and Huygens on physics, and the significance of Newton.
In the second volume they treat post-Newton developments, strides in heat and sound, the coming of steam and new developments in astronomy, magnetism and electricity, steel, and recent developments in chemistry.
AMERICAN HERITAGE, April 1963, $3.95.
Though his presidency was perhaps the nation's most undistinguished, Warren G. Harding remains a subject of fruitful and disturbing historical research. The new American Heritage gives consideration to four unsolved mysteries of Harding's regime.
These are: (1) did Harding have Negro ancestors, as has been frequently suggested; (2) did he have an illegitimate daughter by a woman in Marion, Ohio; (3) did he die of a coronary attack, commit suicide, or was he murdered; (4) why did Mrs. Harding burn all that she could find of her husband's correspondence?
These are other articles in the new issue: "Doctors of the Frontier," concentrating on men who saved lives in the wilderness; "Eighth Wonder of Erastus Field," about a fantastic dream building by the New England primitive artist; "The Man Who Stopped the Rams," story of efforts to block the Confederacy on the sea; "The Saloon," a retrospective piece on the forerunner of the "bar" and "cocktail lounge"; "Pater Patriae as Pater Familias," dealing with Washington as father.
"Faces from the Past," a sketch about George Francis Train, a spectacular failure who tried to become president; "My Dear Selous," correspondence between Theodore Roosevelt and a British big game hunter; "Carl Bodmer's Unspoiled West," article with portfolio of pictures by Swiss artist; "Digging Up Jamestown," concerning archaeological findings in our own country.
* *
THE WORLD OF LINCOLN STEFFENS, edited by Ella Winter and Herbert Shapiro (American Century, $2.45).
Lincoln Steffens was the greatest of our muckrakers, but he also was a writer who participated in and covered many world revolutions. This anthology has a wide variety of writings by Steffens.
The editors have selected, for example, "Moses in Red," which treats the revolt of Israel in Biblical times as a typical political and social revolution. This has never been published. Also included are several fables, which Steffens wrote to express his then-controversial ideas.
Ella Winter, incidentally, is Steffen's widow. She and her collaborator deal here with the Mexican revolution, the Russian revolution, Steffen's reflections on fatherhood, the depression, lynchings, and sketches of such people as John Reed, Robinson Jeffers, Harry Bridges, Fremont Older, Lenin and Clarence Darrow.
* *
THE ART OF LOVING, by Erich Fromm (Bantam, 60 cents)—a famous work by one of the most thoughtful psychoanalysts of today. Fromm discusses how to overcome the fear of love, how to use love to conquer shame and anxiety, how to use love to release hidden potentialities, and how to make love an exciting and exhilarating experience.
Progress Comes Slowly and Unsteadily in Peru
By Terry Ostmever
The rise of Peru socially and economically has been a slow and tedious accomplishment, one that has been more frustrating than satisfying.
Being a typical South American country, Peru has seen many governments and cultural institutions come and go for hundreds of years. Many have been good, with able leaders, but each has fallen or merely ceased to exist and each time social and economic depression has returned to Peru.
SOCIAL IMPROVEMENT has always been a troublesome struggle for Peru, while economic development has had its ups and downs, mainly because it follows the governmental trend in the country.
Once, from 1845 to 1879, the internal institutions in Peru remained fairly stable, thanks to a strong military rule by Ramon Castilla. This internal strength was shaken somewhat following Castilla's retirement and the beginning
The social and economic setbacks resulting from this war lasted well into the 20th century and it was not until the administrations of Augusto Leguia in the 1920's that Peru underwent deep-felt economic changes.
SOCIAL IMPROVEMENT was faintly detectable at this time, but it did make some strides from 1930 on. Still, major changes in the Peruvian social foundation were hindered during the first half of the century by a rash of constitutional changes or new constitutions altogether.
of the Spanish war, yet it survived until its collapse during the War of the Pacific (1879-1883).
Internal strife is still evident in Peru occasionally, as it is throughout the continent, but in the last few decades the social and economical path in Peru has led steadily uphill.
A land of desert, mountains, and jungles, Peru has a population that varies according to economic, social, and cultural levels, and the part of the country inhabited. The country's populations is around nine million, a fourth of which is white, and another 450,000 consisting of jungle tribes.
THE WHITES and the mestizo live along the coast and among the
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cities of the Sierra and the Montana. They speak Spanish, are profoundly Roman Catholic, and the political, economic, cultural, and military power of Peru is theirs.
The Indian inhabitants of the Sierrra, mainly the Quechua and the Aymara, are only in part incorporated in the Western culture. Many of these people still live within their own cultural patterns, which is a modern form of a primitive type of social and family organization called the "ayllu."
ECONOMICALLY, AGRICULTural and mineral production have always led the way in Peru. In recent years forestry and fishing have become increasingly important industries, as has manufacturing.
The Peruvian economy has expanded greatly since the war, a trend which actually began in 1930. The
Since World War II, Peru has engaged in a great deal of trade with the United States to go along with an already large volume of trade with European countries.
national budget has increased considerably in past years, along with a decline in the foreign debt.
Peru's current economic problem, however, is rising public debt, which has been directly proportionate to the decrease in foreign spending. The country has devoted much of its funds to the deletion of the foreign debt and this is possibly the reason for only periodic services concerning the internal debt.
A L
TODAY PERU has made giant strides in transportation and communication facilities, such as highways, airlines, and shipping. A continued rise in electric power also has spread through the country.
The development of Peru economically has been steady, but socially the country is still struggling to overcome its remoteness and internal problems. The need for a stable government to direct and improve the Peruvian social order has at times been on the verge of fulfillment. Continued progress is gradually showing the way.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5.
Page 3
Anarchy if Court Declines Law Day Speaker Warns
The U.S. Supreme Court must retain final jurisdiction if there is to be supreme law in the United States, a U.S. district court judge said here Saturday night.
John W. Oliver, judge of the Western District Court of Missouri, speaking at the annual Law Day dinner in the Kansas Union, said anarchy will follow if the Constitution is not protected.
JUDGE OLIVER called the 175 year-old constitutional form of government in the United States an experiment.
The judge, who lives in Kansas City, Mo., discussed the conflict between state and federal powers in connection with the Constitution's "supremacy clauses," which sets forth the Constitution as the supreme law of the land.
"No branch of government and no institution under the Constitution has sustained more continuous attack or reached its present position after more vigorous opposition than the Supreme Court." Judge Oliver said.
BUT, THE DISTRICT court judge added, the Supreme Court has withstood this criticism in a remarkable manner, the Court usually emerging from the criticism in a favorable position.
James K. Logan, dean of the KU Law School mentioned several new plans in his "State of the Law School Address." Dean Logan said plans are being made for a senior thesis, a proposed change in the
graduation requirements and a change in the Law School's grading system.
Another plan calls for the establishment of a Master of Comparative Law degree for foreign students who earn their L.L.B. degree here,
--make it, he added.
THE DINNER was the final event in the Law Day program. Earlier in the day, a moot court session was held in the courtroom of Green Hall.
Winners of the James Barclay Smith Moot Court Competition are Tom Triplett, St. Joseph, Mo., first place; Harry Craig, Lawrence, second, and Ed Collister, Lawrence, third. All are second-year students who will compete in national moot court competition next fall.
Aubrey C. Linville and Robert R. Crawford, both of Salina, received the Order of the Coif, an award given to two men selected from the ten 10 per cent of the class.
Linville, a mid-term graduate, also received the C. C. Stewart $100 award and the Lawyers Title Insurance Corp. of Richmond, Va., $100 award.
CRAWFORD ALSO received a third place prize in Law Review case note competition.
Other awards presented at the dinner were:
Petefish and Postma $100 scholarships — Robert J. Lewis, Atwood and Jerry G. Elliott, Lawrence.
William L. Burdick $75 prize given to the outstanding first-year students for 1961-62 — Lewis and David E. Engdahl. Mission.
Nathan Burkan Memorial Competition $250 award — Stephen M. Blaes. Wichita third-year student.
ROCKY MOUNTAIN Mineral Law Foundation $200 scholarship Robert L. Driscoll, Lawrence.
Phi Alpha Delta legal fraternity $250 scholarships — Stephen M. Blaes, Lawrence third-year student, and Gerald T. Elliott, Geneva, Ill., third-year student.
Law Review awards for outstanding case notes — David Mills, Arkansas City third-year student; Richard Gilbert, Los Angeles, a former student; Michael T. Mills, McPherson mid-year graduate.
Law Review case comment awards C. Jepson Garland, Wellington, a 1962 graduate; Driscoll, and Lynn L. Anderson, Atwood second-year student.
ADIE HAYER $150 award for an El Dorado High School graduate in law or medicine — Ralph M. Metcalf, El Dorado first-year student. Sophia Lauterbach $500 fellowship for Thomas County residents in graduate work — Leon E. Roulier, Colby second-year student.
Other general scholarships — George D. Blackwood, Springfield Mo., first-year student; Allen J. Fanning, Shawnee Mission first-year; Terry L. Bullock, Wilsey second-year; Edward M. Boyle, Shawnee Mission first-year; James L. Crabtree, Ranson first-year; Thomas C. Clark, Kansas City second-year; Robert E. Williams, Canton, Ill., second-year; Charles A. Chartier, Clyde third-year; Kenneth Graham, McIntyre, Livonia, Mich., third-year, and Blaes, Discoll, David Mills, Crawford, Engdahl, Linville and Jerry Elliott.
Russian Education Fails To Impress British Scholar
Prof. Wren, medieval literature scholar from Oxford University, said Russian education rides mainly on the strength of tradition and patriotism.
Education in Russia is rigidly disciplined and time-consuming, but not very impressive, according to Charles L. Wren, a visiting professor from England who spoke at the Faculty Club dinner yesterday.
Prof. Wren visited Russia a few years ago. He said the academies were the best educational institutions in Russia.
"All high quality research work is done in these institutions."
The Russian universities didn't impress Wren quite as much. "The universities are really doing very much the same as junior colleges in America, but in five years instead of two," he said.
The curriculum in Russian universities is all the same, the professor said.
Five years is required to obtain the first degree, the first four being mainly a study of the major and minor compulsory sciences. Two of these years are often merely high school work. Prof. Wren said.
At the end of the five years the Russian student gets his diploma, and if he is selected for academy work he will go in as an aspirant for the "candidate."
A "candidate" is comparable to a Ph.D. from a lesser American university and usually takes from three to six years to attain. Very few
In the fifth year, the student writes a dissertation of his own choice.
Portraits of Distinction
Portraits of Distinction
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
摄影
He said the student is sent to wherever a shortage is. There he stays for at least three years.
"Clearly the idea of the search for truth or the development of personality could not flourish," the professor said. "Still, much flexibility an spontaneity exists among these students."
Prof. Wren said there is some coeducation in Russia. He said many times men and women share the same overcrowded halls, but not rooms, of course.
University Daily Kansan
He said Russian graduate study includes quite a bit of literature, including American works. The
main problem, the professor said, is too much limitation on what the students can read and it is hard for them to get a clear picture of many literary greats.
American influence is steadily rising in the Russian universities, especially in Moscow, he said.
"The Russian students, like any others, tend to show adolescence and one form is being ultra-American."
The word "education" to the Russians means "shaping of the minds," which, he said, is based on the belief that human nature can be manipulated.
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Monday. April 22.1963
A KU woman has been transferred to St. Luke's Hospital in Kansas City as the result of an automobile accident about 12:15 Saturday on the Lakeview Road about five miles northwest of Lawrence.
Two other persons were hospitalized in Watkins Hospital, and another was treated and released.
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The four were hit by a car driven by John K. Letton, Pittsburg senior.
Accident Victim Taken to K.C.
TRANSFERRED TO St. Luke's was Cindy Heinz, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore. She suffered a fractured thigh.
Dinner, Honors Night Planned for Women
The Associated Women Students' annual observation of All Women's Day will begin April 24 with an exchange dinner among organized women's living groups.
Hospitalized were: Nancy Dodge, Salina junior, fractured ankle, and
The activities will continue through the evening of April 29 Honors Night—when the outstanding women on campus will be honored for their contributions to women's activities.
The exchange dinner will be during the regular dinner hours of each living group.
Foreign women students participating in People-to-People and members of the People-to-People Big Sister program also have been invited.
Jim Hubbard, Cedar Vale junior, fracture of left leg and concussion. Treated and released was Keith Hibbard, Kansas ity, Mo., sophomore, ankle injury.
UNDERSHERIFF Rex Johnson said the four were in a group of 10 to 12 students who were standing on the road near their car. The Letton car came around the curve and hit the students and the parked vehicle.
Damage to Letton's car was estimated at $225, and to the parked car, $100. No arrests have been made.
JIM'S CAFE
838 Mass.
About 15 minutes earlier, a car driven by Arthur M. Lucas, Leavenworth freshman, missed the same curve and left the road and overturned. Lucas and his passenger, Charlene Edmundson, 434 St., suffered bruises but did not require treatment.
OPEN
24 hrs. a day
BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY
Attention All Students!
— This is your chance —
STUDENT ART
exhibit of
PAINTINGS and PRINTS
All entries must be submitted April 22 and 23 in Crafts room of the Union. Judges will be Mr. and Mrs. William Howell of Kansas City "Little Gallery Art Shop" and Mrs. Charles Buckwalter, Friends of Art Nelson Gallery. Show will be up May 1 to 17 in Union. Entries may be placed for sale if artist desires.
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Monday, April 22,1963
2926915
2460761
63 KI
ATTENTION
SENIORS
The Senior Class Spring Coffee and Business meeting will be held
TUESDAY, APRIL 23
at 9:30 A.M. in the
KANSAS UNION BALLROOM
Topics to be discussed: Senior gift presentation; HOPE Award;
Graduation procedures,
and
other matters
with
respect to graduation
ALL SENIORS WILL BE EXCUSED FROM CLASSES.
SENIOR CLASS T.G.I.F. PARTY
Big Barn Friday, April 26 Starts at 4:00 p.m.
Monday, April 22, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Cuba Releases Last Americans From Prisons
DONOVAN AND the Castro government disclosed no details of the Americans' departure, but the Swiss Embassy, which handles U.S. affairs in Cuba, said the group would leave this morning aboard the chartered plane which brought Donovan to Cuba Saturday along with 15,400 pounds of ransom goods.
HAVANA — (UPI) — The last 27 Americans imprisoned in Cuba prepared for a "freedom flight" to the United States today.
New York attorney James B. Donovan, who negotiated the release of the Americans, said his year-long mission in behalf of prisoners and Cuban refugees had been accomplished.
DONOVAN BEGAN talks for the release of the Americans after he successfully negotiated the freedom of the 1,113 captured Bay of Pigs invaders for a ransom of $53 million in food and medicine, collected by the American Red Cross.
DONOVAN BLASTED "groundless speculation by certain elements in the press" that his mission formed part of a deal between the U.S. and Cuban governments involving secret U.S. commitments.
THE LAWYER said 1,000 more refugees will come to the United States later this week, possibly Wednesday, bringing to more than 5,000 the total number of Cubans and Americans permitted to leave Cuba.
"It involves no further pledges of drugs, medicines or baby food to the Cuban people." Donovan said in a telegram sent to his New York office.
"It has been understood from the commencement of the mission that I would be wholly unauthorized to represent any United States position in that area," he said in the statements.
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
WE HAVE
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Check Your Numbers
Tempest Winners...Lap 3!
Gary L. Lewis U.of San Fran.
John V. Erhart Loras College
A. M. 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.
PETER HARVEY
Byron D. Groff Penn State
D. B. MacRitchie U.of Michigan
M. A. S. NABANAL
J. L. Millard, Jr.
Ft. Hays State
1937
J. O. Gallegos, III U. of New Mexico
N.T.G. Rosania S.
Kansas State
James W. Todd Valparaiso U. (Staff)
104
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Justin C. Burns St. Bonaventure U.
MARK HOPKINS
Edward R. Wassel Clarkson College
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G. J. Tamalivich Worcester Poly (Staff)
104
Ancil K. Nance Portland State
P. S. Holder, Jr.
St. Mary's U.
Did you win in Lap 4?
IMPORTANT! If you hold any of the 20 winning numbers, claim your Pontiac Tempest LeMans Convertible in accordance with the rules on the reverse of your license plate. Girls! You may choose instead a thrilling expense-paid 2-week Holiday in Europe-for two! Plus $500 in cash!
All claims for Tempests and Consolation Prizes must be sent via registered mail, postmarked by April 27, 1963 and received by the judges no later than April 29, 1963.
If you hold a Consolation Prize number, you win a 4-speed Portable Hi-Fi Stereo Set, "The Waltz" by RCA Victor. Or, you may still win a Tempest! (See official claiming rules on reverse of your license plate, and observe claiming dates given above.)
LAP 4...
20 WINNING NUMBERS!
25 CONSOLATION PRIZES TOO!
1. D328872 | 6. A818471 | 11. C191819 | 16. A112433
2. B552083 | 7. C175380 | 12. A078603 | 17. A337477
3. B631155 | 8. A131483 | 13. D215452 | 18. C467893
4. D148138 | 9. C702472 | 14. A609159 | 19. B911494
5. C591755 | 10. A909791 | 15. C613177 | 20. B482160
CONSOLATION PRIZE NUMBERS!
1. B381031 6. A139564 11. C527240 16. A237594 21. B402208
2. A260110 7. C373057 12. D799966 17. A127588 22. B792561
3. A681037 8. A713453 13. B335471 18. B686223 23. B145355
4. B746597 9. C831403 14. C339395 19. B521492 24. C402919
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Monday, April 22, 1963
Shopping Spree for Class Gift Is Far-Flung and Successful
When purchasing a gift, most people go to the nearest shopping area to select it. But not Marilyn Stokstad, associate professor of art history and acting director of the KU Art Museum.
She left for London two hours after teaching her last class on the Friday before spring vacation, and arrived at 8 a.m. the next day in order to select the '63 class gift for the University.
PROF. STOKSTAD shopping in all the silver dealers' shops in London, and compared their pieces with the pieces in the Victoria and Albert Museum. Further, she consulted with the museum's curators on the selection of the coffee service which is to be the gift.
"The Victoria and Albert Museum is the finest museum of decorative arts in the world and the official repository for the finest specimens of decorative art in England," Prof. Stokstad said.
The coffee service, which will be placed in the decorative arts gallery, and then used for the KU Art Museum's receptions, was finally selected.
THE COFFEE URN was made in London in 1787 by Daniel Smith and Robert Sharp, who were first mentioned in 1763 and worked in London during the 18th century. The urn is completely hall marked with the head of King George as it appeared in 1784, meaning that the duty has been paid. This mark is also indicative of fine silver.
The urn is marked with the date letter for London of 1787 (an M), the crowned leopard's head which is the London mark, the lion indicative of sterling silver and the maker's mark, DS-RS.
The sugar basin also was made of sterling silver in London in 1791. However, that piece has been polished so often that the maker's mark is not clear enough to read.
The rest of the hall mark is clear, so it is London silver of 1791.
THE SENIOR CLASS gift fund did not cover the complete cost of the three pieces. The Art Museum will contribute enough to make the acquisition possible.
Applications for senior class committees and representatives from living groups are now available.
Senior Committees Applications Opened
Jerry Pullins, Council Grove junior and next year's senior class president said applications will be sent to all organized houses by tomorrow. Copies may also be picked up at the Alumni office, 127 Strong. The deadline for turning the applications in to the Alumni office is next Monday, April 29.
Applicants will have their first, second, and third choice among 12 committees. They are Publicity, Gift, HOPE Award, Calendar, Special Events, Secretarial, Regalia (including sweatshirts), Invitations, Rings, Senior Day and Picnic, and Senior Breakfast.
went into partnership with John Eames also of London.
READ and USE THE WANT ADS
The three pieces which are being shipped air freight will be here in time for Commencement activities.
The cream pitcher which is called a jug was made in London of sterling silver by Henry Chawner in 1791. Chawner worked in London between 1786 and 1796 when he
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That's a big order from Pittacus! But your opportunity in a career may be less obscure than you realize.
If you have initiative and imagination,you should investigate the opportunities in life insurance sales and sales management.
Know Your Opportunity- Pittacus
Take the time now to phone, or stop by and talk with the head of our college unit about the advantages of being in the life insurance business.
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24
Monday, April 22,1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
English Proficiency Results —
Did You-or Didn't You?
If you are a transfer student...
If you are in liberal arts, business, education, fine arts, journalism, nursing, architecture, or architectural engineering . . .
UNLESS YOU MADE an A or B in English 1H and 2H, an A in English 1 and an A or B in English 2H, or A's in both English 1 and 2 . . .
There is no escape.
For 188 this spring, for 205 last fall, for 129 the spring before and the many who went before . . .
Requiescat in pacem.
Paul A. Acevedo, Cheryl Sue Adams,
Ronald G. Albertson, Ragene F. Aldrich,
Arthur A. Allen II, Caroline A.
Alberni, E.A. Abbrow, E.A. Blankrook, Janet
A. Alvey, Stanley G. Andeel, James E.
Anderson, John Dillon Anderson, John W.
Anderson, June Linda Anderson, Joan
Anderson, Brian M. Bancroft,
Ford Arnold, Daniel D. Ashbaugh, Henry H.
Asher, Richard Dean Babcock, Rebecca
Baker, Richard Henry Baker, John M.
Balluus, Richard H. Barnes, Eugene
Barnart;
Ben Haines Barteldes, David B. Bartlett, Barbara L. Bauman, George M. Baynes, R. Arthur Beauty, Gerald R. Bell, Marilyn Gay Belton, Laurence E. Beender, Richard A. Berjes, Charles C. Benson Jr., Jane; Andre, Emmanuel; Ben R. Bersens, Pamela Berglund, Patricia Berns, Thomas Doley Berry, Ronald Francis Best, Ann Kennon Binford, Welten Kai Blank, Johene W. Blair, Kay Kai Blank, Jolene S. Bluejacket, Linda Dian Blum;
James William Bodin, Cathy Jo Bohling, James Ray Bolick, James Dennis Bono, Linda Lea Borden, Robert E. Borton Jr., Donald W. Botkin, Charles A. Boudreau, Curtis B. Bowen Jr., Robert J. Johnson, D. Bowersock, William A. Bowersox, Ronnie L. Boyd, Sherry Jo Boyer, Jane L. Boyington, Don Eugene Bozich, William S. Bradbury, Jack Morgan Brady, Ruth K. Bramble, Shirley Ann Branning, Roger W. Brammell, Eva Ma Burrell, Barbara Ann Bremer, Kathryn Brickner;
Marshall H. W. Brier, Dorothy Ann Brooks, Jerry B. Brown, Bernard C. Smith, Mark S. Warren, Bunn, Paul Edward Burch, Lawanda B. Burkett, Robert J. Burkart, Eleman M. Burkhead, John D. Burlington, Leane P. Bradley, Richard rick M. Cahill, Catherine J. Cameron, Donald John Carlson, Kenneth Q. Carlson, Paul Douglas Carlson, James Herbert Carson, David Carson, Linda Kay Cash, David H. Cassell, Lorene G. Castle, Nathan H. Castle;
Hoite C. Caston, Robert Heaton Cathey, Mary Jo Cecrel, James Rox Clark, Mary J. Coelebrig, Charles K. Constance Clendenin, Lee J. Clevergen, Phyllis Clybourn, Constance M Coberly, Catherine Ann Coles, Barbara E Colerick, Richard A. Brennan, Linda Coverside, Elizabeth L. Cooper, Susan Gay Cooper, Wayne Maurice Cooper, Kenneth J. Costich, Marcia Ann Cowles, Jert Burton Craig, John William Crowell, David L. Clark L. Croghan, William Seldon Crow;
Avis A. Crown, Pat L. Carlson, Davan
Philip Lee Currer, Aletha E. Curtis, M.
Philip Lee Currer, Aletha E. Curtis, M.
chael Dachenhausen, Margaret A. Dalley,
John K.丹enambarger, Wilfred D. Danielson,
James C.丹darmold, Sherry E. Dart,
Charles W.丹darmold, John S. James
Shook Davis, Thomas W. Deaver,
Wilfred Leo Delvla, Linda Louise Dennis,
Larry Gwen Denny, Emil Depterio
Charles Wren Denny, Gary Dean Dicke-
lary Mary E. Diefke, Wayne Dylan,
Daphne W. Donnell;
William R. Dotson, Roger B. Dounda,
Helen L. Dreesley, Wesley Scott Dreyer,
Donald D. Dugan, John David Duncan,
Daniel Edward Dune, Betty Ellen Dwyver,
Jonathan L. Sears, N.E. Jonas,
Charlene Edmondson, John Joseph Egan, Diane Ellen Elliott, Giles Michelle Elmore, Julianne Engelmann, Dorothy Mae Englert, James B. English, Dan Milton Epp, Janet Sue Epperson,
Erickson, Jacalyn Ann Erickson, Judith L. Erskine, Howard W. Westes, Margaret T. Estes;
Anne Ellen Hart, Linda Gall Horn, David G. Hattan, DW W. Hatton, Thomas Hawthorne, Shaun Hepp, Los Anno Hepp, Mariann Herdon, Susan J. Hildred, Jhiddt Anne Hill, Frederick C. Hiller, Judy Lee Hineman, William M. Hines, T. D. Hoffner, T. D. Hoffner, Paul Edwin Holt, Rodney Ray Horn, John R. Hormung, Richard A. Houldain, Deborah Houssouw, Damnye M. Hudpins, Judy K. Houssouw, Janet Joy Hunter, Karen L. Husted;
Mary Ka Estes. Merrill Etzenhouser, Daniel契斯 Fair, Larry Kent Fairchild, John Leen FAirhurst, Gloria Gene Farabi, Gail Donna Ferguson, John Mack Fields Janice Gwen B. Flachsbarth, Dorothy Fleckenstein, Maryce Anne Fleming, John William Florin, Mary Catherine Foard, George L. Forman, John Edward Foulston, Harold Wayne Fraser, Arilte Ann Frazee, John Griswold, Michaelandra Sandra Kaw Frere, Miriam J Funk, Verna Jen Fusco, Martha Harrison Gage;
Douglas, Sannon Gale. William G. Galinaitis, Rosemary Galloway, Elizabeth Galton, Donald Mulligan, Warren George, Gene Richard George, William Don Georges, James R. Gerhardt, Terry J. Gierlich, Patrick Green, Paul Gilliam, Gilliam J. Joan Arlene Gilson, James S. Gooding Jr., Karen J. Goodwin, Clarence W. Gould III, Donna Jean Gould, David Green, Steve Green, Floyd Shovel, Patricia Green, Mary Jean Grimshaw, Patricia Ann Grubbs, Vince Gurera;
Jo Eileen Gyulay, Stephen C. Hagen,
Lesley Ann Haragood, Thomas Lee Hauler,
Gerald Lee Hall, James Coleman Hall,
Lynn Lamar Hall, Winona Ellen Hall,
John Arthur Haller, Shirley Ann Haller,
Hamill Hamill, David Hamilton, Sharon Ann
Hand, Janice E. Handy, Rebecca M.
Hanks, Barry M. Hannatty, John C. H.
Hankins, Joel P. Harper, Russell
Harms, Jerry Lee Harper, Harriet
Harris, Philip D. Harrison;
Barbara Anne Huston, Gary Mark Hutton, Kay Victoria Irving, William M. Wittmann, Kary Margaret, David A. Jeter, Arthur T. Jackson, Margaret A. Jeter, Arthur T. Johnson, Janet Marie Johnson, Leah Dale Johnson, Michael S. Johnson, Roger L. Johnson, Jeffrey F. Frederick H. Jones, Robert Alan Jones, Stanley Owen Jones, Robert Murder Kane, Herbert L. Kelley, Ted Gorshak, Donald Kenny, John Otis Killeg, Joseph S. Kilnoski, Delbert L. Kilogz
Joni Miller Kimsey, Carroll B, Kincale,
Martha Kay Kipp, David Alva Kirkman,
William C. Kitch, Diane Kay Klassen,
Katharine A. Klaus, Judith Ann Klein-
berg, Joy Dorothy Kline, Mollie V. Kohlmann, Donna J. Kopseng, Terry A. Kovac, Diane E. Kramos, Peggy Ann Kratzer, Russell D. Kunz, John Lewis Kurtz, Lewis Warren Labadie, Raymond Lank, Lewis Emery, Linda Lee Larson, Barbara A. Laskowski, Sharon Elaine Law;
Nancy Pat Lawson, Joyce E. Leasure,
Quinita Marcelella Lee, Marlyn K. Lehew,
Carolyn K. Lehew, Amanda L. Lewis,
Vernon Parker Lessig, Inda Kay Lewis,
Verna Lee Lewis, Gerald Damon Loch,
Carolyn Ann Locke, Michael Roy Logan,
Sandra Louise, Louis Lovett, Donald Edward Lloyds as R. Lynn, Alice Joy Mackish, Donald L, Maddox, John P. Magers, Theodore R.
L, Maddox, John P. Magers, theodore R.
L, Maddox, John P. Magers, theodore R.
Malson, Floyd S. Manning, C. M. Manure, Lorette Ann Marcoux;
Mary Louise Marolf, David Hubert Martin, Marilyn Katt, Linda Lee Maxey, Luis E. Mayor, Sanford M. Mazea, Anita R. McGride, Larry H. McCausey, Jeffrey P. Wheatley, V. McCarthy, Jeanne A. McCleery, Phillip R. McDaniel, Roger R. McFadden, Robert E. McFarlane, Michael Shane McGill, Jean Ann Nmally, Jerry M. McCausey, Louis Louise Marolf, Marilyn Lee Menacey, Jarger W. Menacey, Buell Merritt, Sidney M. Sieck, David H. Michener, Barbara Ann Miles, Arthur Clyde Miller;
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to discuss the training offered at A.I.F.T. (an intensive nine months program of post graduate study) and the job opportunities open to graduates in the field of INTERNATIONAL TRADE and GOVERNMENT SERVICE.
"Mr. Berger Erickson,
Executive Vice President"
will be on campus
Tuesday, April 23,1963,
from 9:00 a.m.to 5:00 p.m.
Carl Curtis Peck, Thomas Stuart Peel, Janet Sue Pepper, Diance C. Peree, Lee Petersen, Douglas Pickersgill, John Bird Pierce, Malcolm G. Pinney, Francia J Bitman, Stephen B. Plaster, Jerry Mac Pontius, James R. H. Porter, Carol Pontius, James R. Porter, Cyde Ellis Potter, John Albert Potucke, Carolyn Sue Power, Mark Albert Praeger, John L. Puckett, Thomas Orrin Pugh, Ernest R Puthoff, Ernest Pat Quigley;
Why Do You Read So Slowly?
Carolyn Marie Nelson, Lucile Ola Nelson, Wayne Dale Nelson, Robert L. Neth, Michael Bauer, Richard Michael, D. Nossman, Sharon Rose Nussler, Judy Ann Oden, Jane Ogleer, James Edward Oroth, James Edward Oroth, Rose Ellen Osborne, Margaret S. Owens, Peter A. Palka, Harvey K. Palmer, Ralph L. Palmer Jr., Vincent AXane Panzone, Carolyn J. Parkinson, Marjorie Parish,
Henry Patchin, Joseph M. Pavlich.
Donald P. Miller, Gretchen Kay Miller, Nyle David Milleth, Ralph Wayne Miller, Richard David Milleth, D Michael McMillen, P Michael Mobley, Robert E. Moffatt, Mary Lee Molden, Sharon Lea Molly, Mary Lee Moore, Richard Dean Moore, Robert H. Moore, Richard Dean Moore, Robert H. Moyer, Leslie C. Mueller, Joseph A. Mullen, Gary Lee Murphy, Terence P. Murphy, Charles R. Myers, Dainn Irving Charles R. Myers, William Paul Navlor, Carol Louise Nelson;
A noted publisher in Chicago reports there is a simple technique of rapid reading which should enable you to double your reading speed and yet retain much more. Most people do not realize how much they could increase their pleasure, success and income by reading faster and more accurately.
Judith A. Railback, John R. Ratzlaff,
Judith Ann Rav, Robert Joseph Ray Jr.
, Judith Ann Rav, Robert Joseph Ray
Norma J., Reifel, Ray Max, Replogle,
George F. Rhodes Jr., Mary Rhodes, Harold
Wayne Rice, Jon David Rice, Mary
Rose, David Rising, Linda E. Ritter, Beverly
Ann Roberts, Judith K. Robeson, David L.
Robinson, James Edward Rodgers,
Michael Carroll M. Rogers, Michael Vail Rogers, John Henry Ross III.
Paul Dean Ross;
According to this publisher, anyone, regardless of his present reading skill, can use this simple technique to improve his reading ability to a remarkable degree. Whether reading stories, books, technical matter, it becomes possible to read sentences at a glance and entire pages in seconds with this method.
Marc Duane Rucker, Christopher K. Ruhe, Carroll O. Runkle, Suzanne Runkle, Jeffrey W. Duffy, Stephen J. Stephen C. Ryan, Gerry Lynn Ryberg, Larry W. Sanders, Karl P. Sartore,
Interviews may be scheduled at the office of the DIRECTOR OF PLACEMENT
To acquaint the readers of this newspaper with the easy-to-follow rules for developing rapid reading skill, the company has printed full details of its interesting self-training method in a new book, "Adventures in Reading Improvement" mailed free to anyone who requests it. No obligation Simply send your request to: Reading, 835 Diversey Parkway, Dept. 3244, Chicago 14, Illinois. A postcard will do.
The American Institute For Foreign Trade
(Continued on page 12)
Phoenix, Arizona
Thunderbird Campus
613 Vermont
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Second Floor
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Monday. April 22,1963
Foreign Students Memories Linger
By Vinay Kothari
Soon the spring semester will be over and about 175 of 351 KU foreign students will leave KU and probably never return.
Some foreign students will travel across the United States before they go back to their own countries. Others will go directly home following completion of their studies at KU and still others will attend other schools in the United States.
BUT EACH OF THE foreign student will carry with him memories of KU forever, regardless whether the memory is bad or good.
When Miss Nilofer Ahmed of Pakistan came to KU last fall, her goal was to acquire a degree. But as she is about to complete her graduate work in journalism, her anxiety to get a degree is not the same. The day-to-day study now seems to her to have become an absorbing end in itself, she reports. The thought of leaving the university makes her very sad even though she will leave with a degree.
Sami Affy of Egypt says he will miss his many friends, Affy, who will receive a master of arts degree in political science at the end of the semester, said he has had many opportunities at KU to make friends from all over the world. As president of the International Club, he liked KU's international atmosphere.
MISS SALVA HADDAD, Lebanon graduate student, said she has become emotionally attached to KU. She considers KU her "second home." She said she will miss the casual, friendly and informal life of KU.
But, Miss Haddad said, she won't miss "American insincerity." Miss
Haddad described U.S. life as most challenging, both academically and socially.
Miss Susanna Bolstad, of Oslo Norway, graduate student, said she did not like the restrictions placed on women at KU. She said the women at KU do not have as much freedom as women students in Europe.
After living in a sorority house, Miss Bolstad did not like the sorority life.
"THE SORORITY life is sort of dull and restrictive, and the atmosphere is 'childish'," she said.
According to Miss Bolstad, the active social life at KU is the cause of poor grades of undergraduate students.
Still, all the foreign students will have many opportunities to attend several events for foreign students before their departure.
AMONG THESE activities for foreign students are the People-to-People happy hour at 12:30 p.m., Sunday at the Phi Kappa Theta house, 1120 West 11th; the People-to-People industrial tour to KU Medical Center, Kansas City, Kan., on Wednesday, April 24. Several other activities like the industrial tour, happy hour, tea parties or open house and many others are being planned for the month.
There will be an Oskaloosa trip on Thursday, April 25, and a tea party at Chancellor Wescoe's home Sunday, May 11.
Several remaining International Club meetings on Saturdays will include panel discussions, social dancing, and music. The officers of the International Club for next fall will be elected May 11.
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Twenty different groups and nations displayed exhibits and an evening program of music, dancing and skits was presented.
International Festival Draws Large Crowd
The annual International Festival drew about 1000 guests last Saturday in Hoch Auditorium.
Exhibits included the display of clothes, jewelry, carvings, photographs, art and printing. Slides, movies, music and dancing were used in displaying the exhibits.
P-t-P Will Visit KU Med Center
People-to-People will take an industrial tour to the Kansas University Medical Center, Kansas City, Kan., on Wednesday, April 24.
The tour which has been planned for 35 foreign and North American students, will include visits to the research laboratories, surgical rooms and several other sections of the hospital.
The bus will leave at 1 p.m. from the Kansas Union and will return before 5:30 p.m.
Students interested in joining should sign up at the P-t P-office.
Groups participating in the evening program were Africa, "From the Old to the New Frontier;" Arab Nations, "Arab Land and Its Music," Latin America, "Fantasia Musical," Cambodia, "Chhay Yam" (The Drum Song); India, "Match Is Being Arranged." Philippines, "Cari-nosa" (A Lively Group), and Afghanistan, "The Afghan Dance."
Groups represented in the exhibits include Greece, India, Korea.
Latin America, Denmark, Finland, Pakistan, the Peace Corps, People-to-People, Turkey and U.S. Indian (Haskell Institute).
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, originally scheduled to deliver the welcome address, was unable to attend the program because of the Engineering Exposition dinner.
Clark Coan, international student adviser, gave the welcome address in his place.
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Monday, April 22, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
El Salvadorans Attend Events, Tour Campus
The group of ten men and three women arrived in Lawrence Saturday night. The women are staying in Lewis Hall, and the men are staying in Templin and Joseph R. Pearson Halls.
Yesterday was a busy day for 13 University of El Salvador student leaders who are visiting the KU campus this week.
The Salvadorans joined about 100 KU foreign students yesterday afternoon at a People-to-People Happy Hour sponsored by Delta Delta Delta sorority and Phi Kappa Theta fraternity.
After the Happy Hour, the El Salvador group was given a guided tour of the campus.
THE PROGRAM, featuring an American-style picnic and musical entertainment, was held in the gardens behind the Phi Kappa Theta house.
"It is much bigger than our universities," said one of the members of the group.
A RECEPTION was held in the Kansas Room of the Union. The group met several members of the KU faculty and Relays Queen Marjorie Ann Fischer, Lawrence sophomore, and her attendants, Martha Yankey, Wichita freshman, and Suzie Canle, Neodosha freshman.
During the tour, the foreign student leaders, with the exception of one of the women who declined, were taken up the winding staircase to the top of the Campanile. The students stood as the campanile bells played their national anthem.
The guests also were treated to a classic guitar solo by Arturo Jasso, KU assistant instructor of Romance languages.
Six Halls Win In Spring Sing
Today the Salvadorans will be orientated to the KU system and life in America as a whole.
Miller, Douthart, Joseph R. Pearson, Templin, Pearson, and Sellars Halls were winners in the Inter-Residence Association Spring Sing held yesterday in Swartout Recital Hall.
Miller Hall won first place in the women's large ensemble division with "Music When Soft Voices Die."
Douthart sang "Now Is the Month of Maying" and "Sapphic Ode" to win the first place trophy in the women's small ensemble division.
During the remainder of the week the 13 visitors will be meeting KU student leaders to exchange ideas with them.
JRP SANG FOUR nursery rhymes in German, "Songs Mein Grossmama Sang," while nursery rhyme characters performed a pantome. The group wom first among the men's small ensembles.
TEMPLIN WON two trophies: for staging with "Poor Jud" and for the large men's ensemble with "Low-lands" and "Old Tom Wilson." The hall retired the trophy for the latter division.
The students from El Salvador will be in the United States for 30 days.
The Pearson-Sellards combination, the only entry in the mixed ensemble division, won the trophy in that division.
THE JUDGES WERE Genevieve Hargiss, assistant professor of music education; James Ralston, instructor of music education and choral music; Roger Brown, assistant instructor of speech and drama; and Edward Scooter, instructor of voice.
Jacqueline Volkland, Bushton junior, was mistress of ceremonies.
He Paid in Full, Well. Almost
He Paid in Full, Well, Almost LONDON—(UPI)—Police didn't mind computer engineer Albert Rainier's paying a $5.60 fine with British half pennies, but they did object to finding he was a half penny short.
Rainier, 29, told a judge yesterday he had sent 960 coins to the police and had no idea how the missing half penny got lost. The judge dismissed a police summons demanding Rainier pay in full.
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Hitt Voted Top Spot, Time and Life Award
For best results, use the University Daily Kansan Classified Page Phone Ext. 376
James K. Hitt, KU Registrar and Director of Admissions, received the two highest honors of the American Association of Collegiate Registrars and Admissions Officers (AACRAO), when he was elected president and also was voted the Time and Life award for distinguished service.
Hitt will assume presidential duties in 1964.
Mentioned at the New York meeting were Hitt's work as chairman of the data and definitions committee and his editorship of the "Handbook of Data and Definitions in Higher Education."
Hitt, a former KU Summerfield scholar, has been registrar since 1941.
Official Bulletin
Ph.D. Reading Examination in German,
Saturday, May 4, 9:30 a.m., Summerfield
411. Candidates must register in Fraser
306 by 4 p.m., Friday, April 26.
Ph.D. French Reading Examination
9-20 1984 27
No books accepted after April 24.
Special Lecture, 3:30 p.m., 103 Strong Hall. "Malfunctions, Blunders, and Errors in Digital Computation" by Professor Wallace Glivens.
TODAY
versity will discuss "Origins of Soviet
Soviet society" and "Sixties." Coffee
following, public invited.
Russian Club History Club, Joint Club
Union. Peter Schiebert of Marburg Unis Union. Peter Schiebert of Marburg Unis
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
Department of Mathematics Honors
District Association
United Union, Prof. Wallace Givens, Associate
Director, Applied Mathematics Dic-
tamine Today: A Discipline in Fission."
Pl Mu Epsilon, 5:30 p.m., Oread Room,
Kings College of of new members and
election officers of election.
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan Monday, April 22, 1963
Jayhawkers Win Two Titles Against Tough Relays Field
By Steve Clark
The 39th running of the Kansas Relays was a success to Jayhawker track fans.
The KU team, which did not make the victory column at last year's Relays on Saturday afternoon and were shut out of the Texas Relies two weeks ago, picked up victories in the shot put and the two-mile relay against one of the most competitive fields in Relays' history.
The meet's laurels belonged to Jim Miller, a sturdy sophomore from Colorado. Miller won the 400-meter hurdles on Friday and anchored the winning Buffalo 880- and mile-relay teams. He barely missed victory in the high hurdles as he lost his footing and finished inches behind Texas' Rex Wilson. He was voted the meet's most outstanding performer.
DIVO
BRILLIANT FINISH—Loyola of Chicago's ace miler, 130-pound John O'Hara crosses the finish line in the distance medley to shatter Texas Southern's string of 33 straight relay victories. O'Hara trailed Southern's Major Adams by 40-yards at the start of the final mile, but overcame him to win by 10-yards.
pictative heists in Relays history.
BOTH VICTORIES were sweet.
Junior Yul Yost, a 32-year-old Yugoslavian who played volleyball up until two years ago when he walked by Memorial Stadium, saw some men putting the shot and asked if he could try, defeated the Texas Relays' champion Danny Roberts of Texas A&M with a 57-6$^{3}$ put. This was the best mark by a collegian this year and defeated Roberts who put 56-5.
The victory ran Yost's won-lost mark to 8-1 for the year and he and Roberts will clash again this weekend at the Drake Relays in Des Moines, Iowa.
The KU two-mile relay team's victory was especially sweet for two reasons. One, it came at the expense of arch-rival Missouri and second, it was a come-from-behind affair which saw Jayhawker Kirk Hagan overcome the Big Eight's defending half-mile champion Gre Pelster.
BILL STODDART, a quarter-miler who had never before ran a half-mile in competition, led off with a 1:53.5 half-mile. Paul Taylor then added a 1:53.7 followed by Tonnie Coane who ran 1:51.9 to hand off to Hagan trailing by a yard.
Hagan, who has won three conference indoor 1,000 yard run titles, quickly closed the gap and remained behind Pelster until the last turn. Coming out of the turn, Hagan shot into the lead with a burst of speed and outdistanced the conference half-mile king down the stretch. The winning time was 7:28.4.
YELLOW CAB VI 3-6333
THE MEETS' most notable achievement occurred long after all but a handful of spectators had left. Rice's Fred Hansen, who set a pole vault record of 15 feet $6\frac{1}{4}$ inches here last year, made $16-0\frac{1}{4}$ on his final try. The time was 7 p.m. and Hansen had been vaulting since 11 o'clock that morning. Due to the lack of light, he chose not to try to go higher.
One of the biggest surprises of the Relays was the dethronement of Phil Mulkey as the Relays decathlon champion. Mulkey who had won here the past five years setting a record each time was defeated by his U.S. Olympic teammate Dave Edstrom, former Oregon star who is now in the Air Force. Edstrom scored 7,423 points to Mulkey's 7,316.
The Relays were significant in that Texas Southern's streak of 33 straight relay victories was shattered. The event was the distance medley and the man responsible was 130 pound Tom O'Hara from Loyola of Chicago.
The Texas team had a 40-yard lead when O'Hara received the baton. Running for Southern was mile ace Major Adams. The little
O'Hara moved up slowly and passed Adams on the final lap to win by 10 yards. Both teams were under the KU Relays record. The Loyola time was 9:54.2, nearly 13 seconds under the 24-year old record.
IN ALL SIX RECORDS were set. Texas Southern went on to win four more relay titles setting new marks in the 440-yard relay (40.7) and the mile relay (3.09.2). Jack Upton of Texas Christian set a high jump record of $6 - \frac{8}{3}$ and Ed Red of Rice set a javelin record of $256 - 11\frac{2}{3}$.
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Colorado high jumper Leander Durley also jumped 6-8 $ \frac{4}{3} $ but Upton was awarded first place and the record on the basis of the least attempts.
Balfour
In the Glenn Cunningham mile, a previously unheralded freshman from the University of Missouri defeated Texas Relays champion John Camien of Emporia State to win his first major mile victory.
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER
Robin Lingle, who is setting out a year of ineligibility after transferring from West Point, won the feature mile in 4:04.8.
freshman Bob Hanson almost de-
freshman Bob Hanson almost defeated Big Ten 100- and 220-yard dash champion Nate Adams of Purdue. Getting a good start, Hanson led most of the way until Adams overtook him in the last 10 yards to win in 10.3. Both sprinters were given the same time.
ANOTHER RECORD — Rice's Fred Hansen broke his own Kansas Relays' record in the pole vault by six inches. On his final try, he established a new mark of 16-0 3/4. He chose not to try for a new higher mark.
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KU's Floyd Manning went 15-0 for the first time outdoors in the pole vault to finish in a tie for fourth with Preston Holsinger of Oklahoma State and Bill Younger of Missouri. The three led Big Eight vaulters in the event.
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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 Kansas Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not re-
Monday, April 22, 1963
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tapes to tape transcriptions. Office hours—7 a.m. 12 p.m.-10211. Maff.
Phone VI 3-5820.
Experienced typist. Contact Mrs. Hayes at VI 2-0057. 4-30
Prompt neat accurate work on wide carriage electric typewriter. Journalism-Business secretary experience. Charlotte Weber. VI 3-3495. tf
Experienceienced typist does term papers, on paper and issuer papers on electric textwriter, specialist signers. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs. Clarke at 2006 Rhode Island Phone VI 3-7485
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
accurate, neat work, reasonable rates
Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff
VI 2-1749.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type
theses, term papers, and themes, neatly
on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs
Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tf
Grass cutting, yard work and light haul-
ing palatable prices. Call VI 3-4033
or VI 3-4034.
BUSINESS SERVICES
Tutor — Mrs. William Birner, former children's librarian and school teacher,
favorite of all children. Tutor children in speech, English, reading and history through May 29th. Call at 6:30 p.m., except for evaluation appointment. Time and fee to be arranged.
Transportation plus parking convenience and an opportunity to earn extra money, ride a new motor scooter of your choice, demonstrate and sell in your spare time. Get our deal—Blevin's Bike Shop, 7th and Michigan. tt
RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267.
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center, 1218
Conn. Personal service—sectionalized
chambers, chameleons, turtles,
guinea pigs, etc., plus complete list
pet supplies. **tf**
FOR RENT
Party time — School house available for
dances and meetings. Call V. 434-
7855
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
mance of this service: Ola Smith
9391% 9391%. Call VI 3-5263.
Alterations: All types women's clothing.
Call VI 3-1348. 4-24
MISCELLANEOUS
Free Bumper Stickers: "Not Bombs but Brotherhood" or "Speak Up for Peace." Write Jim Masters, $840^{\frac{1}{2}}$ Ky.—No obliquity 4-22
Will care for children in my home. 2 years old and older. Convenient to KU.
Fenced in yard, references. Phone VI 3-
6763. 5-7
Available now — select apartments with in easy walking distance of the Hill Street parking, and recreation room available. Furnished or unfurnished. Two bedroom apts. from $75.00. Sleeping room available. Call 911-3-7504. Apts. 4-2
Attractive 3 room furnished second floor apartment with private bath. Spacious newly decorated rooms, nicely furnished and clean. Walking distance to KU, $75.00, all utilities paid except electricity. Call VI 2-2593. 4-27
LOST
Man's olive green pull-over sweater los
between Lindley Hall and Allen Field
House on April 1st. Reward. Denni
O'Brien, Stouffer place 14-4. VI 3-7608.
WANTED
Persons who have been in community disasters, such as tornadoes, typhoons, floods, etc. Please contact Fred Binding, room 7. Strong anne, or KU ext. 614. 4-28
Western Civilization notes wanted. Will pay $2.00 per copy for this year's notes, Call VI 2-1901 to have the notes picked up.
4-25
Used cars - highest prices paid. Call VI 3-8911. 601 Vermont.
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results
American copper, silver and gold coins,
metal tokens, campaign badges and in-
gestible tokens.
American Coin Mart. 1025 Mass-
hours 9:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.
4-25
PROSPECTIVE
OWL SOCIETY MEMBERS
Dean of Mens' Office
To Be Completed
by APRIL 29th
ALL IT TAKES
KING SIZE
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© 1962 B. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, N. C.
Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 22, 1963
English Proficiency-
(Continued from page 7)
Susan Saunders, Stephen L. Sayers, Joyce Eaine Savre, Judy Ittm Ann Scatolioni, Guy James, Marc Touraine, Julie James, R. Schinkstout, Denny Kae Schmidt, Ralph Lee L. Schmidt, Susan C. Schmidt, Homa Millard, Barbara M. Schwope, Millard M. Patricia M. Schwope, La莉 Kay Secrist;
Margaret A. Seeber, Thomas E. Sego,
Sondra Sellers, Charles R. Sette, Lucie
Jeanne Seymour, Gary Ray Shaffer,
Stuart K. Shandalue, Thomas Ira Shepard,
Philip Leon Sieve, Bert Garrel,
W. Smith, James Dean, Suzanne
Audrey Smith, Thomas A. Smith, Lanny
L. Snodgress, Mary Lynn Speer, Clarence
Radio-TV Student Is Region Head
Judy Southard, Springfield, Mo. junior, was elected vice-president of region five by the National Convention of Alpha Epsilon Rho, honorary fraternity for radio and television majors.
The convention, held Thursday through Saturday in the Hotel President in Kansas City, featured 23 chapters from all parts of the country.
Miss Southard's duties include serving as president of the fifth region and investigating possibilities for starting new chapters in schools in that area.
Region five include Kansas, Missouri, Arkansas and Louisiana. At present there are two active chapters in Kansas, one at KU and one at K-State, and three in Missouri.
A Kansas State junior, Mel Harris, was elected national student president.
Larry Knupp, Great Bend junior, was the voting delegate representing the 18 members of Alpha Psi, the KU chapter. Gale R. Adkins, associate professor of journalism, and speech and drama, is the faculty advisor.
Pearson Takes -
(Continued from page 1)
Jense and finance — were to go to Paul Martin, C. M. (Bud) Drury and Walter Gordon respectively.
DIFFENBAKER, a 67-year-old prairie lawyer who assumed power in June, 1957, will remain an opposition leader in the new 23th Parliament, leading 93 Conversative members.
The remainder of the new Commons, to begin work sometime next month, will consist of 24 members of the right-wing Social Credit party and 17 left-wing New Democrats. Both have made broad promises of support for the minority Liberal government.
With the country having faced two national elections within the past 10 months and four in less than six years, most observers believe the three opposition parties will be reluctant to combine their voting strength to topple the Pearson administration within the near future.
Seniors to Discuss Plans Tmorrow
The senior class will hold a coffee from 9:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. in the ballroom of the Kansas Union.
The HOPE Award winner, and plans for remaining senior activities will be announced at that time.
All seniors will be excused from class to attend the coffee.
DANIEL'S JEWELRY
DANIEL'S JEWELRY specializes in all repair work
- JEWELRY REPAIR
* ENGRAVING
DANIEL'S
914 Mass. VI 3-2572
Hart Steele, Elizabeth A. Stockton, Shelby Louise Stone, William N. Stueck, Robin Austin Swan, Gregory A. Swartz, Ruth Swain Swearingen, Michael George Swink:
Earl James Taggart, Dixie B. Talbot,
Galeen Dean Taylor, Paul Robert Taylor,
Susan Devereaux Taylor, Charles Owen,
Thomas, Sharieen G.
Thompkins, Peter Thompson, Robert W.
W. Thompson, Mary Helen Todd, George T.
R. Thompson, Michael Rowe, Sue Trantum, Mary Jane Truitt, Peter Tucker, Jarvis W. Ulbright, T. Leigh M.
Underwood, Jerry Lily Vanatta, Robert M.
Verdon, John C. Varner, M F
Manlingham, Julia Ann Varner,
Julianne E. Verrier, Mark L. Vinz:
Douglas J. Vogel, Norman Curtis Vogel, Robert Willem Wahl, Mayo Charles Waltcott, Carol Joyce Walker, Grover W. Walker, Judith Ann Walker, Michael E. Walker, Willem Wallace, Douglas S. Waltz, Patricia L. Warren, Geoff Weber, Ronald Wayne Weeks, John C. Weig, Francis J. Weigand, Judith F. Weisensee, Carolyn Sue Wells, Jo Anne Webel, James A. Welter, Kenneth E. Wodel, Maren R. Richard R. Whitaker, William C. Whitenight, Charles E. Whitman, Frederick P. Wickert;
Steven E. Wickliff, Jiane M. Wiggins,
Caryl Dorsely Wilen, Charles L. Wurlheim,
Benjamin L. Wilhelm, Patricia M. Margaret,
E. Williams, Joanne Willis,
Stewart McKee Wilson, William R. Wilson,
Ira Harold Winarsky, David Jay Woll,
John Woll, Joseph Wood,
Martin Gerald Woods, Thomas L. Deenna K. Wooldridge, Dennis M. Woolf,
Oscar Wooton, Lawrence M. Wright,
Elizabeth Ruth Wyll, Patricia Wulf,
Harriett Ruth Wyatt, Rosalie P.
Zoder, Elizabeth L. Young, Rosemarie P.
Zapfert, D Zehring, Virginia E.
Zushek, Mery I. Ziegelemeyer, Patricia S. Zogleman
Staley to Study Econ at Harvard
A University of Kansas economics professor was recently awarded a Ford Foundation faculty fellowship in economics for 1963-1964.
Charles E. Staley, associate professor of economics, is one of 25 university economists throughout the United States to receive the annual Ford Foundation award for research on national and international problems.
Prof. Staley will spend the year at Harvard University investigating problems of stabilization of commodity prices in international trade
His study will include the examination of existing commodity agreements for coffee and tin, as well as proposals for international insurance funds to compensate for unstable raw material prices.
Prof. Staley made a study of the recent activities and policies of the International Monetary Fund in assisting nations exporting raw materials.
Congressman, Doctor To Debate Medicare
D & G
AUTO SERVICE
VI 2-0753
½ blk. E. 12th & Haskell
D&G AUTO SERVICE
A New Frontier Congressman and a past president of the Kansas Medical Society will debate Medicine at 7:30 p.m. today in the auditorium in Bailey Hall.
Rep. Donald M. Fraser, who represents Minnesota's Fifth Congressional District (Minneapolis), will support President Kennedy's program for governmental insurance for the aged.
Dr. Thomas Butcher, Emporia,
will oppose Fraser.
Kennedy's proposal, which was killed in the House Ways and Means Committee in the 1962 Congress, would provide health insurance for the aged and those unable to pay for medical care.
Opponents claim it is a step toward socialized medicine.
Kennedy's opponents also claim that few people in this country can not afford health insurance.
Civil Rights Groups-
(Continued from page 1) restaurants had been solved. Today there are only a few small cafes in Lawrence that do not serve Negros. The civil rights movement was reactivated in 1960, with new issues as its goals. This time it is concerned with discrimination in Lawrence and student housing, barbershops and taverns. It is concerned with Negro employment opportunities and with sorority and fraternity discrimination.
THREE CIVIL RIGHTS groups have been formed since 1960. The oldest, the Civil Rights Council, is a private group much like those that existed in the '50's. The other two groups are something new in the civil rights movement. They are official governmental groups. The Human Relations Committee is a committee of the All Student Council. The Lawrence Human Relations Commission is a part of the Lawrence city government.
These new groups have added another dimension to the struggle for civil rights. They have made it easier for the government to work for the elimination of discrimination.
Leonard's Standard Service
9th and Indiana
Complete Brake Service Minor Tune-ups
Open 7 a.m. to 9 p.m.
PHOTOGRAPHERS AND PERSONS interested in working on
working on next year's
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may make application at
the Jayhawker office Room 117 UNION BUILDING 3:00 p.m.-5:00 p.m. Daily
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100
- Photo By Murrel Bland
BLAKE CRUMBLES—The old physics building, Blake Hall, crumbles as a giant ball thuds into its brick and sandstone wall destroying in a day one of the oldest buildings on campus.
Memories Smashed In Dust of Blake
By Blaine King
Yesterday, a one-ton steel ball ended what time and the need for expanded facilities started.
A workman manipulated the controls of a giant crane, sending the ball thudding into the brick and sandstone walls of Blake Hall the old Physics building.
BY 11:30 A.M., THE FRONT SECTIONS were gone. By 4:30 p.m. after classes had been dismissed from the language sound labs to reduce the danger of falling brick and rock, the back walls were down.
A group of students, standing near the southeast corner of Lilac Lane, cheered a battered wall defiantly resisting the onslaught of the ball.
But at 4:30, the operator lowered the ball and workmen, going home, walked casually in front of the wreckage.
"We've got two more to ball down tomorrow," one said.
BLAKE HAD TO GO, to make room for a new $750.000 classroom and office building which will be erected where Blake once stood.
But the excuses of classroom needs and modernization do not make Blake's razing any easier to take for George Hood, professor emeritus of engineering drawing, who stood yesterday and watched the old bricks smear red dust on the big ball.
"I hate to see any of these old buildings come down," Prof. Hood said.
PROF. HOOD ATTENDED CLASSES in Blake before it was named Blake in 1898. Before it was called the Physics building.
He taught for years on the third floor of Fraser Hall, when the engineers had the south end of the third floor, and the lawyers had the north end
ALEXANDER T. SCHNEIDER
the north end.
WISTFUL — George Hood, professor emeritus of engineering drawing, watches the workmen tear down Blake, the building in which he attended classes in 1893.
He remembers when Blake Spooner Museum, the old chemistry building, Fraser, old Snow Hall and old North College Hall, the first building used by the University, were all that made up the University of Kansas.
The old chemistry building was leveled this year to make way for the addition to Watson Library.
SNOW, WHICH OCCUPIED the land in front of the present library, came down years ago.
Now Blake is gone, and Fraser wil be razed in the next few years.
Tuesday, April 23, 1963
The old lime mortar was crumbling, and sent up clouds of dust when the ball hit.
nese old buildings". Prof. Hood said. But Blake was obsolete. No iron was used in the building below the third floor and the floors sagged.
ONLY A FEW LARGE timbers were salvaged. The contractor hopes to sell the stone for land fill.
"I WAS WELL acquainted with these old buildings." Prof. Hood said.
Blake was built in 1895, and although students hated its architecture, from that time on its one big eve was a familiar landmark.
But the building was hard to heat. The clock froze last year.
Dailu hansan
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
60th Year. No.126
Seniors Present HOPE Award to Prof. Haugh
Oscar M. Haugh, professor of education, was named the recipient of this year's HOPE award before a crowd of seniors who filled the Kansas Union Ballroom.
Prof. Haugh received the award from Mary Ann Warburton, chairman of the HOPE committee, for his outstanding contributions to students and to the University.
“AN HONOR LIKE THIS comes only once in a lifetime.” Prof. Haugh said in accepting the award. “I shall always cherish it.”
He received a citation, a $100 bill,
and a personalized pen-and-pencil
desk set.
HE SAID THERE is a year-end fee of $4.50 which must be paid before graduation. Seniors who have paid their senior dues and have received their senior identification cards have already paid.
PETER KINGLEY
The fee must be paid between May 1 and May 22 in the Business Office in Strong Hall. Receipts for caps and gowns may also be picked up at this time.
The seniors were also reminded of the details of graduation by Dick Wintermote, assistant secretary of the Alumni Association.
ALL THE MOTELS and hotels in Lawrence are reserved for graduation weekend, Wintermote said.
Prof. Oscar Haugh
But the University will open Gertrude Sellards Pearson and any other dormitory facilities necessary to provide rooms for parents and guests, he said.
Arrangements for such lodging
CAPS AND GOWNS will be issued from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, June 1, and from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday, June 2, in Hoch Auditorium.
should be made with the dormitory office, 26 Strong Hall.
Other information can be obtained at the Alumni Association office in Strong Hall, Wintermote said.
The desirability of joining the Alumni Association was also disclosed.
A SENIOR CLASS TGIF party for those who have paid their senior fees will begin at 4:30 p.m. Friday at the Big Barn. The Disciples will furnish the music, and beverages will be free.
Senior class president Mike Mead, Kansas City, Mo., said there are a number of sweat shirts and calendars remaining. Seniors who have paid their fees may pick theirs up in the Alumni Office, 127 Strong. Other seniors may purchase these items at the office.
Graduation announcements may now be purchased at the Book Store. They have been pre-ordered and are available in four styles, ranging from 15 to 80 cents. Class rings may also be ordered at the Book Store.
Respect for Senior Citizens, Socialism, Medicare Aspects
Bv Terry Ostmever
Would the enactment of the King- Anderson Bill to provide medical care for the aged be an act of "respect for our senior citizens" or a step toward "the sweeping fire of socialism?"
The question of Medicare was debated last night by Rep. Donald M.
Ron Donald M. Fraser
Rep. Donald M. Fraser
Fraser, D-Minn., who defended the King-Anderson Bill against Dr. Thomas Butcher of Emporia, former president of the Kansas Medical Society.
Fraser argued that it's time aged persons receive what they deserve. The Congressman said the problem of medical care for the aged has captured the attention of the Kennedy Administration because there are 17 million people in the United States today over 65 years of age and the figure is expected to increase by one million by 1965.
HE SAID THE incomes of these people are less than half of those under 65, yet it is the aged who require the most medical attention.
Another reason for the administration's promotion of governmental insurance for the aged is the inadequacy of present aids, the young New Frontier Congressman said.
"I THNK if we would estimate those over 65 with insurance. I would say at least two-thirds to 75 per cent of them are unable to meet the expenses."
The Congressman said the Kennedy Medicare program, which is the King-Anderson Bill, would cover hospital insurance, skilled nursing
home care, diagnostic service and home health care service.
ITWOULD include benefits for all those over 65 and on Social Security or railroad retirement. After 1971, only those under Social Security would receive the benefits. It is believed by then most of the aged will be under that system.
Rep. Fraser said this program would affect physicians in that it would prohibit government control of the profession, guarantee the right of the patient to choose any hospital, and would not pay doctors' fees.
He believed the Medicare program would make doctors feel freer in prescribing medicines, knowing the patient would be covered.
HE SAID Social Security is a kind of insurance, but it is not intended as an insurance fund as found in private companies because it cannot go bankrupt.
Rep. Fraser felt the Medicare program has a good chance of being passed in Congress this session because the House is more "liberal" than in 1962 and also the important Ways and Means Committee has two new members, both pro-Medicare.
In answer to Fraser's argument, Dr. Butcher said the threat of national socialism and an endangered American economy are the real problems in the Kennedy administration's proposed Medicare plan.
The past president of the Kansas Medical Society, who said he was speaking only as a Kansas doctor and a private citizen, maintained that the King-Anderson Bill is inadequate for those under 65 because they are the ones who will pay for it.
For those over 65, "it's gravy," he said.
HE SAID the younger generations who must foot the bill are not being enticed by financial gains, but by political goals. Medicare, he said, "has a great deal to do with buying the votes of the younger citizens."
"The real problem lies in the American economy and our Social Security system in particular," Dr. Butcher said.
He said he was not attacking Social Security as such, but its weaknesses. "I think it's anemic and in trouble."
THE DOCTOR also argued that
Social Security is actually a tax, not an insurance program as the government terms it.
He said the taxpayers, who paid more than $300 billion into Social Security last year, have no guarantee they will get a return.
Dr. Butcher said the public would have to pay another $25 billion to
12
Dr. Thomas Butcher
aid the aged under the King-Anderson Bill. "I am opposing it solely because it represents financial incaution," he said.
The strongest threat foreseen by the Emporia doctor is socialized medicine, and even national socialism.
HE SAID Americans must ask themselves if they want this change in their way of life.
Dr. Butcher said the American Medical Association has its own propositions to the problem of care for the aged. He feels the AMA is canable of working by itself.
"The problems will be met and are being met where they belong-at the county level." he said.
Dr. Butcher disagreed with Rep. Fraser on the prospects of the King-Anderson Bill being approved by Congress.
"It won't happen this session." he said "But it will be a tough fight in the next one."
Weather
Mostly fair today, tonight and tomorrow. Warner tomorrow. High today 60's. Low tonight middle and upper 30's.
---
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 23, 1963
...With Good Intentions
HERBLOCK'S CARTOON
Robert De Pugh's comments at the Minority Opinion Forum bring to mind that worn but in this case particularly appropriate cliché — the road to hell is paved with good intentions.
His position is tenable, at least on the surface. He fears the Communists will take over the United States, either by invasion or slowly from within. This point is debatable but hardly can be refuted completely. Undoubtedly, the possibility is there. It is the probability that is questionable.
THEORETICALLY, THE Minutemen's only activity before the expected Communist takeover would be to train members in guerrilla warfare and build up a suitable arsenal. The membership is secret, a primary need of guerrilla fighters in a country occupied by the enemy.
Only after the Communist takeover would the Minutemen take positive action. Then and only then would the guerrilla warfare begin in earnest.
This is how the organization would work — theoretically. If there were some guarantee that the Minutemen would work in practice exactly the same as in theory, the organization would be beyond reproach. The theoretical operation — the intentions of De Pugh — is beyond reproach. A well-armed, well-trained, well-organized and widespread guerrilla underground such as the Minutemen could make the difference between a long, grueling term of Communist domination and a relatively short one brought to an abrupt end by the Minutemen.
SO MUCH for what the Minutenen COULD do if their organization precisely follows the theory it is predicated on.
What about the other courses that the Minute- men MIGHT follow on a tangent to the basic theory?
If the communist threat were to wane over a period of several years, the transfer of the "enemy" label from the Communists to some other political group with opinions different from those of the Minutemen would be a short one. The word communist means different things to different people, and to most people its meaning is primarily emotional. The Communist label all too often is used as a catch-all label to cover all those with ideas different from one's own.
DE PUGH SKIRTED around any personal indictment of President Kennedy, but his implications about Supreme Court Justice Arthur J. Goldberg and Presidential Press Secretary Pierre Salinger were unmistakable. He said Goldberg was involved in several Communist organizations, and that Salinger's mother helped organize a Communist youth organization in Northern California.
Quite possibly De Pugh's information about the connection between Goldberg and Salinger's mother with certain organizations is correct. But whether these organizations actually are Communist controlled is an altogether different question.
DE PUGH says the American Civil Liberties Union and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People are Communist controlled. This indictment gives some insight into his definition of a "Communist" organization. The logical thought process would be: This organization is Communist controlled; therefore I am against it. But it is all too easy to slip into the reverse implication: I am against this organization; therefore it is Communist controlled. This is a common logical fallacy, one that comes easily when mixed with a little emotionalism.
And emotionalism is a basic element in the Minutemen's organization. Patriotism is basic to the Minutemen, and patriotism cannot be separated from emotion—at least not by the somewhat less than academic man-in-the-street who might become a Minuteman.
This emotionalism, combined with the logical fallacy that all those opposed by the Minutemen are Communists, easily could lead to the tangent to the theory — the tangent with the good intentions — the good intentions that lead down the road to hell.
THE DANGER is not that the Minutemen are anti-Communist but that they will define what is Communist. If De Pugh is right, if the Communists actually do take over the United States, then the Minutemen could become our best hope for driving out the Communists. But if De Pugh is wrong, and he admits that he could be, then the Minutemen easily could become just as big a menace as the Communists they oppose.
— Dennis Branstiter
"I'm Off To Bold Adventures, O'
Cross The Street"
OLD GUARD
LANE
BUDGET-CUT
DRIVE
FORWARD!
RURAL 65%
CAMPAIGN
©1943 HERBLOCK
THE WASHINGTON PATI
Cartoons by Herblock (Herbert L. Block), political cartoonist for the Washington Post and the Hall Syndicate, will appear daily on the editorial page of the Kansan.
Little Man on Campus cartoons will no longer appear regularly in the Kansan.
Herblock's achievements include two Pulitzer Prizes (1942 and 1954), the National Cartoonists Society's Reuben as "the outstanding cartoonist of 1956," a Heywood Broun Award (1950), National Headliners Award (1940), American Newspaper Guild Awards (1947 and 1948), four Sigma Delta Chi (national journalism society) Awards (1949, 1950, 1952 and 1956), a special Sigma Delta Chi award in 1951, an American Veterans Committee Civil Rights Award and a Sidney Hillman Committee Award. In those blank dates, 1943-45, insert citations for cartoons aiding the war effort—Herblock was drawing for Uncle Sam.
Minuteman Builds Nation-Wide Guerrilla Force
By Fred Zimmerman
In early 1960, Robert Bolivar De Pugh joined a small hunting club. The group leased a lake near his hometown of Norborne, Mo., and on weekends began building duck blinds.
De Pugh, the father of five children, was prospering then as the head of a pharmaceutical company in Norborne. When he wasn't working, his spare time was devoted to his family, church activities, and trying to keep abreast of developments in pharmaceutical research.
BUT JOINING the hunting club changed his life. As he tells it:
"We were working on the duck blinds one day and one of the fellows, in a joking manner, remarked. 'This would be a good place to hide when the Communists take over.' And we started joking about this, just horsing around like fellas do—Yeah, we'll put the .50-caliber machine gun in that blind over there."
"Then we started talking about guerrilla warfare. We got interested in the subject, and started reading some books about it—Mao Tse-tung, Che Guevara. Every weekend we would discuss guerrilla techniques. And we started asking ourselves, 'What is happening in this country? Where is it going?' "
AND IN this way, among 10 or 12 friends on the shore of a little lake in Northern Missouri, a strange idea began taking shape. Its culmination would bring De Pugh national notoriety and a public denunciation from the President of the United States.
It would also hurt his business, and mean fewer and cheaper new clothes for his family.
"We decided we wanted to do something about communism, so we had a division of labor to work out a solution.
"One fella joined all the anti-Communist groups he knew of, to see if they had the right idea or not." De Pugh says in his nasal, Missouri twang. "Another subscribed to 15 or 20 liberal magazines and started studying their viewpoint."
"We decided that all these educational anti-Communist groups such as the John Birch Society weren't doing any good." De Pugh says. "They wouldn't be able to prevent a Communist takeover.
EACH MEMBER of the group began working on some aspect of the "solution." After six months of "real good, hard research" the group had a fourday meeting in which each person reported his findings.
"Our conclusion was that the time would arrive when the
American people would decide to revolt against communism. They would be fighting in the streets for their lives and liberty. They would need arms and ammunition, and that's one of the things we hope to provide."
THUS WAS born an organization of civilian "bands" known as the "Minutemen." De Pugh, speaking at the University of Kansas last Friday, estimated there are now 100,000 members.
Each member is expected to own a rifle, a sidearm, and 300 rounds of ammunition. He is expected to be proficient in guerrilla techniques, and to know how to collect and report "intelligence data."
If De Pugh were not so obviously serious about all this it would be easy to conclude that he and his followers are merely indulging a second childhood
Daily Hansan UNIVERSITY
111 Flint Hall
111 Flint Hall University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became bweekly 1904, trieweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
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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.
by playing cops and robbers. But there is more to it than that.
"TO ME, the enemy is anyone who tries to deprive me of my personal freedom, or my children of their personal freedom. And I will kill any individual who does this if I think I can get away with it."
"If 10 of our members want to put in $30 apiece and form a corporation and start buying 50,000 Thompson submachine guns, they have a right to do so — and they've been buying a few."
Discussing the legal requirement that anyone who possesses automatic weapons must pay a $300 license fee. De Pugh said:
What would the group do if it became illegal for private individuals to own firearms? "Well we'd go underground," he said matter-of-factly. "This is too important for us to submit to any kind of gun registration."
DE PUGH speaks proudly of a 15-year-old member of his organization who is "a real live-wire." Shortly after becoming a member the young man began sending the Minutemen headquarters the license number of every person going into certain socialist and Communist party offices in Chicago. Sometimes he sent photographs of these people.
"He built an organization in Chicago of seven bands of 12 to
15 members each," De Pugh says. "When I finally talked to that kid I was amazed at his knowledge of foreign affairs and ballistics trajectories, that sort of thing."
Being national coordinator of the Minutemen has taken its toll on De Pugh. The nationwide notoriety that comes to a man who leads what many observers consider the most fanatical of America's right-wing groups has understandably hurt his business.
IN ADDITION, his dedication to the cause of anti-communism has led him to pour an apparently large sum of his own money into the organization.
"I would be ashamed to tell you the budget my family is on now. And every cent between that meager budget and my rather substantial income goes to Americanist activities."
In spite of the hardships, De Pugh seems unperturbed.
"Here's the thing," he says. "Either you believe this or you don't believe it. If you believe it you're going to work hard, work to protect yourself in the clinches. If you don't believe it, well go home and watch the idiot box and don't worry about studying guerrilla warfare.
"People say I'm a member of the lunatic fringe.' But lunatic that I am, I might be right—and if I am, God help us."
Tuesday, April 23, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Once Active CRC Appears Doomed
(This is the second in a four-
By. Jackie. Helstrom
part series on local and civil rights groups.)
Three years ago a group of KU students founded an organization through which they could fight racial discrimination. Since the beginning the Civil Rights Council (CRC) has been involved in one controversy after another.
Its existence has been characterized by sit-ins and other demonstrations, charges and counter charges, threatened law suits, and some agreements that have brought its goal of non-discrimination a little closer.
THERE ARE FOUR areas in which most of the work of the CRC has been centered. The original issue around which it began to function was the elimination of discrimination in housing for students. Within the first year work also was begun on discrimination in Lawrence barbershops and taverns and on discriminatory practices of fraternity and sorority houses.
The CRC began to urge the University to stop listing the addresses of discriminatory landlords on the University housing list in the fall of 1960.
The CRC claimed no separate list was being maintained for Negroes and the University was making no effort to check with renters to see if they would accept a student regardless of race, color, or nationality.
As a result, Negro and foreign students had trouble finding housing. They were being turned away from many of the houses listed as available to students on the University housing list.
AFTER A YEAR of urging, and two meetings with Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe and four other members of the administration, the policy was changed.
Kids' Art Confuses Adults
DERBY, England—(UPI)—David Stocker and Gerry Smith, a pair of 4-year-old modern artists, have received apologies from the adults who hung two of their paintings upside down in a current exhibition.
Stocker painted a railway engine and Smith a little girl. The works however, were placed upside down and named a "Petrol Pump" and a "Flower Pot."
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results
Chancellor Wescow issued a statement in November, 1961 announcing that discriminating landlords could not use the housing list if a student, acting in good faith, was refused housing.
At the first of this semester, members of the CRC, co-operating with Negro students looking for off-campus housing, tested several houses on the list.
Many cases of alleged discriminatory practices were discovered. From these, one complaint was made to the housing committee. A hearing was held to investigate the complaint, but before any action could be taken the landlord voluntarily removed his name from the list.
ACTION ON THE barbershop discrimination was concerted in a few months, but the progress made was substantial, according to the CRC.
A survey taken in the Spring of 1961 revealed that no Lawrence barber would cut a Negro's hair. Most of them said they did not have the proper equipment or training.
However, after personal discussions with CRC members, a few barbers opened their shops to Negroes. These few did not solve the problem, but Negro students no longer are forced to go to Kansas City or Topeka to get their hair cut.
DANIEL'S JEWELRY
On the question of discriminatory practices by Greek houses, most of the work of the CRC has been focused on finding the extent of discrimination by Greeks and on determining the probable scope of action that a group like the CRC could take in the area.
It has been around the tavern issue that much of the controversial action of the CRC has been centered. In 1961 there was a student sit-in, and several of the local taverns were boycotted.
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THE MAJOR ACTION taken has been an attack on the discriminatory clauses that exist in some Greek national constitutions. The CRC believes that if these clauses were eliminated, the idea of integrating Greek houses would be more within the realm of probability.
Now, over two years later, most of the taverns in Lawrence are serving Negroes.
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The major change in the situation came this spring, after a meeting of tavern owners with the county attorney, which the CRC co-operated with the Lawrence Human Rights Commission to bring about.
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THE FUTURE CRC may not be quite as active as it has in the past.
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But he also mentioned other factors he thought might account for the decline of student interest in the CRC.
Warner said that since it was founded, the nature of the organization has changed. It has turned from the role of a passive moderator to that of an action group willing to take the initiative to get things accomplished.
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"WHEN THE GROUP was founded it had a nice written purpose. Many people felt it was a worthy cause and were interested in supporting it until they were confronted with actually doing something. When it
Warner feels that the lack of Negro participation may have some effect on the total lack of interest in the group because, he said, the white students tend to lose interest if they feel the Negroes don't even care.
This semester, activity of the group almost has come to a stop because of lack of participation. Chairman Don Warner, Topeka senior, has said that unless things change he is not sure the CRC will be functioning as an active group next year.
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No Negroes have been attending the meetings and only four whites have attended regularly.
meant taking a stand and getting involved in controversy they were no longer willing to help." Warner said.
Apr. 19, 1963 — The American Student Information Service, the only authorized placement service for American students seeking summer jobs in Europe, has increased from 1500 to 2000 the number of travel grants it will award students applying for positions in Europe.
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He also said another cause for the lack of attendance at the meetings was that the people who were originally interested in the group have been graduating faster than their places are filled by new members.
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Two of the four people now active in CRC work will be graduating this spring, leaving a participating membership of two.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 23, 1963
Cuban Premier Trades Americans for Cubans
HOMESTEAD AIR FORCE BASE, Fla. — (UPI) — Cuban Premier Fidel Castro emptied his dungeons of all American prisoners except one longtime enemy yesterday in exchange for four Cubans held in U.S. jails.
He also promised to allow 800 to 1,000 Cubans to leave his Communist island later this week.
New York attorney James B. Donovan, who arranged the swap, arrived here yesterday aboard an airliner with 21 of the pale and skinny Americans. He said three others decided to go to a Latin American country instead of returning to their homeland and three chose to remain in Cuba with their families.
P-t-P Ambassador Trip Set for Mexico
People-to-People will take a student ambassador trip to Mexico this summer.
The trip has been planned for approximately 25 highly qualified students who are well familiar with Mexico and are proficient in Spanish.
The tentative cost for transportation is $125. The cost does not include expenses of lodging where home stays are not possible.
The group will depart from Kansas City on Monday, June 17, and will return on August 17. The students will travel first to Mexico City for two weeks. These two weeks will include the orientation period and homestays with the Mexican families.
Following the orientation in Mexico City, the students will visit various university campuses throughout Mexico. They will have an opportunity to come in contact with Mexican students there and will be able to stay with additional Mexican families.
Interested students should pick up the application blank at the P-t-P office in the Kansas Union.
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In exchange for the Americans' release, the Justice Department announced it was releasing three Cubans charged with conspiring to blow up defense establishments in this country.
Loan Applications Due Before June 1
New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller cooperated in the deal by releasing a Castro favorite — Francisco (the Hook) Molina Del Rio.
The deadline for submitting applications for National Defense Student Loans for the 1963-64 school year beginning in September, is June 1.
Students may pick up applications at the Office of Aids and Awards at 222, Strong Hall. Each applicant will be notified before Aug.1 pertaining to the decision on his application.
Applications for the 1963 Summer Session will be accepted until May 1. There are limited funds available for this period and interested students should contact Robert Billings in the Office of Aids and Awards as soon as possible.
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Tuesday. April 23, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Wescoe Hits Harmful 'Myths'
By Roy Miller
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe attacked what he called the "five modern myths of higher education" in a speech here last night.
Chancellor Wescoe, speaking at the Accountant's Day dinner in the Kansas Room of the Kansas Union before more than 150 persons, said these "myths should be destroyed"
- "That universities are too big."
- "That state universities take them (high school graduates) all in and just as promptly flunk them all out."
- "That only an institution with highly selective admission policies can be a quality institution."
- "That we (institutions of higher education) cannot possibly support the continuing costs of higher education."
- "That TV (educational television) will solve all our problems."
"Mythology is not a thing of the past. Chancellor Wescoe said, "Mythology is still with us when it comes to the misconceptions about education."
The Chancellor, in attacking the first "myth," said persons who say universities are "too big" are unable to define what they mean by "too big."
The prime consideration in judging a university should be "what it has to offer . . . instead of its relative size," Dr. Wescoe said.
"THEERE IS NOTHING worse, in my opinion, than to be stuck in a small university." He said students in a small school do not enjoy as good a curriculum or staff of professors as do students in larger schools.
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"The larger the institution, the more likely it is able to be fair to the student," Chancellor Wescoe said.
The Chancellor said that a "moderate-sized" school like KU provides diversity of opinion, and "It is such diversity that makes an educational program a good one."
One of every 18 freshmen entering this year was valedictorian of his high school class, and 88 per cent of these freshmen were in the top one-half of their high school class, he said.
THE CHANCELLOR said persons who say that state universities take high school graduates all in and just as promptly flunk them all out fail to realize the screening job performed by high school guidance counselors.
He quoted statistics which disclosed that fewer than six per cent of the present freshman class dropped out of KU at the end of the first semester.
"THE FACT IS, few for reason of academic failure are forced to leave the University of Kansas," Chancellor Wescoe said. "Our problem here is not to rid ourselves of students . . . but to give them the best educational experience."
Selective admission does not of itself make a high quality institution either, Dr. Wescoe said. "There is no test capable of selecting the motivation factor."
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The Chancellor made similar statements on selective admissions in a speech recently at Hays, Kan. and in the cover story of a nationally circulated education publication.
THE "OPEN DOOR policy" has not hindered KU's scholastic standing, the Chancellor said. In the last five years a record number of students have received Rhodes Scholarships, Woodrow Wilson Fellowships, and Danforth Fellowships.
Costs of higher education are not insurmountable, Dr. Wescoe said. Statistics show the college population doubles one of every 15 years.
He also mentioned one of every 95 of KU's engineering graduates in the last five years is in "Who's Who in America."
CHANCELLOR WESCOSE called this growth cycle a challenge instead of a problem. He said the challenge of increasing enrollments has been met at the primary and secondary levels of education and "we're ready to meet the challenge at the university level."
Dr. Wescoe, in referring to educational television, said educational television is a "tool and not the answer" to the problems of education.
He said his experience with 11 years of television in the field of medicine showed him two things:
- That a television monitor doesn't replace the classroom teacher.
- That programming is expensive.
The combination of the classroom teacher and good programming makes something that's great, he said. But "without these two, education has as much to offer as a 20-year-old western movie . . ."
"But sufficient numbers of such students cannot be attracted by graduate schools falling below high standards of excellence," he said.
Academically Costly Research Decried
KANSAS CITY - (UPI) - President James A. McCain of Kansas State University warned yesterday that research should not be promoted at the expense of the academic program.
"The graduate school is a case in point," McCain told the Kansas Chamber of Commerce convention. "Competent graduate assistants are indispensable to a thriving research program.
"Nothing could more completely thwart our objectives than to promote research at the expense of the academic program," he said.
"The universities must be firs rate in every respect."
LOOK Executive Here for Ad Day
A speech by a vice-president of LOOK magazine will highlight Advertising Day program Thursday.
Al Lockart, of Bruce B. Brewer Advertising Agency, Kansas City will speak at 9:30 Thursday morning on "Why Can't We Have Ads Like Acme."
A syndicated columnist for the Kansas City Star, Bill Vaughan, will speak at 10:30 on "The Better the Newspaperman the Worse the Speech."
Kansas City radio broadcaster, Gene Davis, of KMBC, will speak at 11:30 a.m. on "Modern Radio Promotion."
Following a 12:30 p.m. lunchon,
Les Suhler, vice-president of LOOK,
will speak of the "New Horizons in
Direct Mail Advertising."
Tomorrow Bob Kearns, sales manager for WIBW-TV in Topeka, will address a radio and television class at 2:30 in room 216. Flint Hall. Kearns' talk will be on "Radio and Television Advertising on the Local Level."
Mrs. Ruth Cerrone, vice-president and copywriter at Cunningham and Walsh Advertising Agency in New York, will also speak to classes tomorrow.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 23, 1963
Scoops on SPORTS By Steve Clark
LEFT-OVERS FROM THE KANSAS Relays: Jim Miller, the Colorado sophomore who won the 400-meter hurdles, anchored the winning 440- and 880-yard relay teams and finished second in the 120-yard high hurdles and was voted the most outstanding athlete award, did so despite a broken toe.
The toe did not bother Miller as was obvious. As a matter of fact, Miller is not even sure how he suffered the fracture. Miller also carried a scar from a previous injury. He had to have four stitches taken in his head at the Texas Relays as the result of a fall.
DAVE EDSTROM, who dethroned five time defending champion Phil Mulkey, had a chance for a KU Relays record, but purposely did not go all out for the record. He scored 7,423 points, which was 57 points short of the record.
He remarked after the meet that he, of course, wanted to win, but did not want to break the record. Since he and Mulkey were teammates on the U.S. Olympics team and are friends, Edstrom did not want to undo in one year what Mulkey had done in five.
Edstrom said that he would go after the record if he came back to the Relays next year.
FALSE PREDICTION: A member of Drake's two mile relay team said he expected victory previous to Saturday's afternoon race in which the Jayhawkers won by defeating Missouri.
The runner said that he expected the toughest competition to come from Texas and Nebraska and that the time would be under 7:33.
...
The prediction fell somewhat short as Drake finished fourth. Nebraska was third and of course, Kansas and Missouri was first and second.
OVERHEARD: a remark concerning KU senior Kirk Hagan, who turned in a tremendous anchor half-mile in the two-mile relay to overcome Big Eight 880 yard champion Greg Pelfster to win the race.
The remark: "Hagan had better have won that race. After all, his picture was in the Kansan three times Friday. I'm glad he did something to earn it."
Comment: Hagan's accomplishments have been newsworthy ever since he became eligible for varsity competition when he was a sophomore.
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KU's Title Hopes Still Alive
The Oklahoma Sooners, who were not even given serious consideration for first division in pre-season pills, stand atop the Big Eight baseball standings with a perfect 9-0 record.
Close behind is the defending conference champion, the Missouri Tigers with an 8-1 record. Third place Colorado, which was tied with Oklahoma going into last weekend's action, saw its bubble burst when Missouri won all three games of the series.
THE KANSAS Jayhawkers are in fourth place with a 5-4 record as a result of their three game sweep
The Jayhawkers and the Cowboys will face each other in a three game series here Friday and Saturday. The teams will play two seven inning games Friday and one nine-inning game on Saturday.
over the Kansas State Wildcats at Manhattan. Fifth are the Oklahoma State Cowboys, who pushed the Tigers all the way last year and finished second. The Cowboys were one of the pre-season favorites for the title.
TO STAY IN serious consideration for the title, the Jayhawkers must win all three games. The Cowboys have all but eliminated themselves from any title chances.
Other games this weekend include Missouri at Kansas State, Colorado at Oklahoma and Iowa State at Nebraska.
clu
Colorado at Oklahoma.
State at Nebraska.
The Standings
Team W L
Oklahoma 9 0
Missouri 8 1
Colorado 6 3
Kansas 5 4
Oklahoma State 3 6
Nebraska 3 6
Iowa State 1 8
Kansas State 1 8
Pro Gridder Wins World Eating Title
SAN DIEGO, Calif. — (UP1) — Ernie Ladd, the biggest man in professional football, today was the world's heavyweight eating champion following a gluttonous foray in which he consumed $ 19 \frac{1}{2} $ pounds of food.
The 6-foot-9, 321-pound San Diego Charger tackle and challenger Nick Cordileone, 5-foot-8, 268-pound fisherman, squared off last night and came out burping before a noisy, cheering crowd of 1,500 at the U.S. Grant Hotel.
The gastronomical competitors, crossing knives and forks on a raised platform before the fans who paid $1 each to charity, were nip and tuck through the lobster tails, tossed green salad, spaghetti and meat balls, mashed potatoes, green vegetables and prime rib.
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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 Dall; Kansan Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not re
FOR SALE
RENAULT AND VOLKSWAGEN OWNERS ATTENTION! Bucket seat terry cloth covers $6.88, new 36 month premium nylon tubeless tires now $15.00 exchange plus tax. Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center -292 Mass. 5-6
1959 Renault Dauphine, Excellent condition. Recent valve and ring job. Tires and body good. 30,000 original miles, one owner. $550.00. Phone VI 2-3948. 4-29
English made racing bicycle, Roynel. 3
most new. Call Cail
Ray, VY. 2-1340
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1954 Chevy station wagon — $175.00. 1953 Nash Ambassador — $200.00. Drive to appreciate. Hot rod material — 1954 Studebaker Commander V-8. and 1956 Ford 282 engine. Benson's — Harper. 282 engine. 19th. Call VI 3-1626. 4-29 For rent.
1958 Chevy convertible, white, red interior, good top, radio-heater, power window, heated seats and seatbelt $1100 or other arrangement. Call VI 1772 for Tex, between 5-7 p.m. 4-24
MOBILE HOME FOR SALE - 45 x8' 1958 Great Lakes Model - Two bedroom. Inquire at Skyline Trailer Court, 631 East 23rd.
Tuesday, April 23, 1963
1955 Ford Customline V-8, radio, heater,
overdrive, 7 tires, new interior, recently
painted, new engine, 20 miles per gallon.
Excellent condition. $530.00. Call after
6 p.m. VI 3-1772 and ask for Carlos or
Julio. 4-30
1961 Volkswagen, excellent condition.
Would consider trade. See at 1244 L-4
4-25
White, 1957 Ford Fairlane convertible,
V-8, new snow tires, radio and heater.
Automatic transmission. Student must
sacrifice. Call VI 2-3282. 4-25
1958 Karman Ghia convertible, excellent condition. Call II 3-2839. 4-24
1955 Ford - original owner - 2 door,
radio and heater, 6 cylinder. 19 miles to
the gallon. Well running car. Good price
Call VI 2-0189.
4-2'
Navy Transmitter GP-7 by Westinghouse. Brand new, never used, many help you Bring $45.00 and someone help you carry it out of Stouffler Bidg. 6. Apt. 8. 4-23
S&W 38 special, Walther P-38. Collectors
German Luger, 32 H&R revolver, 22
Ruger automatic, 22 Remington auto-
motor, 19 Woolen carbide, 30-06-52 round. Also have sixteen and 30-06 tracer. See at Stouffer 6, apartment 8, or call VI 3-1110. 4-24
PRE-MED SENIORS: 46' mobile home
3 blocks from Medical Center in Kansas
Contact Roy Hartley with rain with
Contact Roy Hartley, 3610 Bloom Blvd.
K.C., Kansas. JO-2-0951. 4-23
New and used portables, standards and
electrics. Royal, Olympia, Smith Corona,
Portugal. Portable portables. Portable
typing papers. Lawrence Typewriter, 735
Mass. Phone VI 3-3644.
*YPING PAPER BARGAINS: Pink typing paper 85c per ream. Yellow printing paper 120c per ream per pound. The Lawrence Outlook. 1005 Massachusetts, open all day Saturday. *f
Printed Biology Study Notes: 70 pages,
complete outline of lecture; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta Notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50.
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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.
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. tf
WANTED
Graduate student's or staff member's wife to work in Women's Sportswear Shop. Phone VI 2-0562 for information between 9:30 and 6:00. 4-29
Persons who have been in community disasters, such as tornadoes, typhoons, hurricanes, floods, etc. Please contact Binding, room 7. Strong amnesia or KU exit 644. 4-26
Western Civilization notes wanted. Will pay $2.00 per copy for this year's notes Call UP 1-2901 to have the notes picked up. 4-25
Used cars—highest prices paid. Call VI 3-
9811 611 Vermont tt
American copper, silver and gold coins
metal tokens, campaign badges and im-
portant coins. Many form
coins. American Coin Mart Hours 9:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. 4-25
LOST
Man's olive green pull-over sweater lost between Lindley Hall and Allen Field House on April 1st. Reward. Dennis O'Brien, Stouffer Place 14. 4- VI 3-7608.
YELLOW CAB VI3-6333
MISCELLANEOUS
Alterations: All types women's clothing.
Call VI 3-1348. 4-24
Party time — School house available for
dances, dances and meetings. Call A-
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 23, 1963
Russia Holds Key to Geneva Peace
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Top U.S. officials clung to the hope today that Russia would agree to bring public pressure on Laotian Communists to honor the 14-nation Geneva peace agreement.
President Kennedy and his advisers awaited the results of efforts by Britain, co-chairman with Russia of last year's Geneva meeting, to get the Kremlin to participate in a joint declaration urging all parties concerned to carry out terms of the pact.
The United States was moving some elements of the U.S. 7th Fleet into waters near Laos to be ready for any eventuality and add psychological pressure to the diplomatic offensive.
Officials said that the dispatch of American troops to neighboring Thailand also was a possibility if the Geneva neutrality agreement collapsed.
Humanities Talk In Fraser Tonight
F. S. C. Northrop, professor of philosophy and law at Yale University, will present the Humanities Series lecture at 8 p.m. today in Fraser Theater.
Prof. Northrop will speak on "The Unique Character of the American Legal and Political System."
Last year he received a $10,000 prize award from the American Council of Learned Societies in recognition of "distinguished accomplishment in humanistic scholarship."
The American Political Science Association gave him the 1953 Wendell Willkie Award for his book "Taming of the Nation."
In 1958 Prof. Northrop was the United States representative in a SEATO conference in Bangkok, which involved 13 nations of Southeast Asia.
Last September he headed an international symposium in Austria, at which scientists and scholars from around the world explored problems related to scientific methods and world cultures.
Prof. Northrop has written several books, the latest being "Man, Nature and God." His book "The Meeting of the East and West" has been translated into Japanese, German and Spanish.
Official Bulletin
Ph.D. French Reading Examination
June 27, 2014
No books accepted after April 27.
Ph.D. Reading Examination in German,
Saturday, May 4, 9:30 a.m., Summerfield
411 Candidates must register in Fraser
306 by 4 p.m., Friday, April 26.
TODAY
Tau Sigma, 7 p.m., Robinson Gym.
Tau Sigma, 7 p.m.; Robinson Gym,
Methodist Community Worship, 9-15
northwest of St. Louis.
TOMORROW
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
Catholic Masses, 7:00 a.m. 11:40 a.m.
& Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Strat-
ford
THURSDAY
College Life 7:30 p.m. Oklahoma A. Studentuade for Christ director of Oklahoma
SCHEDULED INTERVIEWS
If you are interested in a teaching position for September, 1963, in any of these areas, please sign up for an interview in 117 Bailley Hall. Buffalo, New York, Soho.
April 25-117 Balley-Centralla School District, Buena Park, Calif.
SUA
invites you to an
Enameling Class
7:45-8:45 p.m.
Tuesdays & Thursdays
in the Craft Shop at the Kansas Union
Register at the information desk
A White House spokesman denied a report that Kennedy had sent a direct appeal to Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev to join the British in reaffirming support of the Geneva accords, which guaranteed the independence of Laos under a coalition government.
FREE
Officials said, however, that Kennedy fully supported Britain's efforts to get Moscow to act and was in close communication with London on this subject.
Kennedy discussed the crisis for an hour yesterday with his top military and diplomatic advisers. They were said to have made no major new decisions on Laos, pending the outcome of diplomatic maneuvering. Other developments in Laos:
Other developments in Laos:
VIENTIANE, Laos — (UPI) — Right-wing strongman Gen. Phoumi Nosavan accused the leftist Pathet Lao today of trying to destroy the Laotian coalition government. Phoumi offered to send troops to help the neutralists against the pro-Communists.
The pro-Communists counter-charged that Phoumi was preparing his troops for an offensive, creating a danger to the security of Laos.
The exchange of charges threatened to upset the uneasy lull in the Plain of Jars fighting between the Pathet Lao and neutralist forces led by Gen. Kong Le.
Diplomatic activity here and abroad picked up in an urgent drive to head off another civil war in this unsettled Southeast Asian kingdom
Israeli President, 78 Dies of Lung Cancer
JERUSALEM, Israel — (UPI) — President Itzhak Ben-Zvi, a scholarly Zionist who helped found the state of Israel, died today at the age of 78.
The pioneer, labor leader and statesman succumbed to lung cancer in his home here.
Ben-Zvi's health started failing following a trip to West Africa last year. But it was not until last weekend that it became known generally he was suffering from cancer.
Telephone Manager Is New C. of C. Head
As president, Ben-Zvi wielded no direct power in affairs of state. But he was a symbol of the new country's unity and sovereignty, above its political parties. The Israeli government is run by the premier, David Ben-Gurion.
KANSAS CITY — (UPI) — J. Hardin Smith of Topeka was elected president of the Kansas State Chamber of Commerce yesterday.
Smith, who succeeds Ellis K. Cave of Dodge City, is Kansas vice-president and general manager of the Southwestern Bell Telephone Co.
Dr. W. Clarke Wescoe of Lawrence, chancellor of the University of Kansas, was named to the board of directors.
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Senate Rapped By Northrop
F. S. C. Northrop, a professor of philosophy and law at Yale University, yesterday termed the United States Senate the "undemocratic branch of democratic government."
Prof. Northrop spoke on American political and legal structure in a speech at the Humanities series last night.
"A LITTLE BIT OF Rhode Island, a little bit of Delaware, count as much as New York with its 11 million people, as big Texas and as much as populous California," he said.
Professor Northrop, comparing the U.S. system of government with the British system, said the British system is easy to distinguish because the executive and legislative branches stand for the same thing.
BUT IN THE UNITED STATES, Prof. Northrop explained, the executive, legislative and even judicial branches may take a different stand on an issue.
The Yale professor pointed out that the executive branch in the British system has no veto over the legislative branch. The
executive is either supported by a majority in the legislative branch or he is voted out of office.
Related story page 12
"Now in the American system, there has always been a President who has vetoed a majority of the legislative proposals," Prof. Northrop said.
"The founding fathers," he added, "created a system of checks and balances. Look at the extreme they went to."
EVEN IF THE AMERICAN executive and legislative branches agree on legislation, he said, "nobody knows if that's going to be the law until a case is brought before the U.S. Supreme Court."
Prof. Northrop said the governing powers are separated in the U.S. Constitution because of the regional differences in the early states.
"American legislature of one cameral like the House of Commons will work in a community that is relatively homogeneous in its populations." he said.
"If our system were based on a majority view, the danger would be that the states with different customs would be in constant conflict." he added.
PROF. NORTHROP, who is the author of 10 books, last year received a $10,000 prize award from the American Council of Learned Societies in recognition of "distinguished accomplishment in humanistic scholarship."
In 1958, Prof. Northrop was the United States representative to a Southeast Asian Treaty Organization (SEATO) conference in Bangkok.
In evaluation of the legal systems, Northrop said, "I think it is one of the unfortunate tragedies of democracy that the new constitutions being set up in India and African nations today are based on the British, rather than American system."
Wednesday, April 24, 1963
He said the Declaration of Independence is based on the Lockeian principle that everyone is born free.
"I THINK THERE IS hope that India can make its liberal democracy a visable one."
"Now how can that be a true proposition," he asked. "Jefferson was a professionally and technically trained lawyer. And Jefferson knew he was writing not a document in biological matter, but in political and legal science. And in that, it is a true proposition."
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Daily hansan
60th Year, No. 127
Muller, an anthropology major, will compete in the National Amy Loveman Book Contest for a $1,000 prize. The national competition is sponsored by the Saturday Review. and the Book of the Month Club.
Applications Ready For ASC Committees
Judges of the KU contest were Jack Vincent, Topeka businessman and book collector; Mrs. Calvin VanderWerf, wife of the chairman of the chemistry department; and Joseph Rubinstein, special collections librarian and assistant professor of bibliography at KU.
Applications for All Student Council committee positions will be available tomorrow, Reuben McCornack. Abilene junior and newly elected student body president, said.
Applications may be obtained from living group presidents, the Dean of Students office, the ASC office, political party presidents and ASC members.
THEY MUST BE turned in by May 1 to the Dean of Students office, the ASC office or political party presidents. McCornack said the applicants will be interviewed.
The library sponsors the contest to encourage student book collecting. Forth said there were 21 entries and seven finalists chosen.
The second place prize of $50 went to Carl Stephen Long, Mission junior, for his collection on national defense, disarmament, and peace organizations.
Committee positions available are as follows:
Contest results were announced today by Stuart Forth, associate director of the library. The contest, named in honor of Mrs. Elizabeth Taylor of Kansas City, is sponsored by the library.
"We had unusually good collections this year for a book contest limited to undergraduates," Forth said.
Jon Muller, Salina senior, won the $100 first prize in the annual Taylor Book Contest with his collection of books on archaeology and ethnography (distribution of races) of the Great Plains.
Archaeology Books Win Library Prize
- Public Relations Committee — (12-14 members) Works to publicize the ASC and its function and acts as a liaison between the ASC and various student organizations.
- Statewide Activities Committee — (unlimited membership) Works to spread information about KU throughout the state.
- Housing Committee — (Six members) Works to provide adequate housing for university students.
- Student Health Commission (Five members) Maintains liaison with Watkins Hospital.
- Publications Committee — Coordinates the organization of various campus publications.
- Social Committee - (Three members) Supervises all social affairs on campus and enforces social regulations.
- Disciplinary Committee — (Three student members selected each semester) Jurisdiction over violations of ASC constitution and other University regulations.
- Traditions Committee - (Four members) Promotes school spirit, coordinates activities of pep clubs and supervises the cheerleading staff.
- Union Operations Board (Five members) Works with the Kansas Union and Student Union Activities.
- Convocations and Lectures Committee — (Three members) Organizes and sponsors convocations.
- Calendar Committee — (Three members) Works with the University Senate in setting up the University calendar.
- Film Series Committee (Three members) Approves and schedules films shown on campus.
- Commencement Committee — (Three members) Organizes and directs commencement.
- Human Rights Council — (Five members) Studies problems involving personal liberty and human rights.
- Secretarial Committee — (Six members) Assists the ASC secretary and student body president.
- Student Liaison Committee — (Four to 12 members) Maintains liaison with the city and state government, advising them on matters concerning KU students.
- Current Events Committee
(Five members) Works to bring campus speakers and films on contemporary issues to the University.
- Campus Chest — Acts as a central collection agency on the campus for various charitable and health organizations.
- Peace Corps Committee — (chairman and vice-president appointed) Coordinates local and national Peace Corps programs.
- Student Court - (Five to seven members) Jurisdiction over violations of ASC constitution and any cases arising among students or student groups. The Student Court has final decision in all matters of interpretation of legislation of the ASC.
- World University Service Coordinates international activities of various campus organizations and carries out ASC programs in the area of international affairs.
- Traffic and Safety Committee—(Four members) Works with the campus police and acts as a tribunal for students seeking relief from University parking tickets.
- Orientation Committee — Organizes the student orientation program.
- Three secretarial positions are also available. Applications may be obtained for secretary in the following departments;
- Department of Student Welfare, which includes the Housing Committee and Student Health Commission.
- Department of Public Relations, which includes the Public Relations Committee and the Statewide Activities Committee.
- Department of Student Activities, which includes the Publications Committee, the Social Committee and the Traditions Committee.
Weather
Skies will be partly cloudy tonight and Thursday. Thunderstorms will be widely scattered over the state tonight and in the east portion of Kansas Thursday.
Warmer temperatures are expected tonight and Thursday. The low tonight will be from 45 to 50 in the northwest and to the middle 50's in the southeast. The high Thursday will be in the 70's.
Pachacamac's Feuding Factions Create Vox, UP
(First in a series)
By Ralph Gage
Vox Populi and University Party, KU's two current political parties, are relative newcomers on the campus political scene.
Although Vox has existed since 1957, and UP since 1960, both still have far to go to match the longevity record of the party which spawned them.
Pachacamac Party, known to alumni as the "Black Masks," ruled KU politics for 28 years, and during that time it practically dictated KU's extracurricular happenings.
PACHACAMAC WAS composed of all the Greek houses and won 22 elections in its lifetime—the equivalent of 44 victories today, because at that time only one election was held each year. The current system of electing All Student Council members from living groups in fall elections and ASC representatives from academic districts in spring elections was inaugurated in the fall of 1960.
During its existence, Pachacamac was opposed by many lesser parties. None were very successful, until FACTS appeared in late 1952. FACT'S' rise sparked a controversy which caused a split in the Pachaeamac ranks, ultimately sounding the death knell for the "Black Masks" as a political organization.
FACTS' RISE robbed Pachacmac of patronage for the party faithful, causing dissention among the houses over the number of appointments and offices they were receiving.
That suggestion caused an uproar, since Pachacamac, as a thoroughly Greek organization, could not support the idea of incorporating Independents. The two factions of the party split in 1854.
Some of the Pachacamac followers felt the party's continued success could be achieved best by incorporating Independent students in the party, rather than trying to win their votes or nullify their strength.
A MAJORITY OF the houses allied themselves with several independent groups, forming AGI (Allied Greek-Independent party.)
The other faction reorganized into POGO, the Party of Greek Organizations. Although POGO also sought Independent support, it collapsed in the spring of 1956
after suffering two consecutive defeats.
The remnants of POGO were reorganized into Vox Populi, whose formation was announced in October, 1557. "The purpose of Vox is to give the Independents a choice when they vote in the future," Jim Austin, the party's first president said.
VOX WON ONLY a single seat in its first election, but in April, 1558, swept 17 of 24 ASC seats, in addition to winning the race for student body president with a write-in candidate.
AGI was finished. It had apparently become too large to satisfy its houses, and a few of them joined the Vox bandwagon in hopes of better patronage rewards.
This support gave Vox the strength to defeat AGI again in the spring of 1959. In that election Vox won 20 of 26 ASC seats, and the student body presidency. AGI then disbanded and Vox was unopposed by any political organization until UP petitioned the ASC for recognition in May, 1969. The party held its first official meeting in October of that year.
THE PARTY'S initial platform
announced that UP had been formed because Vox Populi, during its reign as KU's only political party, had been "unfaithful in serving the students . . . and because there was a great deal which Vox had left undone."
In the fall elections of 1960—the first fall elections in KU's history—UP trimmed Vox ten to six and established itself as a first-rate political organization.
By the fall of 1961, both parties, direct descendants of Pachacamac's feuding factions, had firmly established themselves in the sphere of campus politics.
Some of the planks show significant recognition of the students' problems, as well as an understanding of the extent of the ASC's abilities.
AT TIMES, BOTH parties have worked toward the same ends. Their platforms indicate, however, they have differing opinions about what is needed and wanted by KU students.
The first Vox platform to appear on the campus contained only two planks with any merit. One called for investigation and correction of the housing problem plaguing independent students. The other dealt with ASC committee appointments, their basis and who should have the power to make them.
THE SECOND VOX platform to appear was a little better, although it repeated several policy statements inserted as planks in the first platform.
JIM AUSTIN, Vox's candidate for student council president in the spring of 1959, announced his stand on nine matters he considered important issues.
The most significant of these was a call for all schools to have a voting representative on the ASC. He also called for an investigation of the Student Health Service.
Austin's stands apparently were favored by the student body. He led the Vox sweep of the election which put AGI out of existence.
UP'S FIRST PLATFORM, presented in the fall of 1960, called for the University to clarify rules and regulations regarding social and disciplinary matters. Vox had a similar plank.
UP and Vox both supported amendments advocating separate ASC representation for large and small dormitories. Vox initiated this action in the spring of 1960.
(Continued on page 12)
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 24, 1963
HERBLOCK'S CARTOON
Worry If the Talk Stops
The disarmament talks in Geneva have been running more than a year, and on the surface there appears to be no progress.
While both the United States and the Soviet Union repeatedly have acknowledged that nuclear war probably would end Western civilization as we now know it, both sides apparently refuse to erase the basic differences which cause the danger.
But there is no value in wallowing in a morass of inevitable destruction.
THIS FAILURE TO absolve differences leads many people to assume that nuclear war is inevitable; the antagonists are on a collision course with both parties picking up steam.
Thankfully, the U.S. and Soviet leaders act in a manner which would indicate that they doubt the inevitability of nuclear destruction.
IF FOR NO OTHER reason, a disarmament agreement will not be put into effect because neither side will trust the other, and the Soviets refuse on-site inspections.
But while the principal goal of the Geneva conferences probably will not be met, the antagonists are talking. And the more they talk, in attempts to define and understand more clearly the basic differences, the higher the chances they will not turn to war as a final solution.
It is generally believed that neither the United States nor the Soviet Union will make a calculated, planned decision to start a nuclear war; neither side would serve national interests by triggering total destruction.
BUT THE DANGER of accidental war is another matter. An invulnerable deterrent, which is the bulwark of the U.S. defense, requires spreading your counter-punch capacity over a wide area. While this lessens the chance for an enemy to knock out punch, it also increases the problems of controlling the weapons.
THE MUCH-PUBLICIZED "hot line" between President Kennedy and Premier Khrushchev is to be used to prevent nuclear war by misunderstanding. It resulted from talks at Geneva.
Of course, this may not prevent war, even accidental war, but it certainly is an improvement—a step in the proper direction.
If the threat of nuclear war is to be dissolved, the two antagonists must dissolve their basic differences. Certainly, this hope is nothing but a pipe dream at the present time,but it is the best we can hope for.
The irony of the world being bathed in nuclear fire as a reaction to an accidentally fired missile would not lessen the disastrous results.
The only way to negotiate differences (outside of fighting) is to talk. They are talking; we should start worrying when the talk stops.
- Terry Murphy
"Some Day We'll Have To Get This Thing Finished"
RECORD
NUCLEAR
FALLOUT
EXPECTED
THIS
SPRING
EAST-WEST TEST-BAY NEGOTIATIONS
© 1963 HERBLOCK
THE WASHINGTON POST
Weather Control Possible Key to Water Control
Rv Terry Murphy
Water: we drink it, wash with it, and generally take it for granted even while knowing what a precious resource it is.
Its importance is historic: men have fought range wars and other wars when access lanes to reservoirs were closed or regulated. Federal court dockets are jammed with cases in which large cities fight for the vital right to tap large pools, both underground and on the surface.
These are manifestations of the struggle which boils down to this: Water—how and by whom shall it be controlled and to what ends?
The most obvious means of water control seen throughout the world is dams.
Dams vary in size and form, from those used to create farm ponds for watering livestock, to the monuments to engineering which stretch across miles-wide valley floors with bases measured in width into hundreds of feet.
Regardless of size or form, all dams serve one common function: the storage of water. They are designed to make the most effective possible use of water.
Man has been dependent on dams for much of his recreation, electric power, irrigation, navigation and, most important, for drinking water and hygiene.
As the dependence on dams has grown, the emphasis has shifted to erecting what are termed multipurpose reservoirs. The term dam fails to convey the multiple role the structures have come to assume.
One of the more spectacular examples of multipurpose reservoirs is Lake Mead. When the lake was formed by backwaters from Hoover Dam, recreation was a distant second to the basic purpose of storing water for irrigation and flood control.
But Lake Mead has become as renowned as a recreation area as a flood control project. The same probably will hold true for the recently completed Tuttle Creek Dam project north of Manhattan. Yet the original Tuttle Creek furor was grounded in conflicting views about the best method of watershed control.
As important and prominent as lakes are, both natural and man-made, they remain just one consideration in the entire picture of water resources.
Oceans are the largest reservoirs. Like lakes and ponds they provide recreation, but the prime importance of oceans lies in their value to transportation, both of goods and ideas.
One hope for reclaiming arid
The principal difference between the Sahara Desert and rich river-bottom land is the absence of water in one and the plenitude in the other.
Another source, wells, supplies enough water to make areas of marginal precipitation support life. But wells always represent a second choice as a water supply. Surface water presents many obvious advantages.
As valuable as water is to man, it represents a threat to his continued existence. When not in the relatively calm state in lakes or slowly-moving streams, water threatens property, life, and most importantly, the top-soil from which man exacts food for life.
But the inaccessibility of ground water does not lessen its importance. Without groundwater, important streams would be dry except during and immediately after storms.
Dailij 17änsan
lands lies with the success of men working toward an economically feasible means of distilling salt water. This could hold the solution to the problem of supplying cities with water to meet domestic needs.
A less obvious, but just as important, source of water lies beneath the surface of the earth, out of sight and beyond practical methods of control.
111 Flint Hall
University of Kansas student newspaper
January 1988, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912
Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press
Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22
N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates:
$3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon
during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University
holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Law-
rence, Kansas.
Telephone VIking 3-2700 Extension 711, news room Extension 376, business office NEWS DEPARTMENT
Fred Zimmerman
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Dennis Branstiter
Managing Lato.
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Each spring, we know that at least one section of the country will be inundated by river water which leaps it banks and leaves property damage totaling millions of dollars, not too mention the lives lost.
Editorial Editor
Jack Cannon
Floods are familiar disasters to everyone; persons living in mountain areas can attest to the fact that water—in its various forms—kills and destroys in other ways.
Business Manager
Snowslides have made news often enough to familiarize most people with their effects. More rare and proportionately more destructive are earth slides or mud slides. A complete village
in Peru and nearly all its 200 inhabitants perished last year in a mud slide that resulted from water than ran unharnessed.
The people of the Midwest are well aware of the problems tied to too little or too much water; the region's economic base rides on the measure of moisture.
But dangerous as water in motion is, its value to transportation has been and remains an important determinant in the economic and political strength of regions and even nations.
Here in the Midwest the battle between the big dam forces and the catch-it-where-it-falls advocates has shifted local attention away from the importance of rivers as transport avenues, but it is merely a provincial blind spot.
But provincial conditions blind us to the problem, which is neither too little nor too much water, but rather whether the water present can drain properly.
Fast-evaporating water flowing down slopes in thin sheets produce alkali flats, unfit for crops or grazing land for livestock. The reverse situation, where evaporation is minimal, produces marshes. Economically, such land is uninhabitable. Politically, the field marshals of Hitler will certify that one famous marsh, the Parapet in west-central Russia, greatly influenced the tide of world affairs.
The importance of water is a subject which, perhaps, is so obvious that it is of little avail to discuss it. They key to this sentiment is found in the expression, "the weather; everyone talks about it, but no one does anything about it."
This old saw is losing its teeth of truth, especially in light of developments since World War II.
The entire strategy of attacking "Fortress Europe" swung as a pendulum on the thin thread of predicting the weather conditions; specifically, the end of the spring storms.
In Italy, Allied offensive efforts appeared doomed to failure in the slow-moving muck; the predicted ends of the rains made an important diversionary action possible.
The major Allied thrust in Normandy was nearly called off because of storm-chopped waters in the English Channel. Had the invasion been delayed, the loss of surprise would have been measured in the loss of lives.
Despite ever-foaming detergents and other pollutants which plague water conservationists, man apparently has mastered the technology of managing water resources after they have reached the surface of the earth.
Presently successes which are timid in light of final goals include the "salting" of rain clouds to precipitate rainfall. In 1963, the business of successful Indian rain dances is the concern of scientists.
The task of manipulating the atmospheric conditions is the new challenge. Don't bet against gradual success.
In an age when men orbit the earth and return to tell, no one laughs very loudly when meteorologists speak of controlling the amount, time and location of precipitation.
If science can provide moisture in the amounts at the time and place desired, the task of feeding the world will be made easier.
Letters Minutemen
I hope that those who read or heard the talk of Mr. De Fugh, on Thursday, April 18, in the Minority Forum, noticed that the only difference between his speech and those of the Nazi leaders in Germany 30 years ago is that Mr. De Pugh did not deliver his speech in the German language.
Ruth Adam
Lawrence graduate student
Wednesday, April 24, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Around Campus Cervantes Day Planned
Cervantes Day, an educational holiday for students of Spanish in area schools, will be held here Saturday.
The program will include lectures, sound equipment demonstrations, films and the awarding of prizes for high school language competition.
The Kansas chapter of the American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese will also hold their annual meeting under the direction of Arnold Weiss, associate professor of romance languages and chapter president.
Sanchez Escribano of the University of Colorado will lecture in Spanish on "Lope de Vega, valor humano y estético" at 10 a.m. in Fraser Theater. "Rio Escondido," a Mexican film with English subtitles, will be shown at 7:30 p.m. Friday and 10 a.m. Saturday in 303 Bailey.
The film is the story of Mexico's struggle against illiteracy.
Domingo Ricart, associate professor of Romance languages, will honor the late Prof. José Osma, founder of Cervantes Day, at the luncheon in the Kansas Union.
A variety program will be held at 2 p.m. in which the play "Yerma" will be presented by several KU students. Winners of the annual AATSP high school language contest will be announced. The Kansas winner will be eligible for a national award.
In addition to KU, the participating schools are: Lawrence, Washburn Rural (Topeka), Bonner Springs Rural, and Onaga Rural high schools, St. Mary College of Xavier, Mount St. Scholastica College of Atchison, and Olathe Junior High School.
'Elijah' to be Presented
Three hundred voices of the University Chorus backed by the University Symphony will present the "Elijah" by Felix Mendelssohn at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in Hoch Auditorium.
Soloists will be Marva Lou Powell, soprano and Topeka graduate student; Sharon Tebbenkamp Sooter, mezzo-soprano and Lawrence senior; Edward Sooter, tenor and Lawrence special student; and James Ralston, baritone and instructor of music education and choral music.
Clayton Krehbiel, associate professor of music education and choral music, will conduct.
The program is open to the public without charge.
One-Act Plays Scheduled
An international cast of American, Austrian, English, and German students will present three one-act plays in German at 8:30 p.m. Friday in the University Experimental Theatre.
The first play, "The Matron of Ephesus," by Lessing, is a classic comedy. It deals with a widow in Ephesus who mourns her husband's death by sitting in his tomb, crying and starving herself.
She meets a military captain, falls in love with him, and eventually plans to marry him.
The second play is "Christmas Shopping" by Schnitzler. This is the scene of two old lovers meeting and the conversation which takes place during that time.
The third play, by Gunter Grass, is entitled "Ten Minutes to Buffalo," and deals with two men who are running away from their ship. They try to reach the city of Buffalo, which symbolizes freedom and happiness, and are prevented from doing so by the captain of their ship.
The plays are under the supervision of Henriette Mandl, assistant instructor of speech and drama. She said, "We hope the plays meet with an excellent response so that the program can be enlarged in the coming year."
German Library Received
A 140-volume German library has been given to the KU German department by the Goethe-Institut in Munich as a teaching aid.
The library, entitled "Model Library for a German Teacher," includes the latest works on German literature, methodology of teaching, German civilization, and about 10 long playing recordings on German pronunciation, conversation and other teaching aids.
The library is now being cataloged and will possibly be in use before the end of the semester.
J. A. Burzle, chairman of the German department, said he hoped to tell all teachers of German in Kansas of the new acquisition. Although the library will remain at KU, any teacher of German may use it or write to KU for information from it.
Sociologists Attend Meeting
Four KU sociologists have returned from a three-day meeting of the Mid-West Sociological Society in Milwaukee, Wis.
Charles K. Warriner, chairman of the KU department of sociology, discussed a paper presented by another sociologist on children's consciousness of race, and C. Dale Johnson, instructor of sociology presented a paper on "Colleague Relationship Among the Clergy."
Awards for the best student papers submitted in a society competition were presented by Marston McCluggage, professor of sociology, and chairman of the society's publication committee. E. Jackson Baur, professor of sociology, chaired a section on international relations.
Wescoe Says KU Expansion Hinges on More Financial Aid
By Roy Miller
Emphasizing a need for receiving more financial aid, Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe said last night that KU and Lawrence could and should become one of the nation's major research-based industrial centers.
Chancellor Wescoe, speaking before more than 200 persons at a Lawrence Chamber of Commerce dinner in the Kansas Union Ballroom, said:
Dr. Wescoe said that tremendous amounts of money are available to research-based industrial centers from the National Aeronautics and Space Administration, the Atomic Energy Commission, the National Science Foundation, the Defense Department and other federal bureaus.
"IN THE UNIVERSITY. Lawrence has the secret ingredient that made Boston the electronics capital of the world, which made the Palo Alto area of California one of the most dynamic regions in the nation, which is bringing research-based industry to strange-sounding places like Lafayette (Ind.), Ann Arbor (Mich.) and Norman (Okla.), and half a dozen other cities and towns across this nation which are much like Lawrence."
"The problem for Kansas is how to build capability," Chancellor Wescoe said.
HE SUGGESTED the following as possible solutions to the problem: $ \bullet $ "Existing cooperation between industry and higher education could be enhanced."
- "A concerted effort could be made to exploit present unused
resources of all kinds to bring industry to the state, including the imaginations, the capabilities and the contacts of higher education..."
"But these will not be enough unless the foundation for industrial growth has been laid: a well-supported system of higher education in Kansas," Chancellor Wescoe said.
He said such a foundation would necessitate increased support for all public institutions of higher education in the state, particularly for KU and Kansas State University.
they're a must!
WHITE LEVI'S
CHANCELLOR WESCOE SAID one important step to obtain industrial centers would be to increase teachers' salaries.
"An excessive concern about costs did not build such great universities as the University of Michigan or the University of California at Berkeley." Chancellor Wescoe said, "These two state universities are great because they have received more state support for salaries and operations and research than any other state university."
He said the salary paid KU faculty members is 20 per cent below the average paid faculty members of other universities the size of KU. He also said a recent survey of members of the Association of American Universities showed that KU ranked 29th on a list of 30 in average salaries paid to professors
Dr. Wescoe said if the University of Michigan were moved from Ann Arbor to Lawrence, the present KU
We've Got 'Em In Your Size!
"Appalling?" Dr. Wescoe asked of his hypothetical shift of universities. "Perhaps, but it would buy a great university, and only $38 million of those annual expenses would come from state appropriations. From federal grants would come $28.5 million; for gifts and contracts, more than $8 million.
"THIS IS ONLY part of the story: for with this great university would come a host of industries based upon research; it would bring to Kansas a burst of vitality and a long-lasting prosperity beside which the public investment would seem like only the turning of the key which unlocked the dynamo."
The Chancellor said the industries around Boston's Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) and Cambridge's Harvard University reportedly employ 100,000 persons.
student population of 10,000 would become 30,000, the KU faculty of less than 700 would become 2,000 and operating expenses would be $113 million instead of the existing less than $30 million.
Chancellor Wescoe said "risk capital" should be made available in Kansas to establish research-based industries.
LAWRENCE SURPLUS
"In this area we have talked too long in terms of inducing established industries to move to Kansas," he said. "We can, if we have courage, develop our own, just as the great modern research industries on either coast. . . ."
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University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 24, 1963
Prof. Jenks Follows Interests; Sacrifices Big Profits, Ulcers
By Ralph Gage
"No, I'm not really a horticulturist. That's just my hobby. I'm a cartographer."
Sound like an old cigarette commercial? Could be, but it describes George F. Jenks, professor of geography. The pipe-puffing professor is also a self-styled philosopher.
Prof. Jenks, a crewcut Air Force veteran, says he got into geography and cartography (map-making) purely by accident.
"I had a B.S. degree in education," he said, and "I taught grade school and junior high before I went into the Air Force during the war."
"I was an aerial navigator in the Air Force, and used a lot of maps. When I was discharged in the fall of '45, I went to Syracuse University. I planned to study geography and increase my qualifications for public teaching.
"WHEN I WAS enrolling, my adviser told me, 'You can either be a geographer or a school teacher, not both,' so I picked geography."
But now he is both.
A native New Yorker, Prof. Jenks said he would have liked to have been able to attend Cornell University. "I wanted to study to be a biologist or an ornithologist," he said
Prof. Jenks said instead of Cornell he attended a state teachers college because of the depression.
"I WORKED IN a dime store and a clothing store — for twenty cents an hour—to help put myself through school.
"I could have gone into the managerial end of either and be earning three times what I am now. But I'd have a roaring ulcer, too!
"I have a philosophy that you're better off doing what you like at a low rate of pay, than to earn a lot and be miserable."
IN ADDITION TO his teaching duties, Prof. Jenks is engaged in two research projects.
One involves a study of new techniques and methods of data display so that the data are represented truthfully and can be understood easily.
"WE'RE EXPERIMENTING with three-dimensional maps and graphs. We hope to come up with some which can show the average reader complex scientific data."
An article by Prof. Jenks was published in the February issue of the Kansas Business Review. The article discusses the reliability of facts and figures presented by means of maps and graphs.
For example, a simple bar graph can pointedly illustrate changes in data, but showy symbols can accidentally or intentionally confuse, rather than inform.
TWO BARS, ONE ABOUT half the length of the other, show that poultry and egg production in southeast Kansas declined by almost 50 per cent in a decade.
If, however, eggs are substituted for the bars, readers cannot help being confused. Though the eggs are the same lengths as the bars, the area representation of the eggs may lead the reader to conclude the production ratio illustrated was four to one, instead of the real two to one.
This is one of several ways in which graph interpretations can be distorted or guided.
"The mere representation of concepts by numbers, in graphs or maps, does not insure accuracy or truth. Authors can be, and often are, selective in the methods they use in data interpretation and manipulation."Jenks said.
BECAUSE AUTHORS TEND to present one viewpoint, the reader must understand how the author has treated his data before accepting facts and figures with confidence, he concluded.
A second research project Jenks is currently occupied with resulted from his work on the 1960 census.
"There is a feeling in the federal government," Jenks said, "that figures for the Negro population should not be presented in separate statistics, although racial groups were counted separately during the census." he said.
JENKS WANTED to show the movement of the Negro population but was overruled. He felt the public should be made aware of the
aspects of the movements.
He also feels Negroes could use the data to their advantage in illustrating inequalities.
The University Research Fund provided Jenks with money to hire an assistant, and he went ahead with the project on his own.
HE IS PREPARING A SERIES of 12 maps, showing the Negro population distribution change from 1950 to 1960. Most of the statistics are ready, but he has no funds to use in publishing the maps.
Jenks intends to show several of them at a coming meeting of the American Association of Geographers, in hopes of securing the needed funds. If that fails, he plans to try to interest other organizations and foundations.
when he isn't busy with research projects,he often works in a greenhouse he designed and built.
"I don't grow anything exotic," he said. "I just have a general collection of plants."
HE SAID THE EXPERIENCE had given him great respect for professional florists and greenhouse operators.
He was amazed by the way temperature, water, light and other such conditions must be manipulated in order to have seasonal flowers blooming when they are in demand.
"Easter lilies aren't much good the day after Easter," he said. He laughed and said that in the year and a half he has had his greenhouse, he hasn't been able to get a poinsettia, the traditional Christmas tower, to bloom before February.
"I GUESS IT'S the light," he explained.
Jenks, who teaches Conservation of Natural Resources, a geography course, said he would like to see legislators and pressure groups work
for the benefit of society as a whole,
instead of their own selfish interests.
Commenting on the manner in which governmental bodies handle resources, Jenks said projects such as dams, roads and parks too often end up with democratically-arrived at solutions based on political solutions which prevent the projects from being in harmony with the environment.
THE ATTITUDE OF supporters of these projects also irritates Jenks.
"The hypocrisy of people who pretend to support a project for one reason, when they really back it for another selfish reason is a sad commentary on society," he said.
As an example, he cited persons who support federal dam projects, supposedly because of flood control benefits, when their real interest is in the recreational possibilities of the projects.
JENKS IS IN his 14th year of teaching at the University. He said he likes KU and Lawrence, but the schism between the University community and the town is a problem.
He said the situation was typical of college towns.
He gave as a possible reason for this schism the different manners in which the two groups measure success. In the business community, success is measured principally by financial status.
Success, he said, in the University community is measured by the respect of one's colleagues.
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On Campus with Max Shulman (Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf," "The Many Loves of Dobie Gillis," etc.)
FILLING A WELL-NEEDED GAP
Although my son is a college freshman, I am glad to say that he is still not too old to climb up on my lap and have a heart-to-heart talk when things are troubling him. My boy is enrolled at Harvard where he is studying to be a fireman. From the time he was a little tiny baby he always said he wanted to be a fireman. Of course, my wife and I believed that he would eventually grow out of it, but no sir, the little chap never wavered in his ambition for one minute!
So here he is at Harvard today taking courses in net holding, mouth-to-mouth breathing, carbon tetrachloride, and Dalmatian dogs. It is a full schedule for the young man, and that, in fact, is exactly what we talked about when last he climbed upon my lap.
upon my map.
He complained that every bit of his time is taken up with his major requirements. He doesn't have so much as one hour a week to sample any of the fascinating courses outside his major — history, literature, language, science, or any of the thousand and one things that appeal to his keen young mind.
I am sure that many of you find yourselves in the same scholastic bind; you are taking so many requirements that you can't find time for some appealing electives. Therefore, in today's column I will forego levity and give you a brief survey in a subject that is probably not included in your curriculum.
Hes still not too Old
I have asked the makers of Marlboro Cigarettes whether I might employ this column—normally a vehicle for innocent merriment—to pursue this serious end. "Of course you may, crazy kid," they replied kindly, their grey eyes crinkled at the corners, their manly mouths twisted in funny little grins. If you are a Marlboro smoker—and what intelligent human person is not?—you would expect the makers of Marlboro to be fine men. And so they are—wonderful guys, every man-jack of them—good, generous, understanding, wise. They are each tipped with a pure white filter and come in soft pack or Flip-Top box.
But I digress. We were going to take up a topic you are probably unable to cover in your busy academic life. Let us start with the most basic topic of all—anthropology, the study of man himself.
Man is usually defined as a tool-making animal, but I personally do not find this definition entirely satisfactory. Man is not the only species which makes tools. The simians, for example, make monkey wrenches.
Still, when you come to a really complicated tool—like a linotype, for instance—you can be fairly sure it was made by Homo sapiens—or else a very intelligent tiger. The question one should ask, therefore, is not who made the tool, but what did he do with it.
For example, in a recent excavation in the Olduvai Gorge a large assortment of hominoid fossils was found, all dating back to the Middle Pleistocene Age. Buried with the fossils was a number of their artifacts, the most interesting being a black metal box which emitted a steady beeping sound. Now, of course, zoologists will tell you that tree frogs make such boxes which they employ in their mating activities (I can't go into detail about it in this family newspaper) but the eminent anthropological team, Mr. and Mrs. Walther Sigafoos (both he and she are named Walther) were convinced that this particular box was made not by tree frogs but by Neanderthal men. To prove their point, they switched on the box and out came television, which, as everyone knows, was the forerunner of fire.
If there is anything more you need to know about anthropology, just climb up on my lap as soon as my son leaves.
* * *
© 1963 Max Shulman
The makers of Marlboro Cigarettes who sponsor this column, often with tepidation, are not anthropologists. They are tobaccoists—good ones, I think—and I think you'll think so too when you sample their wares—available wherever cigarettes are sold in all fifty states.
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University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 24,1963
GREEK FIGURE? — The iron sculpture entitled pieces comprising the "Architects as Artists" show the "Discus Thrower" is one of more than 50 now on display in the Kansas Union.
Architecture and Art Displayed In Union
By Dolores Orman
The ability of an architect to do more than draw rigid mathematical designs is shown by the "Architects as Artists" exhibit now on display in the south lounge of the Kansas Union.
An annual event, the exhibit is composed of art work by architecture students. The variety of subject matter is matched by the variety of materials used.
THE FIELDS OF student work include painting, drawing, sculpture, photography, ceramics, and architectural designs. There are examples of iron sculpture, spark plug sculpture, wood sculpture and oil paintings, water colors, ink drawings, pencil drawings, and tissue paper art work.
The more than 50 art works displayed are in competition. Special recognition and awards will be given to students at the architecture department's 50th anniversary dinner Saturday in the Kansas Union.
The art works range from the abstract—such as a sculpture work entitled "Dawn"—to the realistic such as an architectural design showing the problem of converting an abandoned silo into a summer retreat.
RAY HENRY, Lawrence senior
Speech Potpourri Finalists Chosen
Eight speech students have been chosen to compete in the Speech Potpourri finals at 8 tonight in Fraser Theater.
Eight other semi-finalists were chosen last night to compete in finals at 8 Thursday night in Fraser Theater.
Each semester one representative from each of the 49 Speech I sections is selected. From these, 16 speakers are chosen for the finals.
Monday's winners and their topics are Fred Hoffman, Topeka junior, "The Psychology of Love"; Kirk McConachie, Wichita freshman, "New Kind of Pet"; Dale McGuinn, Merriam freshman, "Siaamese Fighting Fish"; Marilyn Robertson, Ottawa freshman, "The Role of AWS"; Cindy Snyder, Bethesda, Md., sophomore, "Audobon Society"; Robert West, McPherson freshman, "Rocket Propulsion" and Robert Woody. Bartlesville, Okla, freshman.
who is in charge of the student display, said there will be an award to the student who has contributed the outstanding display; two awards in the upper division and lower division of design, and three awards in the categories of painting, sculpture, and the related arts such as photography and ceramics.
Displayed in the same area is an exhibit of photographs of buildings designed by alumni of the University of Kansas department of architecture.
The photographs and designs represented include the St. Stephens Church, Spokane, Wash.; the Hilton Inn, Kansas City, Mo.; the Imperial House Apartment Project, Nashville, Tenn.; the St. Joseph Hospital, Denver, Colo., and the Homer Research Laboratory, Bethlehem Steel Co., Bethlehem Penn.
THE 50th ANNIVERSARY alumni exhibit will be on display throughout the month of April and the student exhibit will be on display
through Sunday and possibly an additional daw.
The architecture department's celebration of its anniversary which will include panel discussions and art movies will be concluded with a dinner Saturday evening in the Kansas Union Ballroom. George Beal, professor of architecture, said approximately 300 alumni and friends are expected to attend.
The dinner will be highlighted by scholarship awards to students of architecture. The awards, which come from alumni, national and local chapters of the American Institute of Architects an the general university scholarship award program, amount to about $5,000 or $7,000 annually.
Yesterday's High and Low
NEW YORK — (UPI) — The lowest temperature reported to the U.S. Weather Bureau this morning, excluding Hawaii and Alaska, was 19 degrees at Hibbing, Minn. The highest reported yesterday was 97 at Cotulla and Laredo, Tex.
Graduate Nears Goal; Trains to be Astronaut
A KU graduate and Air Force test pilot hopes to pilot a craft to the moon soon.
Capt. Joe Engle is one step nearer to his dream. He was chosen for training as a possible astronaut or space project manager at Edwards Air Force Base, Calif.
THE 30-YEAR-OLD Kansan is the youngest pilot ever selected for astronautical training at Edwards. He is one of ten men selected for the space research pilot program.
BUT A PILOT must have a thorough knowledge of instruments entrusted to his care, and must be able to identify plane malfunctions and recommend repairs. "He might
Engle said many persons have a misconception of a test pilot. "They believe that a pilot does not need any scientific background in order to make contributions to a test program."
As anexperimental test pilot and an aeronautical scientist, Capt. Engle has encountered many technical and operational problems which could prove valuable on a moon flight.
"The cost of current research prohibits mere play in the air," he said. "You must know what you are doing every minute."
"In short," Capt. Engle continued, "a pilot must be an engineer and an engineering degree is a must."
have to make instant decisions," he said.
CAPT. ENGLE ATTENDS school at Edwards for one half day and flies the other half.
"The flights help us to develop new techniques in landing, energy management, and other procedures applicable to space flights."
A NATIVE OF Chapman, Kan,
Capt. Engle has been a fighter test pilot at the Air Force Test Center at Edwards since graduation from the school's experimental test pilot course in 1962.
Capt. Engle has flown at altitudes up to 90,000 feet.
He is a 1955 graduate of KU where he received a B.S. in aeronautical engineering.
Capt. Engle returned to the campus this week-end to attend the 43rd annual Engineering Exposition.
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El Salvadorans Tour Campus Departments
Visits to the School of Dentistry and the KU Medical Center in Kansas City and the chemistry department on the Lawrence campus have highlighted the first half of the El Salvador group's week at KU.
The 13 student leaders from the University of El Salvador were given a tour Monday afternoon of the school or department of their major field of study.
FIVE STUDENTS visited the School of Dentistry, four medical students toured the KU Medical Center and four were shown the complete operation of the chemistry department by Calvin VanderWerf chairman of the department and professor of chemistry.
The students participated in a seminar on "U.S. Government and Political Institutions" yesterday morning. It was conducted by Clifford Ketzel, associate professor of political science, and was coordinated by John P. Augelli, chairman of the Latin American Area Studies program and campus director of the El Salvador student visit.
MONTE JOHNSON, public relations director of the KU athletic department, gave the students a tour of Allen Field House and Memorial Stadium yesterday afternoon. He explained athletic facilities and introduced the visiting students to KU coaches and athletes.
Charles Staley, associate professor of economics, was scheduled to conduct a seminar for the students this morning on "Economic Development of the U.S."
Burton Marvin, dean of the School of Journalism, welcomed the students and offered them a tour of the school. The group will also visit the University television and radio studios today.
This afternoon the student leaders were visiting the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information.
THE EL SALVADOR visitors will receive their first opportunity to meet and exchange views with KU student government leaders at 7:30 tonight in Room 305-B of the Kansas Union.
Presidents of the KU political parties, the student body president and
Canuteson to Go To Health Meeting
Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, KU Student Health Service Director, will attend the annual meeting of the American College Health Association Tuesday through Friday.
Meeting sites will be the Hotel Muehlebach in Kansas City, Mo., at the Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan., and here on campus.
other organizations have been invited.
Wednesday, April 24, 1963 University Daily Kansan
The Lawrence campus will be the conference site Thursday afternoon and evening.
A seminar on "U.S. Policy in Relation to Latin America" will be conducted at 9:30 tomorrow morning in the Pan American Room of the Kansas Union. Robert D. Tomasek, assistant professor of political science, will be in charge of the discussion.
Dr. Lawrence W. Holden, director of the student health service of the University of Colorado, is president of the association and will preside at many of the sessions.
Dr. Canuteson is chairman of the program and of local arrangements.
The conference theme is the ethical relationships of student health personnel to students, parents, the institution, and other medical personnel and services.
The Friday afternoon general session, concluding the conference, will be devoted to the problems of smoking and health and the policies student health services should take toward use of tobacco by students.
Those persons attending the conference are responsible for the health care of the nation's more than 3 million college and university students.
Lawrence Police Radar Unit Purchased to Curb Speeders
English Poet Subject Of SUA Poetry Hour
William Gilbert, associate professor of history, will read the poetry of Elizabeth Jennings, a contemporary English poet, at the SUA Poetry Hour at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Music and Browsing Room of the Kansas Union.
Nelick to Deliver SUA 'Last Lecture'
Franklyn Nelick, associate professor of English, will speak in the Last Lecture Series at 4:30 p.m. today in the Music Room of the Kansas Union.
Coffee will be served.
In keeping with the theme of the SUA-sponsored lecture series, Prof. Nelick will give the lecture he would give if it were to be the last of his career. He has not announced his topic.
Prof. Nelick is particularly interested in Milton and the 17th century.
He believes that consciousness of speed will increase attention paid to other traffic laws.
wanted everyone to know that the department has the radar unit and that it will be used regularly. Cox hopes to slow Lawrence traffic.
A $1500 electromagnetic radar unit recently purchased by the Lawrence Police Department can be used not only by parked police vehicles, but also by moving ones.
The new unit looks like a large spot light on a flat stand. One part that looks like the base of a study lamp stands fits over both sides of a car window and is held in place by the closed window.
A "substantial" number of arrests and warning tickets have been made, with the new radar unit, Cox said.
Police Chief Bill Cox said he
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A "Floating University" which will take approximately 750 U.S. students on two World Cruises during which fully accredited college credits can be obtained will commence next October.
Called the "University of the Seven Seas", the cruises will take students on two voyages of 110 and 120 days during which calls will be made at 22 ports including Lisbon, Naples, Alexandria, Bombay, Hong Kong, and Honolulu.
The University has existed for three years and its courses will be conducted, coincidentally, aboard the motor ship "Seven Seas", a 12,574-ton, 482-foot liner of the EUROPE-CANADA LINE, for which Holland-America Line is general passenger agent.
The ship is being especially modified to serve as a floating university with complete classroom facilities including a well-equipped library, medical staff, special film equipment and various other material relevant to college study.
The first semester voyage will begin on October 22,1963,when the "Seven Seas" sails eastward from New York from Holland-America Line's new Pier 40,and will terminate in San Diego,California on February 8,1964. The second semester voyage will last 120 days and sails from San Diego on February 11,1964,ending in New York on June 9,1964.
Headed by William T. Hughes, President of the University of the Seven Seas, the non-profit organization, originally sponsored by the Whittier Rotary Club, is incorporated in California and has acquired official status as an institution of higher learning from that state, which empowers it to issue transcripts of student records and to grant degrees.
In addition to Mr. Hughes and Executive Director Dr. E. Ray Nichols, Jr., the University Afloat will have approximately 40 professors and instructors including some 15 women faculty members.
Among the academic courses open to students who attend the University will be classes in architecture, creative writing, music, painting, theatre, business administration, economics, education, political science, astronomy, geography, geology, oceanography, public health, languages, history, anthropology, philosophy, psychology, religion, sociology, and speech.
Rates for students who enroll will range from $1590 which includes gratuities and special field trips while in port. In addition, tuition for each semester voyage at sea is $400.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 24, 1963
HRC Working to Define Function
(Third of a Series)
Bv Jackie Helstrom
If a Negro is refused service because of the color of his skin, what can he do about it?
He can either ignore the insult, or he can complain to a private civil rights organization and initiate a protest march.
BUT THERE is a third possibility. A new area is opening in the civil rights movement. This is the official civil rights committees of governing bodies.
In these organizations, the Negro has a place to take a discrimination complaint.
It is the Human Rights Committee (HRC) of the All Student Council that has taken over this role at KU. It has tried to become an effective intervening body between the students and the administration in civil rights matters on campus.
Many people consider this type of organization merely a lid to keep the pot of civil rights controversy from boiling over. But the suppression of demonstrations by the HRC and similar groups may possibly gain the confidence of the people who want to see something done in civil rights, but want to avoid personal involvement in an active demonstration.
THE HRC IS NOW in its second year and is still exploring the possibilities of its range of function. However, the basic scope of its activities are outlined in a preliminary report submitted to the ASC.
These are, in the area of campus problems, to conduct a scientific survey of the opinion of KU students
in several facets of human rights to hold periodic meetings to allow the open discussion of all problems, and the policies of the committee, to meet with representatives of KU organizations interested in human rights problems, and to examine the organizational structure of KU student activities.
Something has been accomplished in each of these areas. For the scientific survey of opinion, Arthur Douville, Prairie Village freshman who is a member of the committee, has been working with Ray P. Cuzzort, associate professor of sociology, to prepare a questionnaire that will determine civil rights feelings. It is to be sent to a random selection of 200 students. The results of this questionnaire are to provide an accurate expression of the general feeling of the campus on civil rights questions.
The committee has also been active in sponsoring meetings. They have held three this year.
The first was a general organizational meeting at which the HRC invited expression of opinion on what the purposes and responsibilities of the committee should be.
LATER IN THE YEAR a meeting was held with all interested fraternity presidents to discuss the general issues involved in the declaration of human rights the HRC is planning to submit to the ASC.
The third meeting was a panel discussion by three men involved in civil rights work, who talked to students about two civil rights bills that were before the Kansas Legislature
Art Exhibit to Present Works by Albert Bloch
An exhibition of Albert Bloch's works, many of which have never been shown before, will be presented on April 30 at the Museum of Art.
The lecture will be given at 8 p.m., April 30 in Fraser Theater. A reception at the museum will follow.
The 32-piece showing will be introduced by Ernst Scheyer, a professor at Wayne State University, who will speak on "Albert Bloch, An American Blaue Reiter."
THE RECEPTION will mark the opening of the exhibition of Bloch's drawings, watercolors, and prints.
Bloch taught at KU from 1923 until his retirement in 1955. During that time, he became head of the Department of Painting and Drawing. Bloch died in December of 1961.
He was born in St. Louis, Mo., in 1882. After studying at the Washington University School of Fine Arts, he worked for several newspapers in St. Louis and New York, drawing illustrations and caricatures of political figures.
IN 1908, BLOCH went to Munich, where he stayed for almost 12 years. Many of the foreign artists attracted to Munich lived in a suburb called "Schwabing," and were nicknamed "Schlawiners" by Munich residents
Although Bloch knew many artists in this group and was somewhat influenced by their work, he never shared their Bohemian life to any extent, nor did he support the more extreme theories of their art. Nevertheless, Franz Narc and Wassily Kandinsky selected Bloch as a participant for both of the revolutionary Blau Reiter (Blue Rider) exhibitions which they organized.
THE BLUE RIDER originated with German Expressionism.
German Expressionism was a manifestation of subjective feeling toward objective reality and the world of the imagination. With bold, vigorous brushwork, emphatic lines,
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and bright color the German painters produced canvases, concisely organized and particularly expressive of intense human feeling.
Bloch showed six paintings in the first Blue Rider Exhibition, opening in December, 1911, and several watercolors and drawing in the second exhibition, March 1913.
at the time.
Another important European exhibition which Bloch participated in during this period was the International Exhibit of the "Sonderbund" in Cologne in 1912, and exhibit which inspired the 1913 Armory Show in New York.
After his return to the United States, Bloch gave exhibitions in Chicago and St. Louis and was included in the "American Art Today" exhibition at the New York World Fair in 1939.
The problem of meeting with representatives of other civil rights organizations has been solved by appointing Marsha Dutton, Colby senior, as a representative from the Civil Rights Council. She regularly attends the meetings of both groups.
BLOCH'S EXHIBITION which is opening here includes works as early as 1906 and as recent at 1558. That offers a comprehensive survey of Bloch's development in the watercolor and drawing media.
Mrs. Bloch has been instrumental in helping the Museum of Art prepare for this showing.
Another exhibition is soon to open in New York.
AN ORGANIZATIONAL QUESTionnaire has also been sent out to determine the structure of KU student activities. A questionnaire was sent to every organization on campus asking the extent of minority group participation in the organization.
In the area of off-campus problems the HRC is cooperating with the Human Relations Commission of the City of Lawrence on any question that involves KU students.
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The major area of their cooperation has been in trying to solve the problem of discrimination in the Lawrence taverns. The HRC, the CRC, and the Lawrence Commission have all been working to try to get
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Thompson said that it was the lack of a defined program that has thwarted all effort to bring Martin Luther King to the KU campus. King says he will not come unless his visit is part of a planned program.
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This spring the HRC is also going to help the Lawrence Commission conduct an employment survey in Lawrence.
The last goal the HRC is trying to achieve is to develop a report of "The State of Human Rights at the University of Kansas" including a "Declaration of Human Rights of the Associated Students of the University of Kansas."
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NEXT YEAR. THOMPSON would also like to see the HRC add to their activities the responsibility of doing something to observe World Brotherhood Week.
THE STATE OF HUMAN rights report will be compiled from the results of the questionnaire.
definite," said Frank Thompson, Iola junior and chairman of the HRC.
"Such a declaration can define the goals that we ought to strive for and make our future programs more
A declaration of human rights will be submitted to the ASC along with the statement on the state of human rights at KU for which the HRC will ask official approval.
"I think the previous work of the private civil rights groups has eliminated a good share of the illegal discrimination in Lawrence," Thompson said. "The area that we must now be concerned with is the elimination of prejudice.
"Prejudice will not be eliminated by sit-ins and demonstrations. People get scared and defensive, not more liberal and willing to change their attitudes." Thompson said.
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Wednesdav. April 24. 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
University Daily Kansan SPORTS KU Bowling Team Wins NIBA Title
The University of Kansas won the championship title of the National Intercollegiate Bowling Association finals Saturday.
After winning the NIBA Kansas Conference championship, the Jayhawkers went to Northern University of Illinois, DeKalb, Ill., to compete with the nation's seven leading teams in the NIBA finals. The Jayhawkers defeated the other teams with the maximum points, 97.26.
AMONG THE TEAMS competing for the championship were KU; Air Force Academy, Colorado Springs. Colo.; Bellarmine College, Louisville, Ky.; Mankato State College, Mankato, N.D.; La Crosse State College, La Crosse, Wis.; Central Missouri State College, Warrensburg, Mo.; the University of Akron, Akron, Ohio, and Siena College, Waterville, N.Y.
Terrel Hays, Shawnee senior, was awarded a trophy for the top 10- game score, 2039, of the tournament. The other KU bowlers were Dave Rybolt, Ottawa junior, 1823; Donald Kahl, Tulsa, Okla., sophomore, 1825;
Oklahoma won the just-completed conference postal bowling league, posting a 40 won-12 loss record. The Sooner team is the defending tournament champion, winning last year at the University of Colorado at Boulder.
League Bowling Actions Begins Here Friday
KU ENTERS THE tournament after closing out the league action in second place, winning 33 and losing 19. Iowa State finished a close third with a 31 won-21 lost record.
Bassom C. Fearing, KU bowling coach and Union recreation manager, said that he will have to see the results of the next varsity practice before he decides who will represent KU in the tournament. Tournament regulations limit each school to five players with no substitutions.
Saturday matches will start at 9:00 a.m. and continue until 5:30 p.m. Awards will be made at a banquet at the Kansas Union, 6:20 p.m.
The six leading KU varsity bowlers, and their overall averages are: Donald Kahl, Tulsa sophomore, 193; Dave Rybolt, Ottawa junior, 187; Terrel Hays, Shawnee senior, 186; Leslie Mueller, Belleville, Ill. sophomore, 185; Bob Bowersock, Shawnee Mission junior, 185; and Harold Bunch, Kansas City, Kans. junior, 184. Hays is the captain of the KU squad. Rybelt is the secretary of the Big Eight League.
PAIRING FOR THE tournament matches will be made at the coaches and captains meeting, 7 p.m., Friday. The first match will begin at 7:30 p.m. and the second and final match of the night will begin at 9:00.
The tournament will be conducted on the Petersen Point system-one point per game won and one point for each fity pins.
Leslie Mueller, Belleville, Ill., freshman, 1673; and Robert Bowersock, Shawnee Mission junior, 1866.
The University of Akron and Siena College took the second and third place respectively in the tournament.
In the NIBA Kansas Conference, KU won 63 of 84 games and lost 21 games. The other participants in the conference were the University of Wichita, won $ 49\frac{1}{2} $ -lost $ 34\frac{1}{2} $ Kansas State University, won 39 los 45; and Emporia State College, won $ 17\frac{1}{2} $ -lost $ 66\frac{1}{2} $ .
Oklahoma University bowlers will be trying to continue their winning ways at the Big Eight Bowling Tournament to be held here at the Kansas Union Jaybowl, Friday and Saturday.
Dodgers Eye Future With Howard's Specs
By United Press International
Frank Howard finally has put on glasses and suddenly the Los Angeles Dodgers can see a much rosier future ahead.
Wearing the specs at bat for the first time last night, the six-foot-seven Howard hammered a home run in the bottom of the ninth inning to break up a tie and give the Dodgers a 2-1 victory over the Milwaukee Braves.
HOWARD HAD considered putting on glasses for some time but didn't decide to wear them until shortly before last night's contest.
Even though they won, the Dodgers still had their troubles.
From the point of view of the Dodgers, who have been having their troubles lately, the big outfielder couldn't have picked a better time.
They collected only two hits, one off starter Bob Shaw and the other off loser Claude Raymond.
THEY ALSO MAY have lost their ace southpaw, Sandy Koufax, for a while. Koufax, who was sidelined for half the season last year with a finger ailment, suffered a muscle spasm in his left shoulder last night and was forced to leave after blanking the Braves on two hits for 6 2/3 innings.
And merely to make sure the game had everything, Milwaukee Manager Bobby Bragan announced the Braves were playing under protest in the third inning. Bragan got his dander up over two successive balks called on Shaw by plate umpire Augie Donatelli.
SAN FRANCISCO beat Cincinnati, 4-2, Chicago defeated Pittsburgh, 7-2, and St. Louis crushed Houston, 15-0, in the other scheduled National League games.
Koufax entrusted a 1-0 lead to Ron Perranoski, who nursed it until the top of the ninth when Hank Aaron cracked out his fifth homer of the season to tie the score.
Attendance Up For A's Games
Athletics' owner Charles O. Finley decked his team out in bright green and gold suits this year to increase "color" in the game. However, most observers today said it was the colorful play, not uniforms, that was drawing the crowds.
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KANSAS CITY, Mo.—(UPI) The green and gold-clad Kansas City Athletics, besides making other teams green with envy with top division play, have struck gold at the home turnstiles.
Statistics today showed that attendance for the first 10 home games was up 25,000 over last year to 99,943. Other statistics showed the A's in second place in the league, despite early forecasts for near the cellar ranking.
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University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 24, 1963
Russian Beliefs Remain Basically Unchangeable
By Dolores Orman
The "vulgar, non-religious, scientific materialism" philosophy of Russia in the 1860's is present in Russia today, Peter Scheibert, professor at the University of Marburg, Germany, said yesterday at the University Lecture.
Speaking on "Origins of Soviet Thought in the 1860's" Scheibert explained that in the 1860's the people of Russia had no regard for history and religion, but continually looked forward in search of a new image based on a Utopian element.
During this period of Darwin, Scheibert said, people thought all the laws of nature had been discovered. The problem was to transfer the laws of animal life to the life of man as a social being in society.
SCHEIBERT SAID elements of this thought are found in Russian society today, the desire for social justice, to liberate man from his wants and help him regain his virtues.
Scheibert said there was a complete isolation of state and society in Russia of 1860. There was no public opinion and there was strict censorship.
People retired from public life with no desire to interfere in government activities, he said.
Scheibert explained that the nobleman of the period made a living off the serfs, thus having time for leisure activity. This situation in society became an object of condemnation, he said.
IN 1830's AND 1840's there were small circles in Russia who discussed Utopian ideologies, Scheibel said. They studied the ideas of such European philosophers as Saint Simon and Fourier.
"These philosophers believed that revolution did not only mean a change in the social and political conditions but a change of man into a new altruistic, non-egoistic being." Scheibert said.
Anti-bourgeois feeling developed in Russia, he said.
Chemist to Speak At Wayne State U.
Charles A. Reynolds, professor of chemistry, has been selected as "Frontiers of Science Lecturer" at Wayne State University, Detroit, Michigan.
Prof. Reynolds will speak on "Organic Function Group Analysis by Photometric Titration" April 29 at Wayne State University. The lecture will be published in the Record of Chemical Progress.
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"THE SEARCH of man for self-identification meant the removal of the 'immoral religion,'" he said. "What was left was a man as part of nature — a blank."
Man in this state, according to the philosophers, said Scheibert could be conditioned by outside forces. "The problem," he said, "was how to recondition man so he would become good again."
more perfect than traditional Christianity. Scheibert said.
"The Russian radicals of the 1850's were ready to accept the new thought of "vulgar, scientific materialism" as presented in such countries as France." Scheibert said.
The problems of man became defined through the laws of biology and nature, Scheibert said. The psychological problems of man were considered to be essentially sociological and physiological, he explained.
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"The picture of man as an animal in the 1860's was simple and therefore readily acceptable," he said. "Nobility and peasants alike were exposed to these new ideas in the university."
SCHEIBERT DESCRIBED the new Russian philosophic ideas of the 1860's as basically atheistic.
"Even the clergy wanted to escape their background and join the new society of non-religious scientific materialism," he said.
"Though the ideas were not consciously historical," Scheibert explained, "they were basically historical because they were the result of things in the past. There was a full range of tradition behind."
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Scheibert said that the Darwinian theory of survival of the fittest actually did not help socialism.
THE RUSSIANS did not realize this until later, Scheibert said. They then said nature meant the helping of individuals not the struggle between individuals.
Scheibert described the approach as basically ethical. It was adopted and enforced the power of the autocracy through political struggle, he said. "The thought became sanctified through the hero struggle."
he described the violent Nihilists as utilitarian moralists who wanted to do something for the revolutionary political upheaval.
Scheibert said this Utopian element in the Russian philosophy and the search for the new man and his image helped create a certain brand of Marxism similar to Marx's historical materialism.
"ACCORDING TO Marx," Scheibert said, "man is a being whose needs could be defined in terms of material needs. The material is the only existing reality."
The new Russian thought stated that man was essentially a socially conditioned animal, Scheibert said. Everything is nonexistent which has no social meaning.
"The inefficient social adaptation of men to each other was considered the only problem facing this new Russian philosophy," Scheibert said.
He said Russian thought has become more dependent on the pre-Marxian Russian radical thought of the 1860's.
"The more sensitive approaches in Marxism were put away by such as Lenin," he said.
"Today, revolution is put aside again," he said. "Russia is facing the problem of the impact of the new man in a new technically advanced society.
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P-t-P Handbook to Help Foreign Students With US Travel Problems Next Summer
People-to-People will publish a handbook which will serve as a travel guide to foreign students who will be traveling in the United States this summer.
The handbook will contain summer addresses and telephone numbers of KU students who are interested in having foreign students visiting their homes or who are interested in showing foreign students the points of interest in their home towns.
The handbook also will provide suggestions and recommendations concerning travel, food, sight seeing places, accommodations, and transportation.
Patsy Price, Bartlesville, Okla., junior and membership chairman of P-t-P, said the book will enable foreign students to contact some individuals at the places which they visit.
The book will be published before the end of the semester.
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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
Wednesday, April 24, 1963 University Daily Kansam
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1958 Chevvy convertible, white, red interior, good top, radio-heater, power window lock, rear window guard $1100 or other arrangements. Call VI 3-1772 for Tex, between 5-7 p.m.
MOBILE HOME FOR SALE - 45'x8' 1958 Great Lakes Model - Two bedroom. Inquire at Skyline Trailer Court, 631 East 23rd. tt
White, 1957 Ford Fairlane convertible. V-8, new snow tires, radio and heater. Automatic transmission. Student must sacrifice. Call VI 2-2382. 4-25
1955 Ford Customline V-8, radio, heater,
overdrive, 7 tires, new interior, recently
painted, new engine, 20 miles per gallon.
Excellent condition. $530.00. Call after
6 p.m. VI 3-1772 and ask for Carlos or
Julio. 4-30
New and used portables, standards and electronics, Royal, Olympia, Smith Corona, boxing papers, Lawrence Typewriter, 735 mass. Phone VI 3-3644.
1958 Karman Ghy convertible, excellent condition. Call VI 3-2839. 4-24
&W 38 special, Walther P-38, Collectors
German Luger, 32 H&R revolver, 22
tiger automatic, 22 Remington auto-
matic rifle, AMMO: 45, 30 carbine, 9mm,
60 shotgun, AMOE: 10, 60 tracer, 6,
00-10 tracer. See at Stouffer 6, apartment
l, or call VI 3-1110. 4-24
"YPING PAPER BARGAINS; Phink typing paper $8c per ream. Yellow paper $5c per ream. Per pound. The Lawrence Outlook, 1003 Massachusetts, open all day at Saturday.
Printed Biology Study Notes: 70 pages, complete outline of lecture; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta Notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50. tt
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop Modern, self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. weekdays.
All kinds of house plants. Potted . . .
including pillodendron to be used for
room dividers and in picture windows
phone VI 3-4207. tf
Western Civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extensively comprehensive, nimeographed and bound for $4.00 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
"Turn Toward Peace," or "Speak up for Peace," or "Work for Peace," or "Wait for War"-Free Bumper stickers-Write Jm Masters, 840% Ky-No obligation.
MISCELLANEOUS
Alterations: All types women's clothing.
Call VI 3-1348. 4-24
Party time — School house available for
classes, dances and meetings. Call V-4
7453
Will care for children in my home. 2 years old and older. Convenient to KU. Fenced in yard, references. Phone VI 3-6763. 5-7
TYPING
Experienced typist. Fast accurate service on term papers, thesis, etc., reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Floyd, VI 2-1582. 4-25
Will type term papers and reports on
the Internet. Resume to Ress,
1831 W. 21st, phone VI 3-6440.
Wilson 21st, phone VI 3-6440.
Will do neat and accurate typing in my home. Experienced in themes, theses, and term papers. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Adcock, VI 2-1795. tt
"GOOD TYPING CREATES a favorable impression with instructors." For excellent typing of theses and term papers, call Miss Louise Pope, VI 3-1097. tt
Fast, accurate and work by experienced typist. References. Phone VI 3-6506. tf
Secretary and English major will do expert typing of papers. Mrs. Compton, M.D., will teach 6 p.m. 1311 N.H.; after 6 p.m. Particular attention to problems of foreign students. tf
Theses, term papers, reports, typed quickly and accurately. Experienced typist; electric typewriter. Marian Graham. 1619 Del. — IV 3-0483. tf
Dissertations, theses, manuscripts and term papers typed on new electric typewriter. Experience in library keys. Experience in education and sciences. Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. VI 2-1546. fc
Efficient typist. Would like typing in her
thesis letters. Call anytime at VI 3-2651
Good typist. Would like to do term papers, and theses. Mrs. Oxford. VI 2-0673.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, these and other materials on an electric typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patty, VI 3-8379.
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers,ports,letters. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Eldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568. Mcfeldown, 2521 Ala. 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. tt
Experienced typist. Contact Mrs. Hayes at VI 2-0057. 4-30
MILIKENS SOS — always first quality
typing on LB.M. Carbon ribbon machines.
hours: 7 a.m. to 12 p.m.-0021₁₅. Offers
phone VI 3-5920. Mass ff
Experienced typist does term papers. Experienced typist does term papers. Electric typewriter. Special symbols and signs. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs. Prompt at 2006 Rhode Island Phone IV 3-7485.
Prompt neat accurate work on wide carriage electric typewriter. Journalism-Business secretary experience. Charlotte Weber, VI 3-3495. tf
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast accurate, neat work, reasonable rates Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 2-1749. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type
theses, term papers, and themes, neatly
in new electric typewriter. Call Mrs.
Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tt
Graduate or older undergraduate men.
A few studio apartments available for June 1st. New kitchens, quiet, cool, ideal conditions, clean and inexpensive.
Private room: $14 per night.
Best of neighbors. Call VI 3-8534 for appointment.
4-30
FOR RENT
HOME for Summer session—two bedrooms with study—within walking distance of any building on campus-VI 2-2278. 4-30
Vacancy at Emery apartments, 1423 Ohio. Efficiency type of apartment for rent June 1st $5 and $6 with water and gas. Call VI 3-6180 for further information. 5-6
5 room apartment on 28th. Available
and couple only. Phone VI, if
7819 evenings;
Furnished, modern, air-conditioned, 2 bedroom house — close to KU. Vacant June 1 — shown by appointment. Call VI 3-0698. 4-29
Available now — select apartments within easy walking distance of the HILL. Includes street parking, and recreation room available. Furnished or unfurnished. Two bedroom apts, from $75.00. Sleeping room also available. Call VI1-37940. Santos Apts. 4-26
Attractive 3 room furnished second floor apartment with private bath. Spacious newly decorated rooms, nicely furnished and clean. Walking distance to KU. $75.00, all utilities paid except electricity. Call VI 2-2593. 4-25
Delivery boy and part time kitchen help
Gene Durham, Campus Hideaway. 4-20
HELP WANTED
LOST
Man's olive green pull-over sweater lost between Lindley Hall and Allen Field House on April 1st. Reward. Dennis O'Brien, Stoutson Place 14-1, VI 3-7608
Grass cutting, yard work and light haul-
tenance amenable prices. Call VI 817-4033
or VI 3-4033. 4-24
BUSINESS SERVICES
Tutor — Mrs. William Birner, former children's librarian and school teacher,
reading and writing to tutor children in speech, English, reading and history through May 29th. Call at 6:30 p.m., except for evaluation appointment. Time and fee to be arranged.
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.
Transportation plus parking convenience ride a new motor scooter of your choice, demonstrate and sell in your spare time. Blevin's Bike Shop, 7th and Michigan.
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center, 1218
Conn. Personal service—sectionalized
the mustaches, chameleons, turtles,
guinea pigs, etc., plus complete list
pet supplies. **tf**
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
more info, call Ola Smith. Ola Smith
93919 Mass. Call VUI 3-5263.
Two boys to play rhythm or lead and bass guitars in new dance combo forming from break-up of old band. Must have own instruments. Non-union. For auditions, call Dick, VI 3-0064 after 2 p.m. 4-26
WANTED
Graduate student's or staff member's wife to work in Women's Sportswear Shop. Phone VI 2-0562 for information between 9:30 and 6:00. 4-29
Persons who have been in community disasters, such as tornadoes, typhoons, earth shocks, floods, etc. Please contact Dr. Extinghon 6-7, Strong anges or KU ext. 644. 4-26
Western Civilization notes wanted. Will pay $2.00 per copy for this year's notes. Call U. 2-1901 to have the notes picked up. 4-25
Used cars—highest prices paid. Call VI 3-
9811. 601 Vermont.
American copper, silver and gold coins,
metal tokens, campaign badges and in-
formation cards for American force
coins. American Coin Mart. 1025 Mast.
Hours 9:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. 4-25
STRICK'S DRIVE IN
"Table service only"
6:00 a.m.-10:00 p.m. weekdays
8:00 a.m.-8:00 p.m. Sun.
732 N 2nd (Highway 40-59
4 blocks N of Kaw bridge)
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By BARNES & NOBLE — LITTLEFIELD
ECONOMICS ACCOUNTING HISTORY
outlines of . . .
CHEMISTRY
PHYSICS
PSYCHOLOGY
By SCHAUMS
Theory and sample work problems in
CHEMISTRY
PHYSICS
CALCULUS
TRIGONOMETRY
ALGEBRA
ANALYTIC GEOMETRY
KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORE
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, April 24.1963
Northrop Urges Unity In Religions of World
If world unity is to be effected today, the peoples of the world will have to approach religious education and statesmanship as religious partners — not religious superiors, said F.S.C. Northrop, professor of philosophy and law at Yale University.
Northrop spoke at a convocation of the school of religion yesterday in the Kansas Union. He referred to a Pearl Harbor of religion in the world today. The Pearl Harbor of 1941, he explained, was a powerful political impact; the Pearl Harbor of today is predominantly a cultural impact.
Northrop stressed the necessity of understanding other cultures. Doctors, lawyers, engineers and agriculturists, especially those working in other countries, to be effective, must have a thorough understanding of customs, instruments, medical techniques and legal procedures of other lands, as well as their own, he said.
Northrop said that often he must prevent his foreign students at Yale from becoming too "Americanized." "Even though they may master Western ways, they lose contact with their own people. They are taken over by the Western way of thinking," said Northrop, "and sometimes lose respect for their native ways of thinking."
Northrop emphasized the need to have experts and educators keep alive the understanding of the living religions. "Christians must understand Buddhism and Hinduism in their deepest terms and the specific factors that differentiate them from other religions such as Judaism and Islam," he said.
He stressed that basic to human understanding is the integration of religion with other phases of knowledge such as economics, physics, mathematics and history. Such an integrating, all-encompassing knowledge is called epistemology.
Epistemology, according to Northrop, gives a common denominator
to all religions. That is, through epistemology, all religions can be reduced to similar terms.
He referred to "modes of knowing": radical empiricism and idealistic naive realism. Buddhists and Hindus, he said, are oriental empiricists who conceive the meaning of God as something timely, eminent, immediately apprehendable and indeterminate. To these radical empiricists, all worldly phenomena are determinary, transitory and thus perishable. God is an all-embracing concept.
On the other hand, for the Semitic religions, including Christianity, Judaism and Islam, which he terms idealistic naive realists, the concept of God is determinate and fixed, rather than transitory. The Semitic religions attempt to explain God by logical realistic, sometimes scientific reasons.
Northrop stressed that neither the Oriental radical empiricist, nor the idealistic Western naive realist can be related to good or evil.
"Good and evil cannot be identified with these concepts," said Northrop. "Instead we must try to combine the Western concept of the divine with the oriental concept. That is, we must understand our religion with the other great religions of the world."
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TYPEWRITERS
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AUFS Speaker Japanese Expert
LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER
The fourth and final American Universities Field Staff authority for 1962-63 will speak to classes, seminars and faculty gatherings here this week.
735 Mass. VI 3-3644
Lawrence Olson, an authority on Japanese affairs, will be on the campus April 24-May 3.
He will discuss economic, political and social areas of Japanese life and the redationship of Japan to the United States and other Asian countries.
Olson has been with the AUFS since 1955 and has served with the U.S. government in Asia.
He received his Ph.D in Asian History and Languages at Harvard University in 1954.
Official Bulletin
Ph.D. Reading Examination in German,
Saturday, May 4, 9:30 a.m., Summerfield
411. Candidates must register in Fraser
306 by 4 p.m. Friday, April 26.
Ph.D. Reading Examination
9th January 2014 in room 138, Room 24.
No books accepted after April 24.
TODAY
Radio Production Center. 7:30 p.m.
Boom 220 Flint, Executive Committee
Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses, 7:00 a.m. 11:40 a.m.
St. Stephen Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road
College Life 7:30 p.m. Parlor A Student-side for Christ director of Oklahoma.
Der deutsche Verein, 5 Uhr, Donnerstag, den 25. April, 502 Fraser, Deutsche Lieder, Spiele, Erfrischungen. Wir werden auch über den "Picnic" spreen.
Fraternity Jewelry
Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals
Feuding Factions—
Balfour
(Continued from page 1) Again in the spring of 1961 both parties presented similar planks. Both supported peaceful methods of eliminating discrimination practices.
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571
AL LAUTER
(Continued from page 1)
Both recommended that the student body president be given a veto ower on all ASC legislation, subject to a two-thirds override.
VOX'S PLATFORM in the fall of 1961 had two significant planks. One asked for elimination or reduction of residence hall parking fees for residents of the halls. The other concerned night bus service.
One UP plank asked that Stop Week possibilities be investigated. Another supported creation of a Current Events Committee. Vox supported this in its next platform
Vox also backed the move to get Greek houses to remove discriminatory clauses in their constitutions. UP supported a bi-partisan ASC qualifications board to control committee appointments.
Vox supported Big Eight College Bowl competition.
THE PARTIES have taken stands on almost everything imaginable, yet the feeling exists among students that the parties really do not stand for anything in their platforms. Since some of the planks
border on the ludicrous, that feeling may have some basis in fact.
For example, early Vox platforms contained planks saying the ASC was not to be used as a springboard for promotion of individual interests and ambitions, a plank as conspicuous by its presence then as it is by its absence now.
During the past campaign, Charles Whitman, UP candidate for student body president, charged that the presidency "was being used as a stepping-stone to state senator."
ROGER WILSON, Vox president,
replied that "motives are not important,
but the job the person does
when he gets the position is."
VOX HAS NON monopoly on ridiculous planks, however. UP has advocated student discounts at local stores, cooperation with city officials on off-campus traffic, parking and snow removal. All these matters are entirely out of the realm of the ASC.
During the recent campaign Vox charged UP with "rehashing old issues." UP was guilty, but no more so than Vox. Both organizations have done this since their formation.
Next: "Successes and Failures" or "Have They Done Anything but Talk?"
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Students Powerful In Latin Schools
Latin American students do take an active part in the operation of both their government and their universities, but not to the extent that most Americans believe.
This was the conclusion derived from the discussion and exchange of ideas last night between the 13 student leaders from the University of El Salvador and KU student leaders.
THE VISITING GROUP, consisting of 10 men and three women, is visiting KU this week as part of a
THE DECISION
Nanoleon Eugenio Cardenas
30-day tour of the United States sponsored by the U.S. Department of State.
The informal discussion last night was intended to give members of each group a better understanding of the feelings and functionings of the other group.
An interpreter from the State Department who is accompanying the group, attended the meeting to facilitate communications.
THE VISITORS, who seemed eager to explain situations in El Salvador and learn about the United States, have already latched on to some of the true spirit of the "Crimson and Blue." Several male members of the group appeared at the meeting wearing KU sweatshirts under their sport coats.
Napoleon Eugenio Cardenas, 26 year-old seventh year medical student, explained the general organization of the University of El Salvador.
At the conclusion of the discussion, the visitors expressed their appreciation to the KU student leaders for an enjoyable and informative evening by presenting a pennant of their university to Reuben McCornack, KU student body president
SPEAKING THROUGH the interpreter, Cardenas said there are seven main schools which comprise his university. Because of the lack of facilities, all the schools are not located on the same campus.
1
Lino Ernesto Martinez
The visiting group consists of students from the medical school with an enrollment of about 250, the dental school with about 140, and the chemistry school with about 300.
The law school has the largest enrollment, estimated by the group to be between 600 and 1,000. The total enrollment of the university is about 3,000.
BECAUSE OF THE limited facilities of the university, only students with the highest grades on entrance examinations are enrolled.
Pedro Jose Rosales Carreras, 24 year-old third year chemistry student and president of his school's student body, said that Latin American students have a direct participation in the election of the university officials.
THESE SIX representatives include two faculty members, two students, and two adult members of the profession who are not otherwise associated with the school.
A General Assembly, consisting of six representatives from each of the seven schools, is elected each year.
This assembly, one-third of which is made up of students, elects a "rector," equivalent to our chancellor, every four years.
One student and one dean from each school, the rector, and two other officials comprise the maximum authority group called the Superior Council. The students have more than a one-third majority in the council.
LINO ERNESTO MARTINEZ, 21 year-old second year chemistry student, said the deans of the schools are frequently removed by the students. For example, the chemistry school has had as many as three deans in one year.
A 90 per cent vote by the student body can impeach the dean. Martinez said this power is often used wher
A.
Thursday, April 25, 1963
a corrupt or incompetent dean does injustice to his position.
Pedro Jose Rosales Carreras
THE DISCUSSION grew a little lighter as it neared its conclusion. The topic of discussion turned to social customs of the two countries, and the Salvadorans joked about the American customs and the American misconceptions of their own.
Students have the freedom to belong to any political party they wish, Martinez said. The students said they are against the present government of their country and cannot support it because the election was "a fraud."
Noemi Sanchez de Tinetti, 23-year-old fifth year medical student, has a husband and nine-month-old child at home. She is staying at Lewis Hall this week and said she was very surprised to see the couple kissing in front of the dormitory at closing time.
Cardenas then drew a round of laughter from his classmates with a quip to the effect that in El Salvador, they hide behind the doors to kiss, rather than doing it in the open.
IN HER COUNTRY, Mrs. De Tinnetti said, the girls are allowed to go out with boys before 6 p.m., but after that one of the parents must accompany them as a chaperon.
After the discussion, a member said his group is enjoying the visit here very much, and is very happy about the KU students' acceptance and interest in the group.
In New Orleans, he said, the hosts were very friendly, but did not make a concerted effort to understand or converse with them.
Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
60th Year, No. 128
Discrimination Brings Plea To Assist CRC
Ellison Sees Need Of Negro Support
Nolen Ellison emphasized the need for Negro support of the Civil Rights Council (CRC) and discussed means of gaining the needed support at last night's meeting.
"I think it is most important in getting Negro support for the organization if those Negroes who come are to feel like a part of the group." Ellison, a Kansas City senior, said.
HE SAID THAT it is not enough to expect Negroes to come just to discuss problems; they must also want to come to see friends.
HOWEVER. Ellison said, the percentage of Negro students willing to do this kind of work would probably be greater than the percentage of white students because they don't run the risk of being looked down on for doing it.
"If they just come and sit, no one knows their name, and they feel they are not an accepted part of the group, they are not likely to come back." Ellison said.
Most Negroes feel that the CRC is impersonal. They feel it does not really make any difference to the group whether they are there or not, Ellison said.
ELLISON ALSO said that on this campus there would only be a small number of Negroes willing to work in civil rights activities.
"Among his friends, the Negro would be considered doing something beyond what he needs to do
"There is only a small Negro group at KU," he said "and most of them feel satisfied with what they have. They are doing something that most Negroes don't get a chance to do — going to a major state university."
Don Warner, chairman of the CRC, added, "It takes a special kind of person to want to keep sticking his neck out to go into these places where he knows what is going to happen. Even when they expect it, it still hurts a little."
(Continued on page 12)
Nolen Ellison
Morgan Elected Alumni President
The new president and vice-president of the Alumni Association have been named for the coming year.
Eugene W. Morgan, Kansas City, Mo., succeeds Stanley Learned; Bartlesville, Okla., as head of the alumni group.
Mrs. Charles R. Bell, Maryville, Mo., is the new vice-president succeeding Mrs. Tom Lillard of Salina.
Morgan who is a 1937 graduate of KU and past president of the Greater Kansas City KU Alumni Association was responsible for raising funds to expand the University's Memorial Stadium.
Mrs. Bell is a past president of the Maryville chapter of the American Association of University Women and former state editor for the AAUW.
CRC Says Service Denied Negroes
The Civil Rights Council (CRC) announced last night that a recent check of two downtown taverns shows that Negroes still are not being served.
Two Negro students walked into Louise's and the Huddle, sat down in boots, but were not served, the CRC said.
THE CRC UNDERSTOOD that there might have been a change in the policy of the two taverns as a result of a recent meeting of tavern owners with the county attorney.
A third tavern, the Harbour, was checked last month and found to have changed its policy. The Negro students were served.
Don Warner, chairman of the CRC, said that he and another white student entered the taverns before the Negroes to watch the reaction and stayed after they left to listen to any comments made by the owners or by the customers in the taverns.
WARNER SAID that when the two Negroes walked into Louise's, she seemed to be ready for them. She told them she had no beer, no cokes, nor anything else they would ask for.
When, instead of leaving immediately, they had remained sitting in the tavern for about 10 minutes, she walked to the front and locked the door and turned off the sign.
An old man, sitting in the booth next to the Negro students, leanned over after Louise had refused them and said, "It just ain't America anymore, is it?" Warner reported.
AFTER THE Negroes left the proprietor said she would not unlock the door for fear the Negroes would return with 50 more.
Warner reported that one customer openly disapproved of her actions. He reportedly asked her if the Negroes had been hurting her.
The owner of the tavern said that she had refused service to the stu-
(Continued on page 12)
U.S. Hopes Go With Envoy; Kremlin's Aid in Laos Sought
LONDON —(UPI)— W. Averil Harriman flew to Moscow as President Kennedy's personal envoy today to try to enlist the Kremlin's help in restoring peace and stability to Laos.
Western hopes for peace in the southeast Asian kingdom rode on the undersecretary of state's urgent mission. He carried a message from Kennedy to Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev and planned talks with Soviet Foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko.
American sources said Harriman's principal task was to remind Khrushchev of his personal pledge to Kennedy to help maintain the independence and neutrality of Laos.
Harriman told newsmen at London airport he considered "most insulting" and "utterly incorrect" the inference in a recent Soviet note to Britain on Laos that the United States was at fault in the Laotian crisis.
"I think the Russians are trying to curry favor with Red China and put in the accusation on their insistence." Harriman said.
"Let's get it clear—that government (which accused the United States) was not the U.S.S.R., but Red China."
Harriman emphasized he would appeal to Khrushchev to stand by the letter of the agreement the Soviet leader made with President Kennedy nearly two years ago in Vienna.
"About the only thing he and President Kennedy agreed on at Vienna was the Laos situation and
Related stories on page 10.
that Laos should remain independent." Harriman said.
"I want Mr. Khrushchev to take action to quiet the situation and put it back on the rails again.
United States has put in forces was completely ridiculous."
"As I said, I will appeal to Mr. Khrushchev and my appeal will be based on the agreement made in 1961," Harriman said.
Harriman was to stress the responsibility of the Soviet Union as a co-chairman of the 1962 Geneva agreement on Laos for making every effort to restore peace and stability there.
Cloudy to partly cloudy skies are expected tonight with temperatures ranging in the low 50's.
Weather
"It looks as if the Russians in their notes were anxious to please Red China. To suggest that the
Generally fair skies and warmer weather are forecast for Friday with the high in the 70's.
Harriman said he thought Khrushchev had placed some faith in the Vienna agreement and had indicated often he wanted to keep Laos an independent state.
The mission to Moscow was decided upon in telephone consultations between Kennedy and Harriman yesterday after the Kremlin refused to join Britain in a peace appeal on the Laotian crisis. Harriman has been conferring on the crisis with officials here and in Paris.
Britain is the other co-chairman of the Geneva conference which ended Laos' civil war, guaranteed the country's independence and neutrality, and set up the coalition government now threatened by renewed fighting.
The fighting between neutralist and pro-Communist forces in Laos slackened off this week under a shaky cease-fire, but the Western Allies still regard the situation as dangerous.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 25, 1963
"Home Rule" Inaction
What are the implications of a medical care program for the aged?
Is it a step toward providing needed care for elderly persons, and as such a justifiable humanitarian program, or is it simply submission to disaster-inviting dreams of bringing Utopia to the United States?
NO ONE CAN predict with accuracy that providing medical care for the aged is a step into the furnaces of socialism which reportedly will burn the strength of American character to a crisp.
The additional cost of administering from Washington any program that could be handled from offices at the state or county level is wasteful.
But there is evidence that many nation-wide programs administered from Washington are the seed bed for several social weeds that the country could well do without.
But once again we are forced to return to the question of alternatives. State governments have established records of unwillingness to accept responsibility to care for citizens.
SO. IF WE ARRIVE at the decision that any effective program—be it medical care for the aged or social security—is needed, the only way it is likely for such a program to be effected is through federal initiative. Of course, it is not a foregone conclusion that such programs are needed; many federally-sponsored programs now in effect could be eliminated.
But once we have decided that a broad program is needed, the state governments drive the hopeful to the doorsteps of federal administration. No other agency has displayed an inclination or ability to handle large programs.
Those who are fighting the concept of even a narrowly-based welfare state have not wiped the dust of the Dirty Thirties from their eyes. Such programs are here to stay, and more will follow.
THOSE WHO OPPOSE federal intervention would best concentrate on devising a philosophy which will determine which functions should best be left to the state and county and which functions the federal government is in a better position to administer.
But formulation of a philosophy will not be enough. If the local-rule advocates really want a stronger voice in running the country they so dearly love, they must show as much forcefulness in effecting programs as they now do in opposing federal action. If they do not do their job, the federal government must, and all the talk in the world about creeping socialism will never amount to more than plaintive cries in the night.
And what is worse, what truth there is in their viewpoint will be submerged and doomed along with their already expired dream of an unfettered free enterprise state.
THE NATION NEEDS to hear the voices which tell us the dangers of too much federal activity. But talk alone is not enough.
Before these forces will be effectual, they must offer a plan to meet some very real needs—a plan which is more realistic than deluding themselves with the hope that the United States could and will prosper as the land of Free Trade, as in the "good old days."
The voices favoring decreased federal activity must be listened to closely. But these voices will not be heard when they are nothing more than a disguise for a plan to do nothing.
Terry Murphy
BOOK REVIEWS
THE GOLDEN SERPENT, by Ciro Alegria (Signet Classics, 60 cents)—As paperback publishers gobble up all the best-known works there remains a vast body of writings that need to be called to the attention of the public. Such a book is "The Golden Serpent." Ciro Alegria is a Peruvian, and this novel is a revision and expansion of his story. "The Raft." The novel is vivid and colorful, describing the passage of the Maranon River through Peru, and the people who live along its banks. Alegria gives pictures of the mighty Andes, the rapids, flower girls and river men, fiestas and victims of natural disasters in this dramatic country.
***
THE RISE OF SILAS LAPHAM, by William Dean Howells (Signet Classics, 75 cents)—When Howells is mentioned this is usually the novel that comes to mind. It is an important book, a pioneering venture in its realistic exploration of an American businessman and his methods. Silas Lapham himself is somewhat of a comic figure, a man of no heroic stature. He has risen to wealth in the paint business, but his rise came about in part through unscrupulous methods. His moral rise after the collapse of his enterprise is perhaps the chief "rise" Howells is dealing with.
* *
THE END OF IT, by Mitchell Goodman (Signet, 50 cents)—The war novels continue to pile up, though not in years has one of real depth appeared. This reprint is the story of Lt. Gil Freeman in Italy, an American soldier who finds in Italy and the Italian countryside and people a meaning which transcends the brutality and senselessness of war. Goodman is a New Yorker, who went to Harvard on a scholarship and entered the Army in 1943. He has been writing since 1948. In "The End of It" he has explored the nature of war rather than the ferocity and savagery of men at war,
\* \* \*
UNDERSTANDING CHEMISTRY, by Lawrence P. Lessing (Signet Science Library, 60 cents)—a work in which the writer tells about early theories of the nature of matter, about the development of laws concerning matter and energy, about the great discoveries, including such recent ones as synthetic fibers, plastics, fuels, antibiotics and vaccines. Lessing is an editorial consultant on science and technology to Architectural Forum and Fortune magazines.
Price Support and Acreage Control Interlock
By Terry Ostmeyer
The strained relations between U.S. agriculture and the federal government have tightened somewhat in recent years, but no matter what happens this spring promises to be a climactic one for the American farmer.
Already a record crop planting and harvest in 1963 is expected by the Agriculture Department. This is a distinct change from the falling trend experienced in the past three years.
ALL MAJOR crop plantings are expected to increase, with
wheat rising 4.1 million acres over last year and corn increasing by 3.8 million acres. Such increases would produce a total crop acreage of 2 per cent over 1962, when production equaled the 1960 record.
Of course a record crop production will depend on weather conditions which so far have been favorable except in the middle and southern Great Plains.
The main reason for this reversal in production, though, is the loosening of government controls in crop planting this
year, especially wheat and corn. Farmers have been induced to plant more because of higher support prices, extra payments, and, of course, increased acreage quotas.
STILL. UNFAVORABLE farm prices persist, as do high farm costs. Even though the farm income of $12.9 billion last year was the highest since 1953. price controls remain a problem in agriculture.
"Well, Back To The Old Grind"
CONGRESS
J.E.K.
PROPOSALS
APPROPRIATIONS REQUESTS
©1963 HERBLOCK
THE WASHINGTON POST
Government controls in agriculture have become a definite concern of farmers, farm organizations, both political parties, and Congress. And this spring presents the greatest test of all the nationwide wheat referendum on May 21.
The wheat referendum concern new and strict controls by the Kennedy Administration. The program was authorized by Congress last year and is designed to reduce the wheat surplus, maintain farm income, and provide stable prices for consumers.
SECRETARY OF Agriculture Orville L. Freeman has devised this plan, which would cause a compulsory cutback in wheat production. Something new included in Freeman's proposal is that each wheat farmer's quota will be termed in bushels as well as acres.
Freeman also has set two wheat prices to be effective if the referendum carries. Market wheat will sell at an average of $2 a bushel and livestock feed and seed wheat will sell at $1.30.
All U.S. wheat farmers—including the small "15 acre" growers—will vote on the referendum in May. A two-thirds majority is needed for passage. If the plan carries it will be mandatory for all wheat farmers,
and if it fails the wheat support price will fall to $1.20, according to the Agriculture Department.
THUS, TO many the proposal set before the wheat farmers by the administration appears to be a choice between $2 wheat and $1.20 wheat. There are others, though, who feel Freeman's plan is not an issue on the choice of wheat prices, but on the question of more or less government control. Also, a group consisting mostly of farmers does not believe Congress would allow the wheat price to drop to $1.20.
The main argument against Freeman's proposal seems to center around more freedom for the farmer, whereas the supporters of the plan see new stable farm incomes and consumer prices. Supporters approving the referendum are the National Farmers Union, the National Grange, the National Farm Organization, and a number of other wheat groups.
At its recent meeting, the Farmers Union issued a statement concerning the issue, saying: "We unanimously go on record favoring a 'yes' vote, and urge every effort be made to bring about an overwhelming victory for farmer families."
THERE IS only one major organization opposing the new wheat plan, but it is the largest of the farmer organizations—the National Farm Bureau Federation. The Farm Bureau's president, Charles Shuman, repeatedly has expressed a need for farming freedom. He said Secretary Freeman has "failed to recognize that farmers want to move increasingly toward the market rather than toward greater restriction and control by government."
Another group against the
plan is the U.S. farm equipment industry, which has predicted a 5 per cent increase in sales over 1962, but also fears that a decrease in wheat plantings would hinder the all-important combine sales.
The administration recently did its best to insure passage of the wheat referendum when, in a show of togetherness by the Democrats, the House quickly approved of a feed-grain bill aimed at curbing surplus supplies.
THIS SUPPOSEDLY was done to discourage the Republicans from attacking tight wheat controls. If the bill is shoved through the Senate far enough ahead of the referendum date, the Republicans may lose a vital vehicle for enacting milder curbs on wheat.
The administration has even threatened to employ no wheat curbs at all if the referendum answer is "No."
One thing is certain. Whether the coming wheat referendum passes or not, its outcome surely will influence the future role of the U.S. government in agriculture.
Daily Hansan
111 Flint Hall
111 Flint Hall
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904,
triweekly 1908. daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Telephone VIking 3-2700
Extension 711, news room
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Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press Representation by National Advertising Service. College Press of the X 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.
Thursday, April 25, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Red China Renews Attack On Russia
TOKYO — (UPI) — Red China today broke its silence on the 93rd anniversary of Lenin's birth with a new attack on Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev as an "ideological servant" of capitalism.
The attack was made through an obviously Chinese-inspired editorial in North Korea's official Rondong Sinmoon newspaper commemorating Lenin's birthday. Excerpts were broadcast by Radio Peking, monitored here.
This was Red China's only acknowledgement of Lenin's birthday, which was celebrated in the Soviet Union last Monday.
IT WAS THE FIRST time since the Red Chinese came to power 15 years ago that they have chosen to ignore Lenin's birthday.
Israeli Presidency Soon To Be Filled
JERUSALEM, Israel — (UPI) -- Knesset (parliament) Chairman Kadish Luz and Salman Shazar, former education minister, emerged today as the two most likely candidates to succeed the late Itzhak Ben-Zvi as president of Israel.
There will be no discussions on a parliamentary level during seven days of mourning for Ben-Zvi, however.
AN ESTIMATED 150,000 persons, virtually the entire population of the Israeli sector of Jerusalem, turned out yesterday to pay their last respects to the long-time Zionist leader. Ben-Zvi, 78, died Tuesday morning from cancer of the liver.
Informed observers said Luz and Shazar appeared the most likely of four possible candidates for the presidency. The other two are Pinhas Rosen, 75, a former minister of justice, and Prof. Joseph Rivlin, 56, a scholar in oriental culture who once studied at New York University.
Luz, 67, is a former minister of agriculture who was educated in Estonia and served in the Russian army during World War I. Informed sources said he might be nominated by Premier David Bengurion's Mapai party. A new president must be selected by May 22.
PETER HAWKINS
JULIE JENKINS Kappa Alpha Theta
A blouse, a wrap skirt and built-in bermudas — one of several such styles here now.
The Radio Peking broadcast carried only brief direct quotes from the North Korean editorial on Lenin. The rest of the broadcast was devoted to what appeared to be Red China's own comments.
COACH HOUSE
Chessen For Town and Country
It claimed Lenin had forecast that the leadership of international communism against the capitalist world would ultimately fall to Red China and other Asian communist countries.
The broadcast said Lenin "maintained that the mounting national
liberation struggle in Asian countries was one of the factors which would decide the final victory of world proletarian revolution."
"EUT." IT SAID, the revisionists (meaning Khrushchev) believed that the proletariat in Europe (Russia) could win victory even without direct allies in the liberation struggle in the colonies.
"The modern revisionists cover up the aggressive nature of imperialism and serve its aggressive schemes.
"This reveals them as its ideological servants.
"No illusion whatever about imperialism should be entertained," the broadcast said in defense of Red China's hard-line communism. "Only by thoroughly crushing the schemes of the imperialists and revisionists, and by uncompromising light against imperialism and colonialism can all the oppressed and exploited people win freedom and national independence."
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University Daily Kansan Thursday. April 25, 1963
Archaic Attitudes Face Civil Rights
(Last of a series)
By Jackie Helstrom
If Lawrence is ever going to ac-complish anything in the field of civil rights, it has got to overcome its border-state attitudes.
That is the opinion of James E. Titus, assistant professor of political science and chairman of the Lawrence Human Rights Commission. He feels the defeat of these attitudes should be the long range goal of the LHRC.
"I would like to see Lawrence, in the next ten years, become a model city in terms of inner group relations," Prof. Titus said. "But this can happen only after crusty, old attitudes have been disrupted."
THE LHIRC IS AN ADVISORY commission of the Lawrence City Commission that was created a year ago when student sit-ins made apparent the need for a group which could solve discriminatory problems without creating tension.
The creation of such a commission is three things. Prof. Titus said.
"It is an admission that a problem exists in the area of racial and minority group relations. It is an admission by the city commission that they would like to do something about the problem. It is the creation of a commission to exist as the moral conscience of the community."
Warm Burial for Patrolmen
LOS ANGELES — (UPI) — A burglar threw 50 suede jackets from the roof of a store yesterday to the pavement beside his truck.
Two patrolmen who had been investigating the truck climbed from beneath the pile of jackets, onto the roof and arrested Arcellas Leavurette, 20.
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The objectives the LHRS is supposed to fulfill are to improve relations among local population groups, to improve the city's reputation for tolerance, to open the way for each individual to develop according to his abilities without limitation and to help Lawrence benefit from the fullest realization of its human resources.
The nine-member group had its first meeting Oct. 4, 1961. According to William A. Binns, the past chairman of the LHRC, the organization spent the first month trying to find out what it could do.
"GROUPS LIKE THIS HAVE A high mortality rate. Two-thirds of them don't exist at the end of the first year. One-third of those who stay in existence do so by doing nothing," Binns said.
Among those left which have stayed in existence and have made a contribution to the community, there seems to be a common procedure, he said.
They all started their fight against
discrimination by giving the community information about itself.
"Civil rights is an area where there is a need for careful information." Binns said. "The air is filled with half truths and rumors."
SURVEYS HAVE BEEN taken by the LHRC to determine the factual situation in the fields of employment, public education, and public accommodations. The facts discovered are now being related to the community.
For several months Binns and Prof. Titus have presented the information to civic groups, clubs, church groups, and "anyone else who will listen," Binns said.
Prof. Titus is now in the process of writing reports of all the information discovered.
In addition to its activities in informing the community, the LHRC also has had some experience acting as a mediation board in cases of discrimination.
"WHEN YOU ARE reasoning with people about discriminatory practices, strange things can happen. You can feel that you are getting nowhere with someone, and then you find later that their whole attitude has changed," the professor said.
Tonight!
THE LHRC HAS IN ITS first year accomplished what it set out to do in that time, but there are mixed feelings in Lawrence about whether the group has done enough or whether it has done too much.
Last July, one critic accused the commission of "stirring up trouble" with its employment survey.
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"All we were doing was asking the policies of Lawrence businesses." Binns said, "The whole thing was confidential, we would never use the name of any individual. This was interpreted as doing too much."
Finals will be Friday, May 3 in Robinson Gym.
In the area of tavern discrimination in Lawrence, the LHRC has been working with University civil rights groups who brought the problem to light.
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The LHRC is making a study of the relationship of high school dropouts and minority groups. The group is studying the situation in terms of employment opportunities in an effort to be able to encourage these youths to stay in school.
"People must keep in mind in evaluating the work of the LHRC," he said, "that the group has no budget and no staff, and all the members have jobs and work on this in their spare time."
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"We have been willing to cooperate with student groups in this matter," Prof. Titus said. "But I think it is a peripheral issue. The major issues that we need to work on are education, housing, and employment."
WE'RE SORRY
for the inconvenience caused by the cancellation of "The Adventures of Robin Hood" last Friday night. Our distributor failed to ship us the film in time for the showing. All those who failed to claim a refund should do so in the SUA office. Again, due to difficulties beyond our control, we will be unable to present "Tammy and the Bachelor" this week. In its place, a three part Academy Award winning program has been substituted consisting of "Cascabanca." "Bear Country," and Chapter 13 of "Captain Video." Our policy will continue to be one of bringing to the campus the best in motion picture entertainment, both old and recent releases.
The Shaggy King of a Western Wilderness!
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WATCH FOR BIG SCREEN CINEMASCOPE COMING TO THE FLICKS SOON!
Plus Chapter 13 of Captain Video
1. My theory on looking for a job is - Play it big! Shoot for the top! Go straight to the prez for your interview.
I don't know any presidents.
newspaper
8. Beautiful! All you have to do is find a president who likes dogs. You'll have him eating out of your hand in no time.
2. Use your head, man. Have your dad set up appointments with some of the big shots he knows.
I am a journalist.
He's a veterinarian.
I don't know an Elkhound from an Elk.
TWO MEN CONVERSING
8. A letter to the employment manager!
Ho ho ho! You've a lot to learn.
4. Frankly, I don't know what else to tell you. You've got a problem.
Then how come I landed a great job at Equitable an executive training spot that's interesting, pays a good salary and has a lot of promise for the future.
It's not as bad as it seems. My idea is to find out the name of the employment manager at the company I'm interested in. Write him a letter telling him my qualifications. Spell out my interests, marks. Simple as that.
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I'm not the president but I'll try.
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Slain Integrationist Warned of Death
GAD5DEN, Ala. — (UPI) — A postman slain during an integration march on an Alabama highway was warned at least three times he would be killed for his beliefs, authorities disclosed today.
Both President Kennedy and Alabama Gov. George C. Wallace expressed outrage over the slaying of William L. Moore, 35, of Baltimore, Md.
In it. Moore noted the warnings.
Kennedy called it "an outrageous crime" at his nationally televised news conference. The governor, announcing he had ordered every investigative agency in the state to work on the killing, said it was a "dastardly act."
ALABAMA OFFICIALS made public a diary Moore kept during his anti-segregation walk from Chattanooga, Tenn., toward Jackson, Miss., where he intended to present a letter of protest to Gov. Ross Barnett.
In it, Moore noted the warnings.
In *Chattanooga*, a woman from whom he bought a milkshake told him, "I hope you make it." The diary quoted Moore's reply: "I hope so too if the niggers don't get me." The woman then said, "No, I think the whites will get you."
EXCERPTS FROM the diary said:
"April 22 --- walking again ... couple of passing cars have yelled, 'nigger loving ----- -----'
"April 23 — walking again. Traffic cop wav greeting . . . invited to chat with few men who had heard about my walk on TV. They didn't think I'd finish my walk alive."
"A couple of men who had talked to me before drove up and questioned my religious and political beliefs. And one was sure I'd be killed for them. . ."
THE LAST ENTRY. "only kids adopt dogs," noted the fact Moore had presented some children with a stray dog he had picked up on his march. He gave them the dog at a general store located only a mile from the place his body was found
Tuesday night, sprawled on U.S. 11 in front of a roadside park 13 miles from Gadsen.
He had been shot once in the forehead and once in the neck with 22 caliber bullets. The sandwichboard sign he carried, which said, "Eat at Joes, both black and white.Equal rights for all (Mississippi or bust)." was still on his back.
An investigator for the Alabama department of public safety, Roy McDowell, disclosed he had stopped Moore shortly after he left the general store and offered his protection. He said Moore refused.
Moore had saved his vacation time to make the trip south. He walked from Baltimore to the White House in an abortive attempt to deliver a personal letter to President Kennedy.
AFTER WHITE HOUSE guards turned him away, he took a bus to Chattanooga and set out last Sunday on his walk to Jackson.
Moore's widow, located in Binghampton, N.Y., called him a "crusader at heart" and said she was "terribly afraid for him . . . and I knew something would go wrong, I felt it. . ."
"I WANTED TO bring him with me." McDowell said. "We were afraid something like this would happen. But he (Moore) said he didn't need any protection. If I could have found some reason to pick him up I would have done so . . . but he was apparently breaking no laws."
The state of Alabama has offered a $1,000 reward for his slave.
An integration organization, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC), announced in Atlanta, Ga., it would complete the march Moore started. SNCC administrative assistant Julian Bond said the organization's executive committee would meet in Norfolk, Va., next weekend to plan the hike which will be resumed at the spot where Moore died.
P-t-P Reception Hour Scheduled for May 9
The People-to-People reception hour will give foreign students and Americans an opportunity to meet on an informal basis, according to Sharon Foster, chairman of P-t-P hospitality committee.
The foreign students can bring their friends and guests with them at the reception hour and give them a chance to meet other foreign students and Americans.
The reception hour will be from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. May 9, in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
Elizabeth Boggs, a member of President Kennedy's Panel on Mental Retardation, will speak at a dinner Friday evening. Saturday morning she will show slides of a tour through Holland made by the Administration's panel.
MISS BOGGS is a past president of the National Association for Retired Children and is now chairman of the NARC Research Committee.
Association Meet Begins Tomorrow
Maynard Reynolds, chairman of the Minnesota Advisory Committee on Mental Retardation, will talk on "Coordinating Efforts to Serve Mentally Retarded Children" at the general session on Friday.
Reynolds, who is also director of special education at the University of Minnesota, will show a film during registration.
The convention will be made up of several workshops which will discuss the development of community centered services. "Resources for the Retarded—Fact or Fiction?" is the theme of the two-day meet.
The seventh annual convention of the Kansas Association for Retarded Children will be held Friday and Saturday in the Kansas Union.
JOHN CAWLEY, assistant professor of education and director of special education at KU, will moderate a workshop on "The Challenge to Special Education."
Thursday, April 25. 1963
University Daily Kansan
Governors Boost JFK In Backhanded Manner
California Gov. Edmund C. Brown,
a Democrat and a Kennedy support-
er, was elected conference chairman
for the next year and Republican Gov.
Mark O. Hatfield of Oregon was
picked as vice-chairman.
The resolutions committee, chaired by Hatfield, refused to report Rosellini's resolution to the conference
PHOENIX, Ariz. — (UPI) — President Kennedy's administration today had some support from the 1963 western governors' conference, but it was in a backhanded sort of way.
READ and USE THE WANT ADS
The governors, seven Republicans and five Democrats, wound up their three day conference at nearby Scottsdale yesterday by:
- Rejecting a move by Washington Gov. Albert Roselini, a Democrat and chairman of the national governor's conference, to gain support for Kennedy's youth conservation corps.
- Refusing to accept a rebate of 10 per cent of federal income taxes to states as a substitute for Kennedy's federal school aid proposals. This resolution came from Montana Gov. Tim Babcock, a Republican.
floor. Then the Washington governor attempted unsuccessfully to offer it despite the committee action.
Although he gained support from Alaska Gov. William Egan, another Democrat, he got no help from Republicans. Gov. George E. Clyde of Utah, for example, said the problem of youth employment could "best be solved at home."
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, April 25, 1963
McNamara 'No' to RS70 Spending
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Congress received it straight from the source today—in case there was any doubt—that Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara does not think it "necessary" to step up spending on the RS70 warplane.
McNamara gave that economy-oriented word to some economy-minded senators yesterday. In testimony before the senate military appropriations subcommittee, McNamara also engaged in some lively, but good tempered, exchanges on other topics.
DURING a lengthy appearance McNamara tangled with subcommittee members on such widely varied subjects as the gravity of last fall's Cuban crisis and the performance of the controversial TFX fighter, as well as the question of development of the RS70.
Both the House and Senate have voted the secretary an unrequested $363 million authorization to speed development of the suprasonic RS70 strike plane. Most of the unrequested funds voted by Congress for this and other bombers in prior years have gone unspent.
McNamara said in reply to a question that he did not view the additional money for the RS70 as necessary.
McNAMARA also questioned the wisdom of additional spending for the cancelled Skybolt missile, and for what he called "unnecessary" TFX planes.
That was a reference to the controversy over the TFX fighter plane contract. McNamara has said his prime object was to get the Navy and the Air Force to agree on the design
for a single plane rather than build contrasting tactical fighters.
SEN. BARRY Goldwater, R-Ariz., questioned McNamara about the performance of the TFX. Goldwater, a major general in the Air Force reserve, said he thinks the 86 billion to be spent on the TFX could have produced "something more sophisticated than what we will end up with."
McNamara disagreed, saying the TFX is, if anything, "pushing the state of the art further than we should."
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Thursday, April 25, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Prof. Nelick Says Students Badly Educated, Overtrained
An associate professor of English said yesterday that today's college students are badly educated and highly over-trained.
Prof. Franklyn Nelick spoke at the final SUA lecture of the year, which by tradition is given by a speaker as though it were the last of his career.
It is, Prof. Nelick said, the process of permitting a person to become who he really is. It is the movement by a person toward what he desires mostly.
"EDUCATION MEANS to draw out or to educe," he said. "It is a natural thing."
About 125 persons were present for the speech.
"Education is an art, and like all arts it has its proper end. No art is a self-enclosed thing."
"BUT THERE IS a place for traaming in the curriculum," Prof. Nelick said. "Not everything can be taught in the classroom.
He offered as the inverse to education, training, which is what he termed "merely progressing."
Citing a parallel between the art of medicine and the art of education, Prof. Nelick said that "medicine as a science deals with the techniques of surgery, but as an art it strives toward the health of the patient."
Prof. Nelick pointed out education
"SO MUCH HAS been done with the technique of education, that we have lost contact with its art." Prof. Nelick said. It is not sufficient merely to train students, but it is necessary to educate them.
also has its techniques. But as an art, he added, it is the perfection of the individual.
"THE LIBERAL ELEMENT is demanded in the world we live in, the emancipation of the person."
Intellectualism has united education. Prof. Nelick said.
Prof. Nelick said a teacher cannot help one become who he really is if that teacher merely passes out information.
"Such a teacher," he said, "hopes to initiate the ways of the intellect and fulfill one aspect of the incursive mind of the student."
"We are too concerned with the brilliance of cerebral display or that we are too pedantic," he said.
Educators have begun to stress an era of specialists. More math, science, chemistry, physics, etc., is needed, "but to insist that specialization is all is ultimately to destroy the democratic process" in the university.
HE POINTED OUT that certain requirements are made upon the student in that process of education.
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CYRANO
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April 30, May 1, 2, 3, 4
8:30 p.m.
I.D.'s Admit
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Tickets at University
Theatre Box Office
The student must have candor and a lack of fear by being willing to admit that there is something else he seeks; that he needs to be perfected. It will perfect his intellect and him as a person, Prof. Nelick said.
"A search without an objective is a child's game," Prof. Nelick added. "If the ends of education are divorced from the means, you are merely playing a child's game."
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 25, 1963
Cyrano de Bergerac
Brilliant Wit, Fine Poet, Big Nose
By Carol Lathrop
A brilliant wit, fine poet, and
lonely man with a big nose.
Those words describe Cyrano de Bergerac, the lead character in the play by the same name which opens at 8:30 p.m. April 30 and runs through May 4 in the University Theatre.
"Cyrano de Bergerac is the best of the romantic melodramas that has ever been presented." F. C. Strickland, visiting professor of speech and drama said.
It is a story which combines comedy, drama, love, and acrobatics. Also, it includes such things as 27 ways to insult a nose, a recipe for almond tarts in rhyme form, and various new, romantic definitions for the word, kiss.
"Cyrano de Bergerac" is the story of two men, Cyrano and Christian, who love the same woman, Roxanne. Because Cyrano is impeded in romance by his big nose and Christian by his inability to express himself. Cyrano teaches Christian the art of romance and writes poetic letters for him to deliver to Rox- anne.
When Christian goes to war, Cyrano continues to write letters to Roxanne for Christian.
Roxanne visits the battlefield, and tells Christian that she loves his very soul which she has seen in his letters.
Christian realizes that she loves Cyrano, and is about to tell her the truth when he is killed.
Fifteen years later Roxanne is still wearing the letters around her neck which she believes were written by Christian. In Cyrano's dying moments he tells her the truth.
"Although everybody loves to see the play, few people get to see it. It is seldom done, because of the difficulties presented by the large
Russians May Have Seen Test
CAPE CANAVERAL — (UPI) If they looked back over their shoulders, a group of Russians caught a spectacular view afforded few Americans — a bird's-eye view of a U.S. rocket firing.
They were in the right place at the right time yesterday — aboard a high-flying Soviet jet airplane off the coast coast of Florida just as a U.S. Pershing missile blasted away from Cape Canaveral.
Whether the Russians actually saw the speedy little rocket as it streaked 200 miles across the Atlantic in a successful test was unknown. But the Pershing left a brilliant white vapor trail — characteristic of solid-fueled missiles that could be seen for scores of miles.
It apparently was a chance piece of luck. The Federal Aviation Agency (FAA) in Miami, Fla., indicated the Soviet plane was en route from Moscow to Havana, Cuba, on a course flown by the Russians roughly twice a week.
William Kuhkl, instructor of speech and drama and theater assistant, will play the part of Cyrano. He has been rehearsing certain parts since the first of last May, and has been taking fencing lessons three days a week since October.
Eight members of the fencing team are participating in the play.
settings and the three major roles," said director Strickland.
Roxanne is played by Marilyn
Miller Boyd, Lawrence senior, Larry Ketchum. Twin Falls, Idaho freshman, plays the part of Christian.
Prof. Strickland has directed the play twice before while he was at Stanford University.
Tickets may be obtained at the ticket office in Murphy for $2.40, $1.80, and $1.20. Identification cards will admit students to $1.20 seats.
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We could scarcely believe the results, but the official U.S. Auto Club timers confirmed them: R2 Super Lark-132 mph! R2 Super Hawk-140 mph! Two-way averages—under the most punishing weather and surface conditions. That kind of performance, combined
with their gentle 'round-town manners, told us these cars were ready. R2 Super Lark and R2 Super Hawk are now available on special order at your Studebaker dealer's.
Flash: front seat safety belts now come factory-installed on every car—another advance from Studebaker.
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AWS Panel to Discuss Modern Women's Role
A symposium on the role of women in modern society will be held at 7:30 p.m. today in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
The program, one of the many events of the AWS All Women's Day activities, will feature a panel of four guest speakers, each representing a different role of woman in today's society—such as the woman who has combined career and marriage, the woman who gave up work for marriage but then resumed working, the unmarried career woman, and the educated woman who chose marriage over a career.
THE PANEL MEMBERS WILL be Dr. Helen Gillis, a Lawrence obstetrician; Mrs. Charles Fordyce, a Kansas City probation officer; Emily Taylor, dean of women, and Mrs. Lewis Wheelock, wife of KU faculty member Lewis Wheelock, history lecturer.
The program will also include a discussion by the AWS Roles of Women Committee. The members of the committee will discuss the results of a questionnaire which was given to all freshman women.
Each woman will present a talk on her way of life and why she chose it. A question and answer session will follow.
The results of the survey, which was designed to determine how realistically freshman women view their life after college, will be compared to statistics from the Women's Bureau of the Board of Labor.
"BY COMPARING THE results to the statistics and also to what their own mothers are doing, we hope to give college women an opportunity to see the many roles they may play after graduation from college," said Margaret Hughes, Ottawa freshman, a member of the committee.
Donna Gould, Shawnee Mission junior, is head of the six-member committee.
The AWS annual observation of All Women's Day officially began yesterday with an exchange dinner among the organized women's living groups.
The exchange dinner was held during the regular dinner hours of each living group.
FOREIGN WOMEN STUDENTS participating in People-to-People
Page 9
Beta Gamma Sigma Picks 8 Members
Eight students have been elected to the Alpha chapter of Beta Gamma Sigma, national honor society for students in business administration.
They are William R. Patterson, Wichita senior; Lauren S. Ward, Ottawa senior; Larry Gamble, Pittsburgh junior; John Bumgarner, Tulsa, Okla., junior; David Leopold, Hoxie junior; Richard Buxton, Lawrence graduate student; Alan Wutnhew, Lawrence graduate student, and Roger Singleton, Lawrence graduate student and instructor of business.
Election to Beta Gamma Sigma is the highest scholastic honor which may be awarded to a student in business administration.
To be eligible, a student in business administration must rank in the upper 10 per cent of his graduating class. Juniors must rank in the upper 4 per cent and candidates for the Master's degree, in the upper 20 per cent.
SUA
invites you to an
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7:45-8:45 p.m.
Tuesdays & Thursdays
Other All Women's Day events will include a sophomore picnic to be held at 5 p.m. Sunday at Potter Lake.
in the Craft Shop at the Kansas Union
and members of the People-to-People Big Sister program also were invited.
The AWS junior-senior brunch which will be held at 9 a.m. Sunday in the Student Union Ballroom, will feature a fashion show sponsored by the AWS Madamoiselle Fashion Board. The seniors will be guests of the juniors.
THE ALL WOMEN'S DAY activities will end on Monday with an art display and the annual Honors Night.
The art display, which will feature the work of KU women, will be held Monday afternoon in front of Hoch Auditorium.
Register at the information desk
Honors Night, the final event of the All Women's Day activities, will be held at 7:30 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium. The program is designed to recognize the outstanding women on campus.
FREE
During the event the AWS Senate will be installed, the freshman residence counselors, new members of the AWS Fashion Board, Mortar Board, and Cwens will be announced.
The program will also feature the announcement of the outstanding woman from each living group and the AAUW selection of the outstanding senior woman.
Official Bulletin
Ph.D. Reading Examination in German,
Saturday, May 4, 9:30 a.m., Summerfield
111. Candidates must register in Fraser
106 by 4 p.m., Friday, April 26.
Ph.D. French Reading Examination
9th - 10th grade in France (April) 27
No books accented after April 24.
Der deutsche Verein, 5 Uhr, Donnerstag den 25, April. 502 Frauen, Deutsche Lieder, Spiele, Erfrischung ... Wir werden auch über den "Pienic" sprechen.
TODAY
Christian Science Organization. 7:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Everyone wel-
College Life. 7:30 p.m. Parlor A. Student
Office in cradlock, Campus Crus
dian
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses, 7:00 a.m. 11:40 a.m.
St. Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford
SCHEDULED INTERVIEWS
If you are interested in a teaching position for September, 1963, in this area, please sign up for an interview in 117 Bailey Hall.
April 25—117 Bailey-Centralia School District, Buena Park, Calif.
Prowler Flew the Coop
WILLMAR, Minn. — (UPI) — Police have given up the search for a prowler who awakened a woman early Sunday morning.
The woman told police that a woodpecker had awakened her at 5 a.m. by pecking on the roof of her home.
By the time police investigated, the woodpecker had flown the coop.
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Swimsuit $15.95
COLORS: Olive / Coral-Brown Orange-Royal/Lime
Jacket 7.95
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Thursday, April 25, 1963 University Daily Kansa
Khrushchev Has No Reaction On New Test Ban Proposal
MOSCOW — (UPI) — Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev offered no clue today to his reaction to the latest Anglo-American proposals for breaking the deadlock on a nuclear test ban treaty.
Western diplomats believed the premier had brushed aside the proposals presented to him yesterday by Ambassadors Foy D. Kohler of the United States and Sir Humphrey Trevelyan of Britain.
The diplomats doubted that the new initiative would lead to any breakthrough in the nuclear talks.
They pointed to remarks made by President Kennedy at his news conference in Washington yesterday that he was not optimistic on the issue and that "time is running out."
They said Russia's desire to end its
dispute with Communist China would make the Kremlin wary of any commitment which could be interpreted as "appeasing" the West.
The Soviet press published without comment a brief report that the two Western ambassadors had met the Soviet premier yesterday.
Neither Kohler nor Trevelyan would reveal the provisions of the latest offer. But some Western diplomats speculated it involved a lump sum of annual on-site inspections over a number of years.
The United States has scaled down its demands for policing a test ban from 20 annual inspections of Soviet territory to seven. The Russians have refused to grant more than three such inspections. The Geneva talks have stalled on this issue.
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VI 3-2644
Page 10
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 25,1963
Tension Spotlight Focuses On Laos
Tension Spotlight Focuses On Laos Leftists Shell Neutralists; Claim Rightist Buildup Thailand Welcomes US Combat Forces Kennedy Views Solution As Key to Other Issues
VIENTIANE, Laos—(UPI)—Renewed leftist shelling of neutralist positions on the Plain of Jars was reported today against a backdrop of mounting Communist claims of a U.S.-inspired rightist buildup.
An International Control Commission (ICC) team made another one-day flight to the battle zone on the plain in the continuing diplomatic effort to find a solution to the crisis.
Western observers considered the situation highly dangerous, with indications that Gen. Phoumi Nosavan's right-wing forces might be pulled into the dispute which heretofore has involved only the neutralists and pro-Communist Pathet Lao.
THE FRESH OUTBREAK of shelling was reported by a senior officer of Gen. Kong Le's neutralists who arrived this morning from the Plain of Jars for a brief leave. He said the Pathet Lao attacked Kong Le's position at Lat Hoang for an hour last night. Lat Hoang is located on the road from the Plain of Jars airfield to the important town of Xieng Khoung.
If the neutralist report was true, the shelling was the first break in the shaky cease-fire that has prevailed in the critical Plain of Jars region since Sunday.
Aside from the ICC team's visit to the Plain, there was little development here in the diplomatic maneuvering for a settlement. Diplomats looked to the visit to Moscow by U.S. Undersecretary of State W. Averell Harriman for the next move.
REPORTS FROM Washington and London said Harriman's mission was to remind Soviet Premier Nikita S. Khrushchev of his 1961 pledge to President Kennedy to maintain Premier Souvanna Phouma's coali-
KU Woman Places Second in Bowling
Betty Jo (BJ.) Hember, Fairway sophomore, placed second in the all-events division of the Women's National Intercollegiate Bowling Tournament held at Memphis, Tenn., this week.
Miss Member, who was the defending national champion in the playoffs, had a score of 1.069. Janet Sheridan, a student at the College of Education, Courtland. N. Y., was the winner with 1089 pins.
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ion government in power. Harrirman aimed to persuade Khrushchev to hold the Laotian and North Vietnamese Reds in check.
Russia and Britain are co-chairmen of the 1962 Geneva Conference which established Souvanna's government and guaranteed Lao's independence and neutrality. The conference also charged the ICC with supervising the truce that ended the two-year Laotian Civil War.
The U.S. diplomatic efforts were designed to prevent a Communist take-over in Laos. Communist control of the landlocked kingdom would open the way for possible Red Chinese intervention and Communist penetration of most of Southeast Asia.
AS A DETRIMENT to further Communist advances, the United States will dispatch 3,000 combat troops to neighboring Thailand next month. While the troops will participate in previously-scheduled exercises, the show of force is considered timely.
Communist news outlets renewed their charges that the United States is trying to foment a right-wing coup d'etat. The new China news agency broadcast charges by the Clandestine Pathet Lao Radio that "aircraft of the U.S. and Phoumi Nosavan Side airdropped arms and ammunition" to rightist guerrillas in Savannakhet Province.
Informed sources here said the ICC team was sent to the Plain of Jars to study the situation and to prepare for a meeting between Souvanna and his half-brother, Prince Souphanouvong, a vice premier and leader of the Pathet Lao. The meeting tentatively is set for Saturday.
The Pathet Lao claimed Nosavan, backed by the United States, sent guerrilla units into the Savannakhet towns of Muong Phoum and Na Nhom.
The North Vietnamese newspaper Nhan Dan charged that U.S. interference is the cause of continued tension in Laos. It told of alleged right-wing troop movements and claimed some of the troops were commanded by U.S. military advisers.
Earlier this week Nosavan, who also is a vice premier and strongman of the rightist faction, offered to send his troops to help Kong Le against the Pathet Lao. Yesterday his police took over key installations in Vientiane.
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A year ago, it was feared that forces of the Communist Pathet Lao would infiltrate northern Thailand. They were then operating near the Thai border.
BANGKOK — (UPI) — Thailand today welcomed the projected dispatch of about 3,000 U.S. combat forces to this country next month as a timely show of force in the wake of growing tension in Communist-threatened Laos.
Observers pointed out, however, the U.S. troops will participate in previously-planned war games sponsored by the Southeast Asia Treaty Organization (SEATO) and will not actually be stationed in Thailand as they were last year.
Thai officials have made it clear they feel there is not now a need for stationing U.S. troops in Thailand. These officials said the situations in Laos today and a year ago are different.
Now, however, the Laotian Reds are operating in central Laos and are not considered a danger to Thailand.
Bv. United Press International
Laos At A Glance
VIENTIANE, Los — Western observers report new left-shelling of neutralist positions on the Plain of Jars. Observers fear Gen. Phoumi Nosavan's right-wing forces may be pulled into the conflict. United States to move 3,000 troops into neighboring Thailand next month.
LONDON — U.S. Special Ambassador W. Averell Harriman left for Moscow, carrying a message to Soviet Premier Khrushchev from President Kennedy. Sources believe Harriman's mission was to remind Khrushchev of his pledge to help maintain peace in Laos.
WASHINGTON — President Kennedy keeps close watch on developments in Laos. Response of Russia to pleas for a Laotian cease-fire tied to U.S. hopes for better relations in other world trouble spots.
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WASHINGTON —(UPI)— President Kennedy believes that if Russia fails to honor her commitments on Laos, the chances of settling Berlin and other cold war issues will be drastically reduced.
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The President told his news conference yesterday he would withhold judgment until he heard from Undersecretary of State W. Averell Harriman, who has gone to Moscow to discuss the crisis with top Soviet officials.
His statement followed a Defense Department announcement that more than 3,000 U.S. troops would be dispatched to Thailand, just across the Mekong river from Laos, next month to take part in SEATO maneuvers.
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THE PENTAGON also said one squadron of supersonic jet fighters, probably 18 planes, would be sent into Thailand by the Air Force. More than 30 ships of the eight SEATO nations already are assembling in the South China Sea for a naval exercise starting Monday.
Kennedy said the 14-nation Geneva agreement last year guaranteeing Laotian independence and neutrality was "a test of whether it is possible for an accord between countries which have serious differences . . . to be reached and maintained."
The President said, "If we fail in Laos, I would think the prospects
for accords on other matters which may be geographically closer to us would be substantially lessened."
He appeared to be challenging Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev to prove that his professed policy of "peaceful coexistence" had not been abandoned in Southeast Asia under pressure from Red China. He declined, however, to be drawn into a discussion on this aspect.
In reply to a question, Kennedy said that if Laos fell into Communist hands, it would increase the danger to Thailand, Cambodia, South Vietnam and Malaya.
Concern for stability of the whole Southeast Asia area is one of the reasons why the United States is so anxious to uphold the Geneva accord on Laos, he said. He added that it also may explain why "others" do not seem so anxious to uphold it.
The President said the situation in Southeast Asia directly involved Russia as a party to the Geneva agreement and that it had accepted responsibility for maintaining a neutral, independent Laos.
YELLOW CAB
VI 3-6333
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BONE COTTON GABARDINES . $5.95
WHITE COTTON DUCKS . . . $4.95
the university shop
ON THE HILL AL HACK
the university shop ON THE HILL AL HACK
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
Page 1
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
1961 Volkswagen. Excellent condition.
Small down payment. See at 1244 La. 4-29
White floor length wedding dress, size
1-9. Call 10-2 0522. Dress, 4-29
1958 FD retractable hardtop, black and
66767 after 5-30 p.m.
4-30
DEMONSTRATOR CLOSE O U T S
Stereos - Phonos - Radios (Radios) $139.95
Portable Stereo only $65.00 $49.95
Portable Stereo now $65.00 $49.95
Automatic phonograph—$35.00 $189.95 G.E.
Phonograph now $35.00 $189.95 G.E.
Portable now $50.00 $139.95 G.E. Stereo
Multiple—$95.00 $175.00 Deluxe Stereo
Multiple—$95.00 $175.00 Deluxe Stereo
Multi—$125.00 $139.95 Coffee Table
Stereo only $100.00 Ray Stone Shelf
Mass. St. 5-7
Falcon and Comet owners! 600-13 brand new first line 100 Level (four full piles) w/ new windows. $24.80 each or $16.40 plus tax—Free installation at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass.
8 formal cocktail dresses - sizes 10-12
One white wool evening jacket, one set
Wilson golf irons and one 17" RCA TV
console. Call VI 3-8404. 4-30
University Daily Kansan
Gretch amplifier—twin 10" ovals and one
4" Treble speaker—4 jacks and vibrato with complete controls—brand new—Ray Hisicke—503 Templin-Call VI 2-1200.
RENAULT AND VOLKSWAGEN OWNERS ATTENTION! Bucket seat terry cloth covers $6.88, new 36 month premium nylon tubeless tires now $15.00 exchange plus tax. Ray Stonebuck's Discount Tire Center—929 Mass. 5-6
1959 Renault Dauphine. Excellent condition. Recent valve and ring job. Tires and body good. 30,000 original miles, one owner. $550 Phone. 900 I-2 3948. 4-29
English made racing bicycle. Royal, 3
Made in most new. Call Cary, 4-29
RAV, VT 2-1340
1954 Chevy stationwagon $175.00 1953
Chevrolet 200 wagon 200 wagon
appreciate. Hot rod material — 1954
Studebaker Commander V-8, and 1956
Ford Commander XLT. End of E.
19th. Call VI 3-1626. 4-29
MOBILE HOME FOR SALE — 45 x'B" 1958 Great Lakes Model — Two bedroom. Inquire at Skyline Trailer Court, 631 East 23rd.
White, 1957 Ford Fairlane convertible.
V-8, new snow tires, radio and heater.
Automatic transmission. Student must sacrifice. Call VI 2-2382.
4-2
1955 Ford Customline V-8, radio, heater,
painted, new engine, 20 miles per gallon;
Excelent condition. $530.00. Call after
mi. VI 3-1772 and ask for Carl for June
4-30
New and used portables, standards and
electrics. Royal, Olympia, Smith Corona,
typing papers, Lawrence portable, Bond
tapping papers, Lawrence Typewriter,
7 Mass. Phone VI 3-3644.
"YPING PAPER BARGAINS: Pink typing paper 85c per ream. Yellow paper 100c per ream. Per pound. The Lawrence Outlook 1005 Massachusetts, open all day Saturday, ff.
Printed Biology Study Notes: 70 pages
hensive outline and definitions; revise for all classes. Formerly known as the
livery. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery.
$4.50.
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop — Pet phone V 3-212. Modern, self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 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
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
Thursday. April 25. 1963
BUSINESS SERVICES
Tutor — Mrs. William Birner, former children's librarian and school teacher.
Teacher in speech. English reading and history through May 29th. Call at 6:30 p.m. except For evaluation appointment. Time and fee to be arranged.
Transportation plus parking convenience Transportation plus parking convenience ride a new motor scooter of your choice demonstrate and sell in your spare time Blevin's Bike in Power House, 77 and Michigan.
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center, 1218
Conn. Personal service—sectionsalized
masters, chameleons, turtles
guinea pig etc., plus complete line
pet supplies. **tf**
RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267. t
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
ormation. Call VI 3-8263. Ola Smith
939% Mull, Call VI 3-8263.
WANTED
Two boys to play rhythm or lead and bass guitars in new dance combo forming from break-up of old band. Must have own instruments. Non-union. For auditions, call Dick. VI 3-0064 after 2 p.m. 4-26
Graduate student's or staff member's wife to work in Women's Sportswear Shop. Phone VI 2-0562 for information between 9:30 and 6:00. 4-29
Persons who have been in community disasters, such as tornadoes, typhoons, floods, etc. Please contact Fred Binding, St. 7, Strong Avenue or KU ext. 644. 4-26
Western Civilization notes wanted. Will pay $2.00 per copy for this year's notes. Call UP 1-2-1901 to have the notes picked up. 4-25
Used cars—highest prices paid. Call VI 3:
8811. 610 Vermont. u
American copper, silver and gold coins
metal tokens, campaign badges and im-
magines. Also wanted in May 1025 foreign
heirs. Hours 9:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m.
4-25
LOST
A brown wallet, long style that is carried in coat pocket. Lost on campus last Monday. A reward is offered. Call VI 3-2839. 4-29
Pair of brown dark glasses in a maroon case. Lost Friday between Summerfield and Strong. Contact Katie Lowman at VI 3-9123, Room 40. GSP. 4-29
Magnetina silk scarf with green pattern,
parking lot Reward, Call VI S-7630, 5-1
parking lot Reward, Call VI S-7630, 5-1
FOR RENT
PRE-Med Seniors: For rent (or sale) 12%
story older noise; live rooms, neated
meeting, and front porch. Recently reded-
rated, painted, and floors refined. 9
month, from $UMC. Rent $8.00 per
month, per week. Call Toilex
noie VI 5-2505. S-1
Very nice basement apartment for 2 men.
For fall semester. See at 1138.
19th Tern. 121-1
CRESCENT HEIGHTS Apartments, 25th & Rosebud: Rear entrances, large utility room, balconies, sun decks, concrete off-road driveways, patio space, rators, 2 bdrmbs, 840 sqf, living area, individual controlled heating, fully carpeted & draped, garbage disposals, air-conditioners, Compose Ten Manager, Discount for 1 year. Manage: 436 Redbud lane. Phone VI 2-3711
Large 2 room nicely furnished apartment. Private entrance and bath—$35.00 per month. Extra large apartment with private entrance and bath, fireplace and garage—$80.00 per month. Nicely furnished 3 bedrooms, bath only $25.00 per person per month. Nicely furnished 2 bedroom apartment with private entrance and bath—$50.00 per month. Nicely furnished 3 rooms, private entrance and bath—$55.00 per month. Extra large lovely furnished 2 bedroom apartment with private entrance and bath —$55.00 per month. All above apartments available during holiday. All utilities paid VI 3-0298 or IV 3-7850. 5'x
Jay Bowl
KANSAS UNION
DeSoto, Kansas. New furnished duplex, 2
floors. Back yard. Call 6499-1695; DeSoto, Kansas. 3-1
Comfortable, quiet, 4 room apartment— furnished for couple— living room, kitchen, study and bedroom, private bath and laundry. Fully equipped and conditioned. Call VI 3-5863. $5*
Graduate or older undergraduate men a few studio apartments available for June 1st. New kitchens, quiet, cool, ideal study conditions, clean and inexpensive. 15' blocks from Univ. Best of neighbors. Call VI 3-8248 for appointment. 4-99
HOME for Summer session—two bedrooms with study—within walking distance of any building on campus—VI 2-2278. 4-30
Terrell Hays voted outstanding bowler in NIBA Tournament. 2039 pins for 10 games.
Vaemance at Emery apartments, 142.
Ohio. Efficiency type of apartment for
reno. lst $5 and $6 with water and
gas paid. form II v 3-180 for further
formation. I 5-6
★ B. J. Hember finished second in National Bowling Tournament in Memphis, Tenn.
Lost by 20 pins.
Open Bowling
5- room apartment on 25th. Available
and coupled only phone. VI
7819 evenings.
Available now -- select apartments within easy walking distance of the Hill. Parking is free on street parking, and recreation room available. Furnished or unfurnished. Two bedroom apts, from $7.50. Sleeping rooms are available. Call V1 3-7044. Apts. 4-26
Furnished, modern, air-conditioned. 2 bedroom house — close to KU. Vacant June 1 — shown by appointment. Call VI 3-0698. 4-29
Will do neat and accurate typing in my home. Experienced in themes, theses, and term papers. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Adcock, VI 2-1795. tf
Attractive 3 room furnished second floor
furnished with hardwood flooring, newly decorated rooms, nicely furnished and clean. Walking distance to KU.
Meeting rooms paid 4eless electricity Call VI 2-2593.
Will type term papers and reports on
their content in Jose R.
1513 W. 21st, phone VI 3-6440, iff
www.joserrosario.com
Experienced typist. Fast accurate service on term papers, thesis, etc., reasonable rates. Electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Floyd, VI 2-1582. 4-25
TYPING
"GOOD TYPING CREATES a favorable impression with instructors." For excellent typing of theses and term papers, call Miss Louise Pope, VI 3-1097. tf
Fast, accurate and work by experienced typist. References. Phone VI 3-6506. tff
8 a.m.-11 p.m. Week Days 1 p.m.-11 p.m.Sunday
Secretary and English major will do expert typing of papers. Mrs. Compton, M.D., will teach 6 p.m. Particular attention to problems of foreign students. tf
Dissertations, theses, manuscripts and term papers typed on new electric typewriter ribbon and printer keys. Experience in education and sciences. Mrs. Suzanne Gilman. VI 2-1546, ft
Theses, term papers, reports, typeu
juclickly and accurately. Experienced
typist; electric typewriter. Marian Grau-
ma. 1619 Del. — VI 3-6483. tf
VARSITY BOWLING NOTES:
Good typist. Would like to do term pa-
rens, and theses. Mrs. Oxford. VI 2-0673.
Efficient typist. Would like typing in her
letters, letters, Call anything at V1 3-2641.
theses, letters. Call anything at V1 3-2641.
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type the sheets, term papers, resumes. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Meldowney, 2321 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8688. fff
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, these and other types of written material on an electronic typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles PatTI, Phi 3-8279.
English major and former secretary will type themes and theses on electric typewriter. For neat and accurate work call Mrs. Melsa Jones. VI 3-5267. tf
MILIKENES _SOS — always first quality
typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines
they also do tape transcriptions.
houses 7, 10, 15, 20, 30 - ipm 10231-0212
phone VI 3-5820 . Macff
Experienced typist does term papers, books. Interested in typesetting and electric typewriter. Special symbols and signs. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs. Perdue at 200 Rhode Island Island Phone VI-37485
Experienced typist. Contact Mrs. Hayes
at VI 2-0057. 4-36
Prompt neat accurate work on wide carriage electric typewriter. Journalism-Business secretary experience. Charlotte Weber, VI 3-3495. tt
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
accurate, neat work, reasonable rates.
Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff.
VI 2-1749 tr
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will typesexes, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher. VI 3-0558, 1021 Miss. tff
HELP WANTED
MISCELLANEOUS
Delivery boy and part time kitchen help-
giver. Gene Durham, Campus Hideway, 4-300
Will care for children in my home. 2 years old and older. Convenient to KU Fenced in yard, references. Phone VI S-
6763. 5-7
"Turn Toward Peace," or "Speak up for Peace," or "Work for Peace" or "Wait for War"-Free Bumper stickers-Write Jim Masters, 8401, Ky-No obligation.
4-309
Phone in your Classified Ad
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---
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Thursday, April 25, 1963
Potpourri Subjects Range From Tarantulas to Rockets
The sex life of a tarantula—the reasons rockets go—and the super competitive Dobu Islanders furnished the subject matter for the three Speech I Potpourri finals winners last night.
The part one final winners were Kirk S. McConachie, Wichita freshman; Bob West, McPherson freshman, and Cindy Snyder, Bethesda, Md.. freshman.
McConachie's speech was titled "A New Kind of Pet." Tarantulas, except four or five of the 150 species, won't kill people, he said. They affect only cold-blooded animals, he explained.
NOT PARTICULAR about their food, they have to eat only every five to seven days. However, they need about five hours to take care of a grasshopper, and two days to take care of a mouse. It would take a tarantula two years and four months to starve, but only 30 days to die of thirst, said McConachie.
The tarantulas' courtship is a matter of life and death, he said. MeConachie explained that when a male tarantula goes calling on a female, he has to go to her hole in the ground and knock outside the silk curtains. She is then ready to leap out, kill him and eat him. If he's lucky, he renders her passionate by hitting her over the back of the neck. When everything is said and done, he has to make a quick getaway, before she eats him. Sometimes he takes along a grasshopper or some other morsel in the hopes that she will eat it instead of him.
"DESPIITE HIS fearsome reputation, bad table manners and crazy sex life, actually, believe it or not. he can be made into a very nice pet," McConachie said.
West spoke on "Rocket Propulsion." He began by explaining Newton's third law—for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction—with the help of two bal-
looms. The first was blown up, and then released—it collapsed. The second was punctured on one side. It went in the opposite direction from the puncture and landed in the lap of the evening's chairman, Mark L. Knapp, assistant instructor of speech. In this way, West demonstrated how Newton's third law works when gas molecules fire against a rocket nozzle propel it.
HE THEN described rocket fuel, liquid and solid, restricted and unrestricted, and mono-propellant and bi-propellant. He explained different methods of ignition and the kinds of thrust they cause.
When the rocket nozzle is narrowed toward the end, gas molecules enter the throat (narrowest place) at the speed of sound. West said.
Miss Snyder spoke about "The Dobau Society." If we think we have a cutthroat, competitive society she said, there is another society that of the Dobuans (of the Dobu Islands off the coast of New Guinea) that is much more cutthroat and competitive than ours.
This society has no chiefs, no political organization, no apparent legality, she said. One's virtue is determined by how well he can out-do others, out-plunder them, out-steal them, etc., Miss Snyder explained. They rely heavily on magic. Elevation of families depends on the number of magic powers known by them
The society is monogamous, but its favorite pastime is adultery. So competitive are the Dobuans, Miss Snyder said, that when a spouse dies, the living spouse is believed to be the cause of death—not the murderer, but the cause. So the Dobwan society is much more cutthroat and competitive than ours, Miss Snyder said.
STRICK'S DRIVE IN
"Table service only"
6:00 a.m.-10:00 p.m. weekdays
8:00 a.m.-8:00 p.m. Sun.
732 N. 2nd (Highway 40-59 —
4 blocks N. of Kaw bridge)
Other Potpourri speakers last night were Dale McGuinn, Merriam freshman; Fred Hoffman, Topeka junior; Nancy Shroeter, Shawnee Mission sophomore; Marilyn Robertson, Ottawa freshman, and Bob Woody, Bartlesville, Okla., freshman.
Tonight's speakers will be Robert Xidis, Wichita freshman; Robert Koetting, Prairie Village sophomore; Jeanette Jeffery, Tecumsah freshman; Caroline Richardson, Overland Park freshman; David Crandall, Denver, Colo., sophomore; Glenn Laney, Miami, Fla., freshman; Constance Fox, Dodge City freshman, and Barbara Croissant, Leawood freshman.
They will be speaking about Tolstoy, unidentified flying objects, Khrushchev, cannibalism, lasser, chemical warfare, sex, and Esperanto.
Again, three winners will be chosen. Of the forty-six original entries (one from each Speech I section), those three and the three chosen last night will be the six final winners. They are ranked for purposes of judging, but their rank is not made known.
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(Continued from page 1) dents because they had not shown her an identification card.
(Continued from page 1)
Ray Christian
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CRC Says Service-
"We can't serve anyone without an ID," she said. "And I don't hold a restaurant license. I am not obligated to serve anyone anything."
She said that at the time the students came in she was out of beer so she had closed up.
At the Huddle, the bartender reportedly seemed to be sorry that he could not serve the Negro students. He said that it was the manager's policy and he was only working there.
THE MANAGER refused to comment on the incident.
Ellison Sees-
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1) while the white person would probably be considered as doing something less," Ellison said.
In discussing what can be done immediately to stimulate Negro support, Ellison said he felt that the CRC should concentrate on gaining the cooperation of the four Negro fraternities and sororites.
A temporary chairman for next year will be elected at the next meeting, to be held in two weeks.
"The tavern owners don't like to turn Negroes away." Warner said. "And in both places there were customers who said they would like to have seen the Negroes served."
The CRC decided that the next step for them to take would be to refer these cases to the county attorney through the Lawrence Human Rights Commission.
"This is just about all the active work we can do in this area this year," Warner said. "However, we can act as a pressure group to try to get the county attorney to take action."
ROBERTO'S SUNDAY SPECIAL on Spaghetti & Pizza DANCING
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32 AUTOMATIC LANES
Be sure to see Tues.'s & Thurs.'s (April 30 & May 2) Kansan for the schedule YOU should follow to apply for your 1963 student season ticket.
Student Reserved Football Season Tickets For Next Fall's Home Football Games May Be Applied for Starting Monday, May 6.
Student football season tickets will again be applied for according to Fall 1963 graduate - senior - junior - & sophomore priority.
Daily hansan
60th Year, No. 129
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
Friday, April 26, 1963
T. E. BURGESS
Wayne Thompson
'Cities Require Help of Schools'
By Roy Miller
The resources of a university must be used to help solve the problems of urban areas, the president of the International City Managers Association (ICMA) said here last night.
"We don't have the resources outside those faculty walls," Wayne Thompson, president of the ICMA and city manager at Oakland, Calif., said at a dinner of the 16th annual City Managers Conference being held at the Kansas Union.
"WERE GOING TO have to break down those walls and get university help." Thompson said. "We just can't do, it itsures."
Thompson told the more than 75 persons at the dinner of efforts started at Oakland to encourage help from university officials to solve community problems.
He said a 75-acre estate in Oakland has been put to use as a center for educational and industrial use The area will be called the Peralta Oaks Research Park.
Thompson said Clark Kerr, president of the University of California, and James Webb, director of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) have agreed to help at the center.
THOMPSON SAID CITIES must give a "municipal twist" to spaceage techniques to ease the financial problems cities are facing.
we hope through use of some of these space-age techniques we can perhaps cut the need for personnel and cut down on taxes," Thompson said.
The Oakland city manager spoke of the possibilities of using the waste disposal feature of manned space
Weather
The weather bureau predicted cloudy skies would continue through tonight and well into the weekend, along with the possibility of steady light rains and occasional thunderstorms. Tonight's lows will be in the 50s.
capsules as replacements for sewers in urban areas. He also mentioned the use of a telephone which automatically would dial police if a burglar should enter a house or call the fire department if the house was on fire.
HE SAID TELEVISION monitors might be able to replace police and that robot firemen could take the roles of human firefighters.
"Something is going to have to work, because we're going bankrupt," Thompson said. "Some of these cities are on a bankrupt course right now.
"No matter where you go, you hear about financial problems. The people, they know where they're going, they just say no more taxes."
AFTER HIS TALK, Thompson, along with Stephen K. Bailey, dean of the Maxwell Graduate School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse (N.Y.) University, discussed the need for better recruiting techniques of prospective city managers.
"But we, as city managers, can't see the solution financially."
Dean Bailey said students in the public service graduate-training program at Syracuse University often are attracted by the federal government.
He said of 12 or so federal agencies that compete with cities for these students, the Housing and Home Finance Administration (HHFA) attracts the most from Syracuse.
In his speech, Thompson said private enterprise could help relieve communities' financial problems by taking over some of the functions carried out by government.
DEAN BAILEY said the story of 'excitement' and "satisfaction" of serving in urban government must be communicated to undergraduates.
As an example, Thompson told about the Oakland Public Library. He said $2 million worth of commu-
(Continued on page 12)
Sex Bugs Roaches Says Contest Winner
By Terry Ostmeyer
Human beings are threatened with flying saucers and deadly rays, but the menacing little cockroach may at last be headed for destruction by the greatest danger of them all—sex.
Those were the opinions of the three final winners of part two of the Potpourri speech contest last night. The winners and their subjects were:
Robert Koetting, Prairie Village sophomore, "Unidentified Flying Objects, Fiction or Fact?"; David Crandall, Denver, Colo., sophomore, "Laser—Ray of Life or Death," and Connie Fox, Dodge City freshman, "Sex. A New Weapon" (for killing cockroaches).
THOSE WINNERS are included with Wednesday night's victors
Nikita Reports He's a Mortal
MOSCOW — (UPI) — Nikita Khrushchev's reminder to the Russian people that he is not immortal added weight today to speculation he might soon resign one of his top government and Communist party posts.
There was no official indication Khrushchev was under political pressure to make a change, but his public statements on his advancing age focused attention on his possible successors in the Kremlin.
THE SPOTLIGHT fell especially on Frol Kozlov, 54, a secretary of the powerful party Central Committee who is considered Khrushchev's apparent heir as party chief, the actual seat of power in the Soviet Union.
U. S. officials in Washington were reluctant to read too much into Khrushchev's remarks, but they sensed that the Premier might soon decide to give up some of his duties.
The 69-year-old Premier and First Secretary of the ruling party told a group of workers Wednesday he was getting old and "everyone understands that I cannot hold for all time the position I now have in the party and the state."
KHRUSHCHCEV has made similar comments before, but particular importance was attached to this one. It was made public throughout the Soviet Union by the official news agency, Tass, yesterday and the party newspaper, Pravda, and government newspaper, Izvestia, today.
THE REFERENCE gave new impetus to recent reports abroad that Khrushchev is in political hot water at home, or is thinking of giving up some of his duties to concentrate on one job only. The reports apparently stemmed from a dispatch in Lunita, official communist party newspaper in Italy, indicating rumblings in the Kremlin.
Although Khrushchev has mentioned in the past that "we shall all die some time and we must prepare new leaders." Wednesday's speech was the first time he referred to his separate positions as First Secretary of the party and head of the government.
U. S. observers have not detected that Khrushchev is losing his firm control, despite persistent farm deficiencies, over-extension of the country's resources, the dispute with Red China and resistance to party control among Russia's intellectual1
Moreover, the Premier apparently is in good health and has maintained it even with his strenuous work schedule.
who were Kirk McConachie, Wichita freshman; Robert West, McPherson freshman, and Cindy Snyder, Bethesda. Md., freshman.
The six final winners were picked out of a field of 16 finalists from more than 1,000 Speech I students at KU.
The other five finalists in last night's Potpourri were Robert Xidis, Wichita freshman, "Leo Tolstoy"; Jeanette Jeffery, Tecumseh freshman, "The Real Khrushchev"; Caroline Richardson, Overland Park freshman, "Cannibalism — Where and Why"; Glenn Laney, Miami, Fla., freshman, "Chemical Warfare," and Barabara Croissant, Leawood freshman, "Esperanto — International Language."
THE JUDGES FOR the Potpourri finals were Margaret Anderson, associate professor of speech and drama; Stanley Harms, associate professor of speech and drama, and Peter Folsum of the speech department.
E. C. Buehler, chairman of the Speech I program, presented the engraved gavel awards to the winners.
Koetting in his speech on unidentified flying objects, said there have been many true incidents on reported flying objects across the United States.
HE SAID there have been 3,000 such reports in this country and 25 per cent of them have been termed as authentic, many of which are seldom released to the public.
He said unidentified flying objects have been witnessed by many people, more than a million in New York in 1908, to the three airlines pilots who watched a cigar-shaped object in 1948.
He told the Potpourri audience that flying saucers have been tracked on radar at 25,000 miles an hour and some have even been captured on film.
The Frairie Village sophomore said there are many skeptics who refute these reports, just as there are those who claim their validity and danger. Many photographs and eye-witness reports have been condemned as false, he said.
Western Civ. Registration Soon
Registration for the spring Western Civilization comprehensive examination will begin Monday and close May 4 in 130 Strong Hall.
Students in the College, School of Education, School of Journalism and department of chemical engineering are required to pass this examination to graduate.
The examination will be at 1 p.m. Saturday, May 18.
Western Civilization Department review sessions will be Wednesday and Thursday, May 15 and 16, from 7:15 to 9:30 p.m. in Bailey Auditorium.
Dr. James E. Seaver, director of the Western Civilization program, said about 650 students are expected to take the examination this spring.
Students who complete discussion group participation and take the examination this semester will receive four hours of credit. Students who take the test later will get two hours of credit, as will juniors and seniors.
"There are certain educational advantages in taking the exam at the same time as the discussion phase of the program," said Professor Seaver. "Students tend to do better."
The next exam will be at 0 a.m.
July 27.
"BUT," KOETTING SAID, "what's more important to our national security — maybe they are not."
Speaking on the Laser Ray, Crandall, a halfback on the KU football team, used visual aids during his talk to help explain the construction of the ray.
In referring to the peaceful means by which the ray can be used, he said it's use is unlimited in the field of communications. The Laser Ray can spread more information faster than all the telephone, television, and radio waves together, Crandall said.
CRANDALL SAID the Communists have missiles which travel 50,000 miles an hour, but the Laser Ray could hunt them down as it screams through space at the speed of light, 186,000 miles per second.
Tomorrow could be the "Laser Age," he said, and this discovery could rank with the atom.
"ONE OF THE MOST powerful weapons is sex," Miss Fox said to the audience which had already been confronted with every imaginable danger throughout the evening.
As dangerous as this weapon is, it is the only conceivable way of destroying that almost indestructable insect — the cockroach, she said.
Miss Fox said the cockroach has existed for 350 million years with its hard shell and ability to squeeze through almost anyplace.
"THE COCKROACH eats everything from orchids to shoes . . . and it even likes beer," she said.
Through this method, sex-starved cockroaches can be lured to their death, she said.
Miss Fox said scientists now seem to have the answer to the spread of cockroaches. She said female cockroaches give off a sexual perfume which renders the males completely helpless, and a way of extracting this perfume has been developed.
THIS ALL HAS its drawbacks, though. Miss Fox said this method would only destroy the males, not the females who, once mated, lay two eggs a day for the rest of her life.
There is always the fact that some males will be attracted to a female naturally, not to the extracted perfume, Miss Fox explained.
Thus, scientists have started work on a method of sterilizing the male cockroach and possibly generations later the cockroach will be gone, she said.
Whatever the method or whatever the weapon, it looks like a dark future for the once-invincible cockroach, she said.
Crowd Rushes To Trash Fire
Fire engines wailed and professors and students hurried to the scene. Harry Buchholz, superintendent of Building and Grounds, was called in.
The reason? A fire broke out around 10 a.m. in a trash barrel behind Bailey Hall and the annex.
Bystanders tried to put out the fire with a lawn hose, but decided it was a job for the local fire department who quickly controlled the blaze.
Smoke blackened a window ledge on the first floor of Bailey. Several railroad ties and chunks of wood used by the art department were lying a few yards away from the large trash barrel.
Buchholz said the cause of the fire has not been determined.
Page 2
University Daily, Kanşan
Friday, April 26, 1963
Alliance for Progress
The students visiting KU from El Salvador made some revealing comments on the Alliance for Progress. Their views on this subject are well worth listening to and remembering, for the students at that nation's only university form one of the most powerful political pressure groups in the country.
When asked if expression of student opinion were suppressed in El Salvador, one of the students remarked that although the government had no qualms about putting extreme pressure on other political dissenters, it would not dare get rough with the students because of their tremendous political awareness and influence.
HOWEVER. HE did not criticize North American students for their relative lack of interest and activity in national politics. He said the United States has sufficiently large and competent stock of professional politicians to relieve the North American students of this responsibility, at least to the extent that it falls on Latin American university students.
The rarified atmosphere here on the Hill is not to be found on the campus of El Salvador's university. Students there are very close to the practical every-day politics of their nation. Their opinions on the Alliance for Progress should have much more validity than the average North American student's opinion on Medicare, for example.
In answer to a request for general opinions on and evaluations of the Alliance for Progress, one student mentioned a specific example of an Alliance for Progress project that had helped make the entire program unpopular. She told of an airport that was to be built through the Alliance for Progress. The airport itself was welcome, but
the strings attached were wide open to criticism.
THE ALLIANCE for Progress would finance the airport, but only on the condition that the technical personnel and engineers be from the United States. The semi-skilled labor could be El Salvadoran, but the cream of the wages would go right back to the United States. She said it appeared that the Alliance for Progress in this case was being used to help alleviate the United States' unemployment problems rather than to help El Salvador.
Resentment of this sort can hardly be avoided. The Latin Americans are proud people, and they do not like the implication that their technical skills are inadequate. The reaction is an emotional one in this case, for engineers and technicians are not a part of the United States' unemployment problem but, quite the contrary, are in great demand.
The United States must have some guarantee that its money is well spent, and this is possible only through direction of the construction. Technical skill is hardly a strong point in the Latin American labor force. In this respect the resentment is misdirected, but it is not without some basis.
THERE CAN be little doubt that the United States is trying to bolster its own economy. That the Alliance for Progress should help the United States as well as Latin America hardly seems unreasonable. No matter who builds the airport in question, when it is finished it will belong to El Salvador.
It is unfortunate that national pride and propaganda must be such an important obstacle in the path of practical benefits.
— Dennis Branstiter
I will look for it.
the took world
HOW TO STUDY BETTER AND GET HIGHER MARKS, by Eugene H. Ehrlich—a guide for high school and college students. Ehrlich, who is in charge of reading and study habits improvement work at Columbia University, describes ways to increase reading speed, tactics for getting higher exam grades, ways to improve writing skills, steps to master scientific material, ways to develop an ear for language, and techniques for getting more out of study time.
DELTA WEDDING, by Eudora Welty (Signet, 75 cents)—Eudora Welty is one of the South's finest writers, and this is her best-known novel, a story about a southern family living a life scarcely accommodated to 20th century ways. The Fairchild clan includes Battle, head of the family; Ellen, his wife; the great-aunt Shannon; George, best of the lot, and Robbie, George's wife. The time is the twenties. The mood is placid, different from either Faulkner or Carson McCullers, whose work is in the same vein.
Feiffer's Cartoons Weekly in Kansan
Jules Feiffer, nationally syndicated cartoonist and satirist of the American scene, will appear weekly in the Kansan beginning today.
Feiffer went to school in New York and received his art training at the Art Students' League and Pratt Institute. He was employed as assistant to several cartoonists.
His cartoons were collected into a book called "Sick, Sick, Sick," published by McGraw-Hill in April 1958. By the end of December the book had sold 100,000 copies and Feilfer's strip was being picked up by a London weekly. The Observer. His work was also appearing in Esquire, the Sunday Times magazine, Sports Illustrated, and other magazines.
"You Want A,Hot Line To The Capitol Too?"
2007 HERBLOCK
Letters to the Editor
Northrop's Speech Distorted
Editor:
For those of us who read the article entitled "Senate Rapped By Northrop" and also heard the lecture our disgust with inaccurate news reporting is indeed compelled to rise. The major points of Northrop's lectures should be summarized before the inaccuracies of the UDK article are exposed. The Yale professor contends that two schools of political-legal-theological thought were predominant in 17th century England. One of these schools was transferred to the "First Families of Virginia" and, consequently, to some of the authors of the Declaration of Independence. This school of thought did not employ the Lockean principle of tolerance. In creating the United States government a bicameral legislature was thus a must if the institutional framework of the new government was to take the legal, common-law traditions of various sections into consideration. It would be only in such an institutional arrangement that the Lockean idea of tolerance could develop. And according to Northrop the Senate is undemocratic, but the Senate was not "rapped" by him.
The UDK article also reported two more remarks incorrectly—although these articles were not quite as glaring. Northrop did not "hope that India can make its liberal democracy a visable one." He said viable. The other correction to be made concerns Northrop's comment on the Declaration of Independence. He did not say that this document was "based on the Lockean principle that everyone is born free," but that everyone is born "equal." People, according to the Lockean principle, are born equal with one another in that none of them has yet entered into the contract that makes them citizens of society.
If the news reporter for the UDK wants to distort the news for the sake of glamor and controversy he could have at least distorted one of the major points of the lecture.
Gene Mason Brownfield, Texas graduate student
Daily Hansan
111 Flint Hall
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became bweekly 1904,
tristweek 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Member Inland Daily Press Association,
Associated Collegiate Press Rep.
Represented by National Advertising Service,
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I NEVER USED TO GO OUT ON THE STREET.
I WAS ALWAYS AFRAID ID GET BEAT UP.
MARK HENRY
I KNEW IT WAS A
STUPID FEAR. I
KNEW IT WAS
UNREALISTIC. I
LOOKED UP STATISTICS ON
PEOPLE WHO GOT
BEAT UP WHEN
THEY WENT OUT ON
THE STREET. IT'S
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UNTIL-ONE DAY-I I WAS SITTING COM-
FORTABLY IN MY
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CAME TO ME THAT
I DID NOT DARE
GO INTO THE
KITCHEN-THAT IF I
WENT INTO THE
KITCHEN ID GET
BEAT UP.
图
SO I SAT THROUGH ALL
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THINKING MY PROBLEM
OUT, AND AT FIVE IN
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AND NOBODY
BEAT ME UP.
THAT ACTUALLY THE ONLY PERSON WHO REGULARLY BEAT ME UP WAS MYSELF!
SO I AROSE WITHOUT FEAR AND WENT INTO THE KITCHEN. AND NOBODY BEAT ME UP.
AND I PUT ON MY COAT WITHOUT FEAR AND WENT INTO THE STREET. AND NOBODY BEAT ME UP.
FOR THE FIRST TIME IN YEARS I FELT ALIVE! I KNEW I WOULD NEVER BE AFRAID AGAIN!
I FELT SO GOOD THAT THE FIRST COUPLE OF PEOPLE I SAN I BEAT UP.
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A A
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THAT THE FIRST
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I BEAT UP
FOOD
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NG
Architects Plan Awards Banquet
Page 3
The Department of Architecture will conclude its 50th anniversary celebration with an awards banquet at 6:30 p.m. Saturday in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
More than 300 alumni and friends of the KU architecture department are expected to attend the dinner. The featured event will be the presentation of scholarships and awards to KU students of architecture.
The department of architecture awards, which have resulted from contributions by alumni and national and local chapters of the American Institute of Architects (A.I.A.), amount to between $5,000 and $7,000 annually.
THERE WILL also be a general university scholarship awards program.
In addition to the department and general university awards there will be an awards program for students participating in the competitive "Architects as Artists" exhibit now on display in the south lounge of the Kansas Union.
There will be an award made to the student who has contributed an overall outstanding display; two awards in the upper and lower divisions of design, and three awards in the categories of painting, sculpture, and the related arts, such as photography and ceramics.
JOSEPH R. PASSONNEAU, dean of the School of Architecture at Washington University, St. Louis, Mo., and member of A.I.A., will be the guest speaker.
Augustine Kyei, fifth year architecture student from Ashanti, Ghana will read his original poem "Au revoir U.S.A." A collection of Kyei's original poems-was recently featured in the March 1963 edition of "The International Campus."
The departments' anniversary activities during the day will include a movie "Ancient World; Egypt," and "Architecture West" in the morning, and an afternoon panel discussion on "Critical Contributions Needed from Education."
The panel members will include
NROTC Instructor Going to Viet-Nam
Lt. Cmdr. Robert L. Dodd, NROTC Operations and Navigation instructor for the past two-and-a-half years, has been assigned to Viet-Nam as a military adviser.
He will leave San Francisco June 24. The tour of duty will last about a year. He considers the assignment a challenge.
"I'm looking forward to being where the action is," he said.
Lt. Cmdr. Conn, who has been on the U.S.S. Helena of the Pacific Fleet, will replace Dodd as military science instructor.
Dodd's wife, Isabel, and son Steve, will stay in Belvidere, New Jersey, with Mrs. Dodd's mother. The Navy will not allow them to accompany Dodd.
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Gallery Finds No Use for Rubbish
Bowling Games Golf Games
KANSAS CITY. Mo. — (UPI)—A truck load of items which arrived at the Nelson Gallery of Art yesterday, ostensibly for use in its "pop art show" opening Sunday, fooled no one. The items were junk, not art.
1031 Mass. VI 3-9779
The truck pulled up to the gallery bearing a cargo which included old wire cages, assorted boxes, numerous wire coat hangers, some small steel girders, and a wide assortment of items whose origin was not easily distinguishable. The driver carried a letter which he handed to Mrs. George Bunting, assistant curator. The writer, identifying himself as a "fellow artist" said he felt obliged to "participate in kind in your aesthetic endeavor" in the pop show. The letter was signed "Wilber E. Phillips."
Phillips, who is director of the Kansas City Museum, said the signature was genuine. He added that he sent the load of junk to the gallery as a "good natured prank."
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Mrs. Bunting went along with the joke.
"We were particularly impressed that he sent us such nice junk and such a nice selection," she said.
Raymond G. O'Connor, associate professor of history, will speak to ROTC cadets on "Force and Diplomacy" at 7 p.m., Monday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
'Force and Diplomacy Topic of ROTC Talk
A junior-senior brunch and a sophomore picnic are scheduled this weekend in connection with All Women's Day.
AWS Will Hold Brunch and Picnic
The AWS junior-senior brunch will be at 9 a.m. Sunday in the Kansas Union Ballroom. It will feature a fashion show sponsored by the AWS Mademoiselle Fashion Board.
The fashions will be furnished by the Jay Shoppe. Models will be the KU women who participated in the Fashion Boards recent "Best Dressed Coed" contest.
Women attending the brunch will vote for the AAUW outstanding senior women who will be announced at the Honors Night program Monday.
The AWS All Women's Day activities will be concluded Monday with a display of art work by KU women in front of Hoch Auditorium. In case of rain the exhibit will be on the second floor of Strong Hall. Honors Night will climax All Women's Day. The program, designed to recognize the outstanding women on campus, will be Monday at 7:30 p.m. in Hoch Auditorium.
The AWS sophomore picnic will be held at 5 p.m. Sunday at Potter Lake. In case of rain picnickers will take shelter in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
The Little Banquet SMORGASBORD
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University Daily Kansan
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Chicago Police Arrest Eleven Student "Cops"
CHICAGO—(UPI)—Eleven "student policemen" were free on bond today while authorities tried to determine whether the force they were being trained for actually exists.
Chicago police raided the "Leesville Police Academy" Wednesday night and arrested the 11 men, five on charges of impersonating an officer and the other for carrying concealed weapons.
Guns, handcuffs and tickets to a policeman's ball were confiscated.
THE ARRESTED MEN and their ex-convict instructor, Joseph Johnson, 38, said they were going to form the police department of Leesville, Ill., a small Negro community about 20 miles southeast of Kankakee.
The population of Leesville is estimated to be from 200 to 9,000 persons. But its status as a village and whether it has a police force were up in the air.
Kankakee County State's Atty. Edward P. Drolet said the community has no legal right to a police department because, he said, it is not incorporated.
CARLOS V. LINDSEY, who said he was village president, said that Leesville is incorporated. He said the town's police force was chartered Jan. 4, 1962.
Leesville village officers were
elected in December, 1961, although Drolet said the election was not authorized by the courts.
A maze of court proceedings apparently is unresolved.
The arrested men, all Negroes from Chicago, said they understood they would receive a weekly salary of $100 as Leesville policemen. Chicago police said half of the "students" didn't know where Leesville was.
Portraits of Distinction
Portraits of Distinction
HIXON
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 26, 1963
'Look' Executive Praises Direct Mail
Direct mail advertising, a vast and important enterprise, utilizes research-tested methods to reach a particular audience, a "Look" magazine executive said here yesterday.
Lester Suhler, vice-president of the magazine, spoke at the annual Advertising Day program yesterday.
His topic, "New Horizons in Direct Mail Advertising," dealt with circulation advertising and promotion letters sent directly into the home.
Suhler said direct mail advertising is the primary way for a magazine to increase circulation.
FREDERICK G. BONNELL
Lester Suhler
He said large quantities of letters are sent into homes and research is used to determine which mailing method works best.
Subler pointed out that 20 staff members are employed at "Look's" Des Moines, Iowa, plant while hundreds more operate machines which process the letters. He added that the staff is the crux of the whole operation promoting ideas and laying out copy.
Suhler said that in a record day over 100,000 pieces of return mail have been received in his office.
He said that devices and names used in direct mail advertising are "used in good taste." I think the use of direct mail. . is good advertising and is ideal for a magazine desiring quality circulation, he said.
Suhler said a special committee exists to guard the right of privacy of individuals regarding the use of their names on circulation lists.
"In our direct mail, we have attempted to sell "Look" for what it is." Suhler said, "a family magazine." Suhler said "Look" appeals largely to the pouter population
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
of America. "All magazines should want to be young," he said.
Concerning direct mail research used by the magazine. Suhler said direct mail advertising can be costly and any one mistake could mean a loss of thousands of dollars.
He said the trial-and-error method is frequently educational. For example, he said, "We know pretty well what states work best and act accordingly."
Some of the new mailing devices tried by the circulation department included the use of transparent envelopes, different sized envelopes and different colors of ink.
When you find one size envelope outsells another, Suhler said, "it is worthless to use any other."
Ad Executive Presents Gift
The executive of a Topoica advertising agency recently presented to the School of Journalism a set of portfolios representing the best entries in the annual Direct Mail Advertising Association competition.
The portfolios were presented by Perce Harvey, Jr., of Harvey Advertising Agency.
The portfolios, representing the direct mail campaigns of a number of different industries, will be used for study by KU advertising classes. The portfolios will be added to the collection of case study materials in the William Allen White Reading Room.
Harvey is a member of the Direct Mail Advertising Association and is responsible for obtaining the collection for the School of Journalism.
Center to Present 'American Dream'
Kansas University Westminster Center will present the second play in its current drama series, "The American Dream" by Edward Albee, Sunday.
The play will be presented at 8:15 p.m. in the main reception room of the Westminster Center, 1204 Oread Ave.
Following the performance there will be an open discussion of the play led by four faculty members.
"An American Dream" is a satire on the dominance of women and the decadence of the family unit in the American culture.
Performing in the production will be June Royston, Kansas City graduate student, as Mommy; Robert Phillips, Lawrence senior, as Daddy; Marilyn Scharine, Lawrence graduate student, as Mrs. Baker; and Robert Springsteen as the Young Man.
YELLOW CAB
VI 3-6333
The KU Amateur Radio Club will stage a six-meter transmitter hunt this evening. Students wishing to join the hunt or those interested in amateur radio, will meet at 8 p.m. in Room 201 of the Electrical Engineering Laboratory behind Marvin.
Dance Symposium Includes KU Talent
Eighteen University of Kansas students will participate in the Mid-West Dance Symposium at Iowa City, Iowa, April 26-27, which will include an original dance with choreography by a KU student.
She is Mary Jean Cowell of St. Louis, Mo., senior, whose dance, "Anyone," adapted from a poem by e. e. cummings, has no music. The dancers accompany themselves with the rhythm of the words in the poem. Miss Cowell, an honor student, has won a Woodrow Wilson Fellowship for graduate study in art history.
Radio Hams to Stage Transmitter Hunt
The symposium will include two days of intensive classes.
The seven dancers who will give Miss Cowell's number are: Miss Cowell, Danny Johnson, Jamaica, N.Y. sophomore; Coleen Wright, Lawrence special student; Jody Zirul, Prairie Village freshman; Matt Frazier, Lawrence freshman; Larry Siefkes, Great Bend freshman and Bonnie Butler, Merriam freshman.
Others attending the symposium will be: Janet Jacobs, Augusta; Paul Chen, Brunei Town, Bruni; Patricia Shore, Pittsburgh, Pa.; Patricia Postlethwaite, Kansas City, Mo.; Alexander Brown, Lawrence; Kitty Wood, Winnetka, Ill.; Janie Lutton, Bartlesville, Okla.; Mary Messenheimer, Minneapolis, Minn.; Mrs. Eva Mae Brandt, Wakarusa; Ann Kretzmeier, Liberal; and Walter Bgyoa, Tanganyika.
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Page 5
University Heads Focus on Health
Student health services do and should have responsibilities far beyond serving the students, but limited finances limit the functions, four university administrators told the annual meeting of the American College Health Association yesterday at the University of Kansas.
The four administrators were Dean W. W. Malott, of Cornell University and former KU chancellor; Elmer F. Ellis, of the University of Missouri; Leland D. Traywick of Southwest Missouri State College Springfield, and Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe.
NONE OF THE health services at four schools had enough personnel to give physical examinations to anyone but students.
Only at Southwest Missouri State could the faculty and staff be treated, except for emergencies, and that on an out-patient basis.
Malott said Cornell has a University Health Service, with not only the standard clinical services, but responsibility for some health teaching, radiological safety, environmental health and research.
"I have a strong interest in the quality of this service and at Cornell the director reports directly to me," he said.
At Kansas the health service is responsible to the Chancellor while at Missouri the director reports to the dean for extra-divisional activities.
CHANCELLOR WESCOE said the health service should not be a formal school, but indirectly it should foster health education because every visit to a physician should be a learning experience for the patient.
Dr. Ellis, responsible for campuses at Columbia and Rolla, explained that the scope and function of a health service would vary with proximity to a school of medicine and the percentage of the student body living at home.
Dr. Traywick, whose student body includes many living at home or commuting, spoke of the values of integrating the services of local physicians into the health service.
"IN THE FUTURE the problems of mental health will probably present the greatest area of growth in university health services," Chancellor Wescoe said. "And this area of activity promises the greatest future benefits."
Dr. Ellis added, "Since psychiatric consultation was added to the University of Missouri health service, the incidence of suicide in the student body has dropped many-fold."
Over 350 girls from 17 Kansas high schools will be here Saturday for the Women's Recreation Association's High School Sports Day.
Sports Day to Draw High School Girls
Women physical education teachers from the high schools have also been invited.
Instructional clinics on archery, badminton, bowling, softball, swimming, tennis and volleyball will begin at 9 a.m.
The afternoon will be devoted to various sports activities with teams from the various schools competing in softball, swimming and volleyball.
A basic problem in mental health of students is in communication, according to Mr. Malott. "We've got to orient our faculty and staff and students so that everyone knows that at the health service there is a sympathetic person who is ready to listen and help."
The ACHA is meeting this week in Kansas City, but delegates met yesterday afternoon and evening in Lawrence with the conference general chairman, Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director if the KU health service.
Mail Census 1970 Possibility
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The government is considering taking a "do-it-yourself" census in 1970. It would rely on mail-in question-naires rather than the traditional personal interviews by census takers.
The proposed new system of taking the nation's head count was disclosed in a Budget Bureau pamphlet on cost reduction.
THERE IS GROWING Congressional sentiment for trying the mail census despite the fact that the appointment of census takers has long been a patronage plum for House members and Senators.
Census director Richard M. Scammon favors the use of mail. "I'm not positive," he said today, "but I believe we can get a better product for less money."
For conducting the traditional door-to-door count, census enumerators have been paid between $1.50 to $1.80 an hour or a lump sum of $150 depending on the area in which they work.
Eut Scammon noted that in 1960, only one-fifth of the 185,000 census takers were recommended by their Congressmen. The others had to be recruited.
THE COST OF the 1960 census was about $100 million and Scammon believes that a saving of $15 million could be achieved by the mail system.
A bill is pending in the House which would allow the Census Bureau to try the mail operation in other federal censuses between now and 1970.
SHOULD THE HEAD of a household fail to return his questionnaire, a census enumerator would be dispatched to obtain the information in the customary style.
If passed, the Census Bureau and the Post Office Department would cooperate in drawing up a sample mail list. Scammon envisions mailing questionnaires to most areas of the country except where illiteracy is high or there are a great number of transients.
There would be no special penalties assessed for those failing to mail in their forms other than those that now prevail: failure to give information to a census taker, a $100 fine and/or 60 days in jail; giving a false answer, $500 fine and/or one year in prison.
"Casablanca," starring Humphrey Bogart and Ingrid Bergmann, will be shown at 7 and 9:30 p.m. Friday in Fraser Theater.
Bogart, Bergmann Star in 'Casablanca'
University Daily Kansan
The SUA film, winner of three academy awards, is the story of refugees fleeing from Nazi Europe to North Africa. Claude Raines, Peter Lorre and Sydney Greenstreet co-star in the film.
NEW YORK—(UPI)—Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller said last night that President Kennedy's European nuclear defense policy will lead to "chaos." Rockefeller proposed, instead, one of his own.
Rocky Criticizes Nuclear 'Chaos'
Rockefeller, who many believe will race Kennedy in 1904 as the Republican presidential candidate, urged the United States to help Europe create a nuclear arsenal and strategy that can be coordinated with our own.
He called for "a North Atlantic political arrangement within which nuclear weapons can be controlled and deployed for the common good of all free peoples."
SUCH AN ARRANGEMENT, he said, could be achieved through creation of a "genuine political partnership of strong and independent nations committed to sharing agreed nuclear responsibilities for the common defense of the Atlantic area."
The GOP governor said the Kennedy administration "has talked a great deal about partnership, but it is treating our friends of the Atlantic Alliance as dependent allies rather than independent partners.
"The administration in its policies and actions has, in fact, been extremely ambivalent; in the economic field, it has talked of equal partnership, of the importance of European integration and of common European action, but in the nuclear field, it has discouraged the emergence of any European identity."
Rockefeller, in a dinner address to the Bureau of Advertising of the American Newspaper Publishers Association (ANPA), said:
"TODAY, THE SOVIET nuclear arsenal has grown to the point at which it threatens the very existence of every country in the West. Europe is now strong enough in the face of this challenge to want to assume a greater degree of self-reliance.
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International Club Plans Tearoom Gathering
The International Club's social gathering this Saturday will be different, according to Sami Aiffy, president of the International Club
Affy said the Saturday meeting will be surprising to the club members. "Such a meeting has never been arranged in the past," he said.
The meeting will be held from 8 p.m. to midnight at the Castle Tea Room, 1307 Massachusetts St.
Music from different lands and refreshments will be the feature of the evening.
Members and guests are requested to bring their musical instruments to the meeting.
Admission will be free to members and their dates. There will be a $1 fee for nonmembers.
Activities of the club for the remainder of the semester will include a panel discussion at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, May 4, in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union; election of the '63 fall semester officers and dancing at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, May 11, in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union,
PORTSMOUTH, England — (UPF
— Mrs. Eva Phillips yesterday bought
a women's night dress at a jumble
sale that had 54 one pound notes
( $151.20 ) pinned inside the sleeve.
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and a farewell picnic on Saturday, May 18. The place and time of the picnic will be announced later.
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Page 6 University Daily Kansan Friday, April 26, 1963
Lawrence
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April 26
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These merchants salute Jerry Waldschmidt the Player of the W
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Friday, April 26.1963 University Daily Kansan Page 7
Galott's Hardware
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Sandy's Drive-In
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Bell Music Co.
Massachusetts
Duckwall's Store
945 Massachusetts
Acme Laundry and Dry Cleaners
1111 Mass. ● 825 Iowa
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Lawrence National Bank
7th and Massachusetts
Montgomery Ward & Co.
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hmidt
Week
KU
Right-hander Jerry Waldschmidt, Topeka senior, boosted his season record to 3-1 by limiting the Kansas State Wildcats to five hits to become the Player of the Week. The Jayhawkers picked up 11 hits to win 12-2. Waldschmidt will go to the mound this weekend in an important three-game series with the Oklahoma State Cowboys here.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 26, 1963
University Daily Kansan
SPORTS Cowboys Here For Big Series
The Kansas Jayhawker baseball team opens an important threegame series against the Oklahoma State Cowboys at Quigley Field this afternoon.
The two teams meet in two seven inning games today and close with a nine-inning affair tomorrow afternoon. Today's games began at 1:30 p.m. Tomorrow's will start at 1 p.m.
ANY TITLE HOPES which the Jayhawkers might have ride on this three-game series. The Jayhawkers are presently embedded in fourth place with a 5-4 record. The Cowboys are two games back with a 3-6 league mark.
The Jayhawkers have moved slowly up in the standings following losing a three-game opening series against the Oklahoma Sooners which lead the Big Eight with a 9-0 record. The Jayhawkers have swept two out of three from Nebraska and won all three games against Kansas State last weekend.
In another important series, the Oklahoma Sooners host Colorado at Norman. The Buffalooes, which were tied with the Sooners with a 6-0 record going into last weekend's action, lost three games to Missouri and dropped to third place. The Tigers are not expected to be pressed against Kansas State today and tomorrow.
COACH FLOYD TEMPEL will send his three top pitchers to the mound against the Cowboys. Today left-hander Carl Nelson will pitch the opener while right-hander Jerry Waldschmidt will follow in the second game. Monte Stewart will pitch tomorrow.
Nelson has a 2-3 season record and is second in earned run averages with a highly respectable 1.80. Nelson has pitched 43 2/3 innings, allowing only 29 hits and has struck out 56, high for the Javhakers.
Waldschmidt leads KU in the wonloss department and earned run averages. The Topeka senior owns a 3-1 record and a 1.08 earned run average. He has struck out 27 and has only allowed five walks in 32 1/3 innings.
Monte Stewart has moved up into the number three position to replace Roger Brock. Stewart has pitched only five innings this season but has picked up two decisions. He has a 2-0 won-lost mark.
For Oklahoma State, Larry Ferguson and Donnie Bumpass will pitch. Ferguson is the Cowboys' leading pitcher with a 4-1 record and a 1.63 earned run average. Bumpass has a 1-2 mark and a 2.25 earned run average.
Bowling Action Begins Monday
The big event of the university men's bowling season, The Campus Tournament, will begin Monday and run through May 5, according to Terrel Hays, Shawnee senior, secretary of the campus bowling leagues.
Any student who is presently bowling on any campus team is eligible to enter the handicap tournament which will be held in the Kansas Union Jaybowl.
Handicaps will be based on three-fourths the difference between the bowlers' league average and 200. Contestants must have rolled at least twelve games in a league at the Jaybowl to qualify for any event in the tournament.
All teams will bowl at their regular league time during the tourney, but individuals desiring to bowl in the other events must report to the Jaybow desk to arrange desired bowling times.
Entry fees are $1.25 per person,
per event. An additional $0.25 is
charged for the all-events listing.
Trophies will be awarded to the top three places in the three categories and in the all-events.
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In a down-to-the-wire finish against Missouri, the Jayhawkers bettered the existing Drake record which was set two years ago by another outstanding Jayhawker quartet of Kirk Hagan, Gordon Davis, Bill Thornton and Bill Dotson. The Jayhawkers winning time was 1:28.4 at the Kansas Relays.
THE MISSOURI TIGERS will be seeking revenge as Coach Tom Botts will lead his two-mile team once more. Other prominent two-mile aggregations include Ohio, which won the Texas Relays, Oregon State and Stanford.
The KU track delegation's hopes in the 54th annual Drake Relays today and tomorrow ride on an unheralded two-mile relay team which outclassed the University field at the Kansas Relays last week.
Ohio owns a 7:30.8 time. Oregon State ran 7:38.1 indoors and Stanford has turned 7:37.9 this spring but is capable of much better.
The anchor lap of this relay will match four sub 1:50 half-mile runners in KU's Hagan, Ohio's Darnell Mitchell, defending Big Eight half-mile champion Greg Pelster of Missouri, Oregon State's Morgan Groth and Stanford's Harry McCalla, a miler who has run 4:04.2 this year.
terri's
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Two-Mile Relay Team Holds Jayhawk Hopes
803 Mass.
HAGAN RAN 1:49.2 in his anchor half-mile at the Kansas Relays. Pelster ran 1:48.7 in the Arkansas Relays. Mitchell owns a 1:49.3 which placed him fourth in the NCAA last year and Groth has run 1:49.7.
Much of the Jayhawkers' hopes will be riding on Bill Stoddart, normally a quarter-miler, who ran his first competitive half-mile last
The games with the Missouri Cricket Club, Kansas State University Cricket Club, St. Louis Cricket Team, Ft. Leavenworth Cricket Club are being planned for the remainder of the season.
The regular practice of the KU Cricket Club will be at 4 p.m. on Wednesday and Friday at the east of the Memorial Stadium ground, beginning today.
THE WANT ADS
The KU Cricket Club will open its season with a match against Kansas City Cricket Club tomorrow afternoon at the Meckinon Park, North Kansas City.
Others who will run for KU are Paul Taylor, a Coffeyville Junior College transfer who ran 1.53.8 and Tonnie Coane who turned a 1.51.8.
Cricket Season Opens Tomorrow
READ and USE
week in 1:53.5. KU Coach Bill Easton believes the senior is capable of dipping to 1:50.
The Jayhawkers' individual hopes are represented by shotputter Yul Yost, who holds the best collegiate mark this year. His main competition will come from Texas A&M's Danny Roberts. Roberts won the Texas Relays and Yost the Kansas, so the Drake will be the rubber match in the series.
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Golf, Tennis Teams Return to Action
The KU golf and tennis teams return to action this weekend.
Coach Dick Reamon's golfers will host Missouri in a dual match at Lawrence Country Club this afternoon.
The KU tennis squad will be at Kansas City today and tomorrow competing against Southern Illinois, Notre Dame and Oklahoma State.
AND FRIDAY HAD NO SUNDAE
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Play by Julius J. and Philip G. Epstein and Howard Koch
Murray Burrett and John Alison a Martin Stieper
A HAL B. WALLIS PRODUCTION
directed by MICHAEL CURT
WITH PAUL CLAUDE SYDNEY PETER HENREID·RAINS·GREENSTREET·LORRE A HAL B. WALLIS PRODUCTION Screen Play by Julius J. and Philip G. Epstein and Howard Koch directed by MICHAEL CURTIZ
friday fraser theater ficks 7 & 9:30 35c
WE'RE SORRY
for the inconvenience caused by the cancellation of "The Adventures of Robin Hood" last Friday night. Our distributor failed to ship us the film in time for the showing. All those who failed to claim a refund should do so in the SUA office. Again, due to difficulties beyond our control, we will be unable to present "Tammy and the Bachelor" this week. In its place, a three part Academy Award winning program has been substituted consisting of "Cascablaanca," "Bear Country," and Chapter 13 of "Captain Video." Our policy will continue to be one of bringing to the campus the best in motion picture entertainment, both old and recent releases.
The Shaggy King
of a Western
Wilderness!
WALT DISNEY'S
BEAR COUNTRY
A TRUE LIFE ADVENTURE IN TECHNICOLOR
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Be Released by BUENA VISTA
Plus Chapter 13 of Captain Video
WATCH FOR BIG SCREEN CINEMASCOPE COMING TO THE FLICKS SOON!
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Page 9
Dean Woodruff Enjoys Antiques
By Willis Henson
When L. C. Woodruff dean of students, is not tending to his administrative duties, or his biology class, he engages in revamping antique furniture.
Actually, Mrs. Woodruff started the furniture campaign. "She is the bargainer," Dean Woodruff said, who directs the program at their one-and-a-half story home.
"At first, we just used what was handy," he said, "but later we began to purchase antique pieces." Last summer the Woodruffs refinished a grand piano.
HE PROUDLY EXPLAINED the slow process which included cleaning the piano with paint remover, steel wool and sand paper.
PETER HENRY
L. C. Woodruff
Dean Woodruff's latest project was the refinishing of a large walnut chest. He boasts that he has refinished every piece of furniture in the dining room of his home.
The Woodruffs early American period furniture is cherry in color. Though Dean Woodruff likes mahogany he explained that mahogany was an unheard of color by early Americans.
Dean Woodruff now teaches only one biology lecture section this semester, though he has taught as many as three sections.
Asked why he preferred both to teach and continue his job as an administrator, Dean Woodruff said "we are all in the business of education." "A dean is an enigma to many students." Dean Woodruff continued. He feels that by continuing to teach, a better student-teacher relationship can be developed.
DEAN WOODRUFF also has spent many years preparing himself to teach others. He received his A.B. degree in biology and entomology from KU in 1924.
In 1930, Dean Woodruff was granted his M.A. and went to Cornell University as an instructor in biology. He returned to KU in 1934 as an assistant professor of entomology.
He served as registrar of the University from 1942-1946 when he was made professor of biology. He was appointed Dean of Men in 1947. In 1953 he became Dean of Students.
HE SAID that he acts as a "coordinator of all aspects of student life outside the classroom." These aspects include student housing, health, scholarships, athletics, the Union building and other aids.
As Dean of Students, Dean Woodrufl said "I don't see too many students."
To relieve himself from the tensions of his university duties. Dean Woodruff reads often and gardens a little.
During the summer, Dean Woodruff leaves his desk job behind and travels extensively.
"I am a lover of wildlife," he said. Dean Woodruff has found his "Utopia" for such enjoyment "in a little town in Florida."
GUARDING HIS PRIVATE domain like a fisherman would his good-luck fishing hole, Dean Wood-ruff described it as "a town where no one knows you."
He said the town had no telephones. It does have a beach however. Dean Woodruff said he likes to sit and watch the waves roll and toss.
"I could sit for hours and watch the waves. It has a particular fascination for me," he said.
DEAN WOODRUFF does a little fishing on his vacation trips. Once he caught a 50-pound tarpon, a large game-fish found in the waters off the southeastern coast of the United States and in the Gulf of Mexico.
Asked if he liked boating, Dean Woodruff said he found boat trips boring. "I would rather swim in the seacoast water," he said.
In Florida, the 50-pound fish was not given a second look because it seemed commonplace. Dean Woodruff said. He did not even have it mounted. Only his rod and reel remain as a reminder of the accomplishment.
Movers Stack Books in Streets
POUGHKEEPSIE, N.Y. — (UPI)—The state asked book dealer John Lindmark to move his 200,000 volume collection and make way for a highway, but he refused. So the state is doing the job for him.
The task of moving the books, valued by Lindmark at $3 million, is expected to take 15 men 10 days. And when they are finished the books will be stacked three feet high
"Lindmark was served with an eviction notice two weeks ago." City Marshal Herman Soloway said yesterday. "He refused to do anything so we began removing the books."
THE CONTROVERSY began three years ago when New York State set plans for a new north-south arterial here. State officials said they had trouble negotiating with Lindmark and the case finally was settled in the courts. The eviction notice was signed a year ago but held up while officials tried to convince Lindmark to move.
The book dealer claimed he could not afford to move the books and had no place to move them.
"WHEN I LEAVE at four o'clock in the afternoon, they're all his responsibility," he said. "The police are maintaining their regular patrols but nothing else. And if it rains, all those books are going to be ruined."
Soloway said once the books begin to create a problem on the street, the city will take action against Lindmark.
"We're piling the books into the scoop of a bulldozer and taking them outside." Soloway said. "We've built stalls at three feet high along the sidewalk so they can be stacked.
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The Class of '64 will carry on the old traditions under a new program, according to Jerry Pullins, Council Grove junior and president of next year's senior class.
Pullins said the new program includes the creation of senior house representatives, who will be useful in getting the seniors organized, interested and working.
He explained that there will be two senior representatives in each fraternity, sorority and scholarship hall, and one on each floor of the residence halls. These representatives will begin to work this year, he said.
Class of '64 Begins Plans
"They probably will be the most important communication link we have." Pullins said.
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Senior Committees Open for Applicants
Applications for senior class committees are still available.
Jerry Pullins, Council Grove junior and next year's senior class president, said applications may be obtained in all organized houses and in the Alumunl Office. 127 Strong Hall.
He said the representatives would also be an important channel in choosing the senior gift and the design for senior sweatshirts.
Applications must be turned in by April 30 to the Alumni Office.
Pullins said applicants will have their first, second and third choice among 12 committees: Publicity, Gift, HOPE Award, Calendar, Special Events, Secretarial, Regalia (including sweatshirts), Invitations, Rings, Senior Day, and Picnic, and Senior Breakfast.
Pullins said the special events committee would be the "brainstorming" committee of the program. He said several new ideas for senior functions have been suggested, such as class intramurals and a baseball game played on donkeys.
Many of the committees will begin to work as soon as they are chosen, he said. He said the committees would be headed by co-chairmen, one man and one woman.
University Daily Kansan
Pullins said he plans a monthly meeting of all committee chairmen so that activities might be coordinated. At these meetings committee chairmen will give progress reports, which will be placed in a senior file for future use.
He said senior parties would also be organized somewhat differently. He cited the possibility of having a street party for the seniors.
Pullins said improvement is needed in some areas, such as the senior calendar.
Pullins said he feels the plans will be successful. "The seniors have a lot in common. It's their last year."
Soviet Union Ignores Nuclear Test Ban Plea
GENEVA — (UPI) — The Soviet Union today ignored a top-level Western plea for an end to the nuclear stalemate and charged the West with obstructing all aspects of disarmament negotiations.
Soviet Negotiator Semyon K. Tsarapkin told the 17-Nation Disarmament Conference that the "military-economic-financial complex in the United States has obstructed disarmament negotiations to creat a complete lack of progress."
Tsarapkin did not mention directly the personal appeal made by President Kennedy and British
Prime Minister Harold Macmillan to Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev to put an end to the current nuclear deadlock.
But he said the "frantic arms race" undertaken by the West had obstructed agreement even on "such a relatively simple matter as a nuclear test ban."
He claimed both the United States and France had "gone in the face of the United Nations General Assembly's appeal to the nuclear powers not to test after Jan. 1st of this year," and said the United States had conducted 275 tests up to that date—"a highly significant figure."
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Friday, April 26, 1963
Housewife Has Advantage in Careers; Diversity of Interests Easily Expressed
By Dolores Orman
What is the role of the American woman in today's society? Can she be both a successful career woman and mother? What about the unmarried woman?
Those were some of the questions discussed yesterday at the symposium on the roles of women in modern society sponsored by Associated Women Students (AWS).
The program, one of the All Women's Day activities, featured four guest panelists: Dr. Helen Gillis, a Lawrence pediatrician; Mrs. Charles Fordyce, a Kansas City probation officer; Emily Taylor, dean of women, and Mrs. Lewis Wheelock, wife of KU faculty member Lewis Wheelock, history lecturer.
"The concept of the woman in the home, kitchen, and church is gone," said Mrs. Wheelock.
THE TERM "housewife" doesn't fit the college-educated woman who chose not to pursue a career after marriage, Mrs. Wheelock said.
She said all women are housekeepers and that some women are wives.
"A woman works because she wants more money or because she has been prepared for a specialized field for which she is competent," Mrs. Wheelock said.
ALTHOUGH SHE HAS a degree in education and has done secretarial work, Mrs. Wheelock said she found filing papers and typing dull and termed it "idiot work."
"The housewife has more opportunity to jump from one interest to another than the career woman," she said.
Mrs. Wheelock recommended that women have a strong undergraduate background in liberal arts and specialize later.
"THE ROLE OF WOMAN is be coming more non-specialized," she said.
"The techniques of housekeeping and homemaking should not be offered in colleges, she said. "They do not belong in the college curriculum."
She explained that she returned to work for financial reasons after her husband's death in 1951. She has been a probation officer in Johnson county for 11 years.
Mrs. Fordyce, who graduated with a degree in education and sociology, spoke for the woman who had worked before marriage, had stopped and had then resumed working.
MRS. FORDYCE described juvenile work as social work which involved not only the children but the lives of the parents in attempting to solve the child's problems.
Freshman Women Want Home, Career
The average KU freshman woman considers 22 the ideal age for marriage, hopes to raise three children, would like to obtain a B.A. in education and is currently dating more than one man.
Those are a sample of the results of a survey of freshman women sponsored recently by the Associated Women Students Roles of Women Committee.
Donna Gould, Shawnee Mission junior, and head of the six-member committee, presented the preview at the AWS symposium on the roles of women in modern society yesterday.
The survey indicated that the average freshman woman would prefer to bear her first child at the age of 24, her last child at the age of 30, and anticipates working two years after college. She is either the youngest or the oldest child in her family and has a mother who is 43, has had some college work and has worked some, but is no longer working now.
The final results and exact percentages of the survey will be published later in the spring, Miss Gould said.
Approximately 735 freshman women responded to the survey questionnaire. Thirty-eight expressed a desire to raise seven children or more.
"The work has been demanding, frustrating, but quite often rewarding," she said. Occasionally the juvenile workers often find it necessary to consult with doctors, psychologists and mental health centers, she said.
She described two types of homes in which there are working mothers. In one the mother works out of the home because it is necessary and the children understand. The other, said Mrs. Fordyce, is a mother who works out of the home because she does not want to be a housekeeper or mother.
THE MOTHER WORKS so she can get away from home, said Mrs. Fordyce. It is in the latter home that trouble usually erupts.
Dr. Helen Gillis, who has combined a career and marriage, listed several decisions a woman must make when she is considering combining a career with marriage.
"First you should decide what kind of career you are going to have," she said. Dr. Gillis pointed out that some fields are easier to drop out of and return to later than other fields.
Secondly, she said, husband and wife should decide together whose work should come first. Other decisions that the woman should make concern how much she should work after marriage and after the children come.
COMMENTING UPON the latter point, Dr. Gillis said the readily available means of birth controls which are reasonably effective, make it easier for the woman to plan to work.
The woman must also consider her husband, her children and herself, Dr. Gillis said. "It is difficult for a woman to work and not have the full cooperation of her husband," she added.
"It would be difficult for a mother to work full time and devote the amount of time to her children that a mother should," Dr. Gillis said.
She said the woman who wants to combine a career and marriage would "have to have a considerable amount of energy and ability to organize."
DR. GILLIS described the medical field as difficult to go back into after being out for a while because it is constantly changing.
For this reason she has worked part time throughout her marriage. Dr. Gillis explained she married her husband, who has his Ph.D. in chemistry, her senior year in college and had her first child three weeks after she completed her internship.
Dean Taylor, representing the unmarried career woman, said statistics point out that over 90 per cent of the population's women get married. "We do not choose our way of life," she said, speaking of the roles of women. "Events move along and what seems to be free choice is not really free choice."
DEAN TAYLOR expressed that she was satisfied with her life as a single woman. "Statistics show that the average woman is a widow for 11 years," she said.
Speaking of her adopted child, Dean Taylor said she had not denied herself the job of rearing a child.
"One thing I cannot understand," she said, "is why a single woman's supposedly happily married friends feel it is their job to get her married, they don't care how, just get her married."
DEAN TAYLOR expressed the hope that society will some time permit free choice and will not present obstacles in one area and rewards in another.
In the question and answer session that followed the panel discussion one KU woman noted that some of the audience's women would be in the 10 per cent that will not marry and asked how such women can prepare psychologically for such a situation.
Dean Taylor said the answer may lie in the woman becoming more aggressive.
DR. GILLIS SAID if the woman found work that is creative and emotionally satisfying this would be a great help.
Another topic was brought up concerning the fact that when a woman graduates from college she is expected to be able "to do something."
Mrs. Wheelock said she thought the trend for women was toward
the more cultural end of a college education and away from the practical end.
DEAN TAYLOR disagreed, saying "that a college education is becoming a luxury we can't afford."
Dr. Gillis emphasized the time element. In speaking on the subject of specialization after one has received a liberal education, she pointed out that a woman's fertility decreases markedly after 30 years of age and that if a woman postponed having children too long she would not be physiologically prepared.
She added that a woman must take all this into consideration when she is deciding about a career and marriage.
NSF Grants Given To 7
Seven graduate students at the University of Kansas have been appointed National Science Foundation Cooperative Fellows for the 1963-64 year at the University of Kansas.
"BEST AMERICAN FILM OF 1962!"
Cooperative fellowships are placed by the NSF at universities and the selection of the recipient is made through competitive selection by the institution and the NSF.
The fellowships cover all fees and provide a basic stipend of $2,800 for 12 months or $2,100 for 9 months. There is a special research and travel allowance of $400.
Mary L. Wheat of Hastings, Neb,
whose field is mathematics, is the first woman to receive this 12-month fellowship at KU.
-Time Magazine
DAVID &LISA
Others honored are: Richard M. Kellogg, Arlington, chemistry, 12 months; Dean C. Luehrs, Lansing, Mich., chemistry, 12 months; James G. McCreary, Norman, Okla., chemical engineering, 12 months; Karl E. Spear II, Baldwin, chemistry, 9 months; and Donald O. Swenson, Clay Center, mechanical engineering, 12 months.
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Official Bulletin
Ph.D. Reading Examination in German,
Saturday, May 4, 9:30 a.m., Summerfield
411. Candidates must register in Fraser
405, by 4 a.m., Friday, April 26.
Ph.D. French Reading Examination,
fourth edition, April 27. No books accepted after April 24.
No books accepted after April 24.
TODAY
AURI Weekly Open House and Mixer,
9 a.m. Hashing, "The Whatehailam-
a"
TOMORROW
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
SUNDAY
Catholic Masses, 7:00 a.m., 11:40 a.m.
St. Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford
Newman Club Meeting, 6:30 p.m. St.
Louis Academy Student Center. 195
Stratford Road.
MONDAY
Sunday Evening Fellowship, 5:15 p.m.
Westminster Center, 1204 Oread.
Catholic Masses 8 a.m. St. Lawrence
Catholic Chapel, pallet Road;
9:30 and 11:00 Fraser Auditorium
Sunday Morning Worship, 10:45 a.m. *W*; Wednesday, 9:30 a.m. *W*; to be led by the Rev. Maynard Strothmamm, Ph.D., and Larry Blackman, senior in photography, will preach on the *Castles*.
College Life Lecture Series. 4:30 p.m.
Union Forum Room, Dr. J. Edwin Orr,
University of Oxford graduate in Philosophy.
Invited to Tour Nudist Camp
The invitation came, yesterday from John Fletcher of Joliette, Quebec, during a hearing before an overflow crowd on a bill to ban nudism in the state. He operates a camp at Milton.
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Friday, April 26, 1963 University Daily Kapsan
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 reported before publication.
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Wilson golf irons and one 17" RCA TV
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RENAULT AND VOLKSWAGEN OWNERS ATTENTION!Bucket seat terry cloth covers $6.88,new 36 month premium nylon tubeless tires now $15.00 exchange plus tax.Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center -929 Mass. 5-6
English made racing bicycle, Royal 3
Royal 1-1448 most new Call Cymbal
Ray, VF 2-1340
4-29
1959 Renault Dauphine. Excellent condition. Recent valve and ring job. Tires and body good. 30,000 original miles, one owner. $550.00. Phone VI 2-348. 4-29
1954 Chevy stationwagon — $175.00, 1953
Nash Ambassador — $200.00. Drive to
appreciate. Hot rod material — 1954
Studebaker Commander V-8, and 1956
Ford 292 engine. Benson's 1920 Harper,
end of E. 19th. Call VI 3-1626. 4-29
MOBILE HOME FOR SALE - 45'x8" 1958
Great Lakes Model - Two bedroom.
Inquire at Skyline Trailer Court, 631 East
23rd.
1955 Ford Customline V-8, radio, heater,
overdrive, 7 tires, new interior, recently
painted, new engine, 20 miles per gallon.
Excellent condition. $530.00. Call after
6 p.m. VI 3-1772 and ask for Carlos or
Julio. 4-30
New and used portables, standards and electronics. Royal, Olympia, Smith Corona, Portmanthwaite, Patterson, typing papers. Lawrence Typewriter, 735 Mass. Phone VI 3-3644. tf
"YPING PAPER BARGAINS: Pink typing paper 85c per ream. Yellow matting 100c per ream. Per pound. The Lawrence Outlook. 1005 Massachusetts. open all day Saturday. tf
Printed Biology Study Notes: 70 pages,
hensive outline and definitions; revised
for all classes. Formerly known as the
livery. Call VI 2-3701. Free dt
livery. $4.50.
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop Phone vt 3-282 Modern, self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 p.m. week days. tt
All kinds of house plants. Potted . . .
including philodendron to be used for
room dividers and in picture windows.
Phone VI 3-4207. 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
BUSINESS SERVICES
Tutor — Mrs. William Birner, former children's librarian and school teacher.
Tutor — Dr. John Burke, tutor children in speech, English, reading and history through May 29th. Call at 6:30 p.m. except Friday for evaluation appointment. Time and date to be arranged.
Transportation plus parking convenience ride a new motor scooter of your choice demonstrate and sell in your spare time. Blevin's Bike Shop, 7th and Michigan.
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center, 1218
Conn. Personal service—se sectionalized
acoustics, chamcleons, turtles,
guinea pigs, etc., plus complete list
pet supplies.
RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1287.
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
ware in the Kitchen. Ola Smith
8391; Mass. Call VI 3-5263.
LOST
A brown wallet, long style that is carried in coat pocket. Lost on campus last Monday. A reward is offered. Call VI 3-2839. 4-29
Pair of brown dark glasses in a maroon case. Lost Friday between Summerfield and Strong. Contact Kathie Lowman at VT 3-9123, Room 40, GSP. 4-29
Magenta silk sari with green pattern,
parking lot Reward. CALL VI 3-7630, 5-1
HELP WANTED
Delivery boy and part time kitchen help
Gene Durham, Campus Hideaway 4-30
MISCELLANEOUS
"Turn Toward Peace," or "Speak up for Peace," or "Work for Peace" or "Wait for War"-Free Bumper stickers-Write Jm Masters, 840%; Ky-No obligation.
4-30
Will care for children in my home. 2 years old and older. Convenient to KU. Fenced in yard, references. Phone VI 3-6763. 5-7
JOE'S BAKERY
Open 24 Hours Night Deliveries
412 W. 9th
2 bedroom ground floor apartment on East side. Large yard. Utilities paid. Secondly furnished. $65.00. One bedroom second floor apartment. $0.00. Call VI, 6294.
VI3-4720
FOR RENT
Very nice basement apartment for 2 men
and a fall semester. See at 1103.
11th Tern. **S-1**
TWO WOMEN SITTING AT TABLE
PRE-Med Seniors: For rent (or sale) 11¢
story older house; five rooms, heated
porch or garage, gargage
assessment, porch porch, redecorated,
painted, painted, and floors refinished. 9¢
per month, or $20.00 per week. Call Torel-
no VI: 5-2505.
CRESCEM HEIGHTS Apartments, 25th & Rosebud - Rear entrances, large utility balconies, sun decks, concrete off street streams, outdoor patio areas, 2 bdrmrs, 840 sq. ft living area, individual controlled heating, fully carpeted & draped, garbage disposals, air conditioning, discount for 1 year's lease. Manager 2436 Redbud Lane. Phone VI 2-3711.
Large 2 room nicely furnished apartment. Private entrance and bath—$35.00 per month. 2 bedroom nicely furnished extra large apartment with private entrance and bath—$80.00 per month. Nicely furnished 3 bedroom apartment, private entrance and bath only $25.00 per person per month. Nicely furnished 2 bedroom apartment with private entrance and bath—$75.00 per month. Extra large lovely furnished 2 bedroom apartment with private entrance and bath. 2 bedroom apartment with private entrance in our new home—$79.00 per month. Move above apartments available June 1st. All utilities paid. VI 3-0298 or VI 3-7830. 5-1
DeSoto, Kansas. New furnished duplex, 2
bedroom and 1 bedroom. Fenched back, 5-1/
8-1/2 deSoto, DeSoto.
Comfortable, quiet, 4 room apartment furnished for couple—living room, kitchen, dining room, bath and entrance, much storage space and conditioned. Call VI 3-5863. 5-1
4-30
Graduate or older undergraduate men. A few studio apartments available for June 1st. New kitchens, quiet, cool, ideal clean and inexpensive Private parking. It is located Best of neighbors. Call VI 3-8534 for appointment. 4-30
MARGARET'S CAFE
CLOSED
SUNDAY
You and Your Friends Will Enjoy Eating
HOME for Summer session- two bedrooms with study-within walking distance of any building on campus-VI 2-2278. 4-30
Serving the best home-made pies in Lawrence
VI 3-9663
at
5 room apartment on 25th Available
and couple only Phone VI
7819 evenings
Vacancy at Emery apartments. 1423 Ohio. Efficiency type of apartment for rent June 1st, $55 and $65 with water and gas. Call VI 3-8190 for further formation. 5-6
Will do neat and accurate typing in my home. Experienced in themes, theses, and term papers. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Adcock, VI 2-1795. tt
TYPING
Open 6:30 a.m.
to
7:00 p.m.
Attractive 3 room furnished second floor apartment with newly decorated rooms, nicely furnished and clean. Walking distance to KU. Carpool to KU. Paid except elevator City Call VI 2-2893.
Available now — select apartments within in easy walking distance of the Hill. Free parking, street parking, and recreation room available. Furnished or unfurnished. Two bedroom apts. from $75.00. Sleeping rooms available. Call VI 3-7940. Apts. 4-26
Furnished, modern, air-conditioned,
2 bedroom house — close to KU. Vacant
June 1 — shown by appointment. Call
VI 3-0698 4-29
Will type term papers and reports on Russia
Russia Russie Russe Russien 1511 W.21st, phone VI 3-6440
1104 W.23rd
"GOOD TYPING CREATES a favorable impression with instructors." For excellent typing of theses and term papers, call Miss Louise Pope, VI 3-1097. tt
Fast, accurate and work by experienced typist. References. Phone VI 3-6506.
Secretary and English major will do expert typing of papers. Mrs. Compton, secretary, will teach 6 p.m. at 1311 N.H.; after 6 p.m. Particular attention to problems of foreign students. ff
Good typist. Would like to do term papers, and theses. Mrs. Oxford. VI 2-0673.
Dissertations, theses, manuscripts and term papers typed on new electric type-keys. 35 special keys. Experience in education in offices. Mrs Suzanne Gilbert. VI 2-1546, ff
Theses, term papers, reports, typed quickly and accurately. Experienced typist, electric typewriter. Marlan Graham. 1619 Del. — VI 3-0483. tf
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
Efficient typst. Would like typing in her
home letters. Call anytime at V1-3651
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, reports, articles, letters, conference rates. Electric engineer, Mrs. McEldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568. fc
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses. Use electronic resources as electronic typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Pattii, VI 31-8397.
Experienced typist. Contact Mrs. Hayes
at VI 2-0057. 4-50
MILIKENES SOS — always first quality typing on LB M. Carbon ribbon machines also also tape transcriptions. Office hour 8 am, 12 pm.-10211 Maff phone VI 3-5920.
Prompt neat accurate work on wide carriage electric typewriter. Journalism-Business secretary experience. Charlotte Weber, VI 3-3495. tf
Experienced typist does term papers, research reports and manuscripts on electric typewriter. Special symbols and signs. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs. McCook at 2000 Rhode Island, Pho. V-174-785.
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast, accurate, neat work, reasonable rates. Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff, VI 2-1749. tt
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and papers, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1631 Miss. tf
WANTED
Two boys to play rhythm or lead and add from break-up of old band. Must have own instruments. Non-union. For auditions, call Dick, VI 3-0664 after call.
Persons who have been in community disasters, such as tornadoes, typhoons, earthquakes, etc. Please contact Binding, room 7. Strong anne-4 or KU ext. 644.
Graduate student's or staff member's wife to work in Women's Sportswear Shop. Phone VI 2-0562 for information between 9:30 and 6:00. 4-29
Used cars—highest prices paid. Call VI 3-
9811. 601 Vermont. **tf**
For best results, use the University Daily Kansan Classified Page Phone Ext. 376
Selling - Buying Need Help
THIS IS NOT AN ADVERTISEMENT FOR A FILLING STATION BUT FOR A SERVICE.
SERVICE SURROUNDS YOU AT EVERY TURN. THE FINEST PRODUCTS NOW AVAILABLE ON THE MARKET TO GIVE YOUR CAR THE TREATMENT IT DESERVES.
ART'S TEXACO
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9th and MISSISSIPPI VI 3-9897
Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Friday. April 26, 1963
Education Survey Rates KU, CU Tops
KU and the University of Colorado are tied for outstanding coeducational college in an 11-state mountain-plains area, according to a recent educational survey.
The survey, conducted by the Denver Post staff writer, Max Price, ranked KU and CU tops among 103 higher education institutions. The survey covered public and private colleges and universities in Kansas, Arizona, Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nebraska, New Mexico, Oklahoma South Dakota, Utah and Wyoming
THE PRESIDENTS of each institution in the survey were asked to evaluate the colleges and universities in the 11-state area. Nearly 50 per cent of them took part in the survey.
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe said he did not answer the survey.
"We are always pleased to find ourselves listed at the top," he said, but added he did not think the survey was scientific.
In business administration, KU trailed Denver University, while in economics, medicine and physics, KU was outranked by CU. KU tied with CU for second place in history.
OF THE SEVENTEN categorized in the survey, KU was first or second in 10 and mentioned in another. KU ranked first in journalism and tied with CU in four categories — outstanding university and outstanding chemistry, architecture and political science departments.
KU and Kansas State University in Manhattan were mentioned in the engineering category, but were knocked out of the top positions by the Colorado School of Mines, Okla-
Alpha Phi Omegas To Flood Kaw River
The Kaw River will be flooded with canoes tomorrow morning as the KU chapter of the Alpha Phi Omega national Boy Scout service fraternity sponsors its annual canoe race.
Craig McComb, Prairie Village sophomore and president of the KU chapter, said the competitors will meet at 7 a.m. in Topeka near the state Capitol building and then travel to the Kaw for the race.
The University of Kansas City, Kansas State University, Emporia State Teachers' College, Central Missouri State College are scheduled to participate in the event.
About 25 canoes are expected to make the 40-mile trip down the river to the Kansas turnippe bridge over the Kaw.
McComb said he expects the race to be over at 2 p.m. or 3 p.m. The participants will then have a hotdog roast on the river bank, south of the bridge.
Kansas State won the contest last year.
noma State, OU and the South Dakota School of Mines and Technology.
KU WAS NOT mentioned in the School of Education category in which Colorado State College was rated tops. Neither was KU listed in agriculture category in which Kansas State and Colorado State University tied.
For top women's college and men's college, Colorado Women's College was first and St. Benedict of Achison and Regis College tied for first.
'The Boy Friend To Tour Pacific
KU's production of "The Boy Friend" will tour the Western Pacific area May 17-July 17 under joint sponsorship of the USO and the Department of Defense.
The troupe of 17 student actors and musicians will give the musical comedy at U.S. military installations in Japan, Korea, Okinawa, Taiwan The Philippines, Guam and Hawaii
"The Boy Friend" company was one of 22 such groups chosen from more than 150 auditioning groups in the United States to tour during the 1962-63 season. Special committees of the American Educational Theater Association and the National Music Council screened the applicants for the USO, the private, non-profit organization that provides morale services to the Armed Forces here and overseas.
THIS IS THE second KU unit so honored. In 1960 the KU Theater production of "Brigadoon" played the Pacific area.
"The Boy Friend," a musical of the "roaring twenties," ran on campus, in Kansas City and in several other Kansas communities last year. Many of the original cast will make the four.
Students selected for the Pacific tour are:
Judith Byers, Knobel, Ark., graduate student; Mimi Frink, Lawrence freshman; Mary Lynn Speer, Merriam sophomore, Sharon Scoville, Kansas City senior; Karin Gold, Overland Park, sophomore.
MICKEY DENFIELD, Lawrence special student; Robert Mobler, Excelsior Springs, Mo., senior; Tom Winston, Dallas, Tex., junior; Keith Jochim, Birmingham, Mich., senior; Jacque Volkham, Bushton junior.
Gene Masoner, Lenexa freshman; Dan Kocher, Topeka senior; Hoite Caston, Independence senior; Gigi Gibson, Independence sophomore; Kent Riley, Columbus junior; Richard Pratt, Olathe sophomore; William Kuhkl, instructor in speech and drama.
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
(Continued from page 1) nity funds are invested in the library.
Cities Require-
He said $4 million should be invested in the library for it to perform its purpose.
"WERE GOING to ask private enterprise to start another library to make up for this $2 million," Thompson said.
"The 'West Side Story' isn't true only in New York," he said. "It's certainly true in many central cities today, even in Oakland and most West Coast cities."
Thompson said an urgent need is for cities to competitively attempt to attract industries.
(UP UNTIL THIS week, Thompson had been a leading prospect for the city manager opening in Kansas City, Mo. It was reported this week, however, that Thompson would remain at Oakland.)
(In an interview with the Kansan
Two Named To Regents
TOPEKA — (UPI) — Gov. John Anderson today named two board of regents members, filling two longstanding vacancies in state offices.
The two new regents are Arthur H. Cromb, Prairie Village, and Larry Morgan, Goodland. Cromb is president of an industrial manufacturing firm.
He was graduated with honors and as president of the class of 1930 at KU. He received his masters' degree from the Harvard school of business in 1932.
He is a past president and member of the board of directors of the Kansas University Alumni Association, as well as a trustee of the Kansas University Endowment Association.
Morgan, farmer and rancher in Sherman county, is a former member of the board of regents. He is immediate past president of the Kansas State Alumni Association and a 1932 Kansas State graduate.
Take a Vacation from WASH DAY DRUDGERY
GRAVITT'S FAST LAUNDRY SERVICE
You save time and trouble at Gravitt's. Drop off your laundry and pick it up later washed, fluff dried, and neatly folded.
913 N.H.
VI 3-6844
COMMITTEE APPLICATION FORMS AVAILABLE ALUMNI OFFICE,127 STRONG
SENIOR CLASS of'64
Please fill out and return forms to the alumni office by
TUESDAY,MAY 30th
yesterday afternoon at the City Managers School being held in the Kansas Union, Illus W. Davis, mayor of Kansas City, said a decision on the city manager opening might be made today.)
The 16th annual City Managers Conference ends today with a luncheon. Frederick Guild, director of the Kansas Legislative Research Council in Topeka and former chairman of the KU department of political science, will speak at the luncheon on "What Is the Public Good?"
WAYNE THOMPSON, presidem of the International City Managers Association (ICMA), and Robert L. Brown, assistant director of the ICMA, led a discussion of the "Expanded Program" of the ICMA in a morning session today.
At another session this morning at the conference, Edwin O. Stene, professor of political science and director of the city management training program at KU, directed a discussion on a case study.
In an afternoon session yesterday, Stephen K. Bailey, dean of the Maxwell Graduate School of Citizenship and Public Affairs at Syracuse (N.Y.) University, contended that there is no need for a code of ethics in city government.
The theme of the City Managers Conference is "Ethics and Leadership."
A Tax on Them!
LONDON —(UPI)— Capt. Henry Kerby, Conservative Party member of Parliament, has demanded that organizers of call-girl rings pay taxes.
JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass.
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Dailu hansan
Monday, April 29, 1963
Ivan and the other boy, both with their hands together in a gesture of gratitude or thanks. They are standing in front of a large window, which is covered by a white curtain. The sky is overcast, suggesting a cool or windy day.
About 250 girls gathered at the Sigma Chi fraternity house Saturday to squirm,wiggle,and run through the events of the Sigma Chi Derby Day.
MILKING RELAY-LeAne Burnett, Prairie Village junior, gets her cup filled with water at the Sigma Chi Derby Day by Carol Evertz, Kirkwood, Mo., sophomore. The girls represented Kappa Kappa Gamma in the relays.
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
Tri-Delts First In Damp 'Derby'
More than 600 persons braved a light mist to watch Delta Delta Delta sorority capture first place in the Derby, which is loosely defined as a track and field carnival for women participants.
GIRLS FROM 16 living groups locked horns in such events as the fishpole race, egg throw, milking relay, sleeping bag relay, dust bowl, egg swat and musical footballs.
The highlight of the day was the crowning of Cathy Bergstrom, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, representing Pi Beta Phi as Miss Derby Day. Her attendants were Debbie Galbraith, Wichita sophomore, representing Delta Delta Delta and Cathy Speer, Wichita freshman, representing Corbin Hall.
Delta Delta Delta won only one first place—the sleeping bag relay—but they picked up five second places for 42 points. Kappa Alpha Theta, which won first place last year, was second with 26 points. Gertrude Sellars Pearson Hall was third with 24 points.
The Miss Derby Day contestants wore black blouses and white shorts and were judged on the basis of poise and beauty.
AMONG THE FAVORITE events were the mystery event and the sleeping bag relay.
The Derby began with the lighting of the Infernal Smudgepot, which bears no resemblance to the urn that is lighted at the Olympic Games.
The mystery event was a modified limbo, a favorite event in past Derby Days. Instead of
Abbey
walking underneath a pole, the girls scooted under it on their backs. As the pole was lowered to about six inches from the ground, definite obstacles arose.
Cathy Bergstrom
The sleeping bag relay, a new event this year, required four girls and five pairs of shorts. The girls were required to run to the end of the Sigma Chi tennis court, hop into the sleeping bag, change into a pair of shorts which they found there, leave their own shorts and run back and tag the next member of their relay team.
Most of the contestants wore shorts with bathing suits beneath However, the Pi Beta Phi team wore decorated men shorts with blue jeans beneath.
ANOTHER CONTEST was the rough and tumble "musical football" similar to old-fashioned musical chairs played with more girls (Continued on page 8)
60th Year. No.130
OAS Moves to Stop Haiti-Dominican Rift
BULLETIN
SANTO DOMINGO, Dominican Republic—(UPI)—Venezuela today offered the Dominican Republic armed support in its apparently imminent showdown with Haiti over long-standing political problems.
OAS Council Chairman Gonzalo Facio met this morning with envoys from the United States, El Salvador, Ecuador, Chile, and Columbia to discuss the mission. A spokesman said later, however, that no regularly-scheduled airline space could be obtained for the mission.
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The Organization of American States (OAS) moved today to head off possible armed conflict between Haiti and the Dominican Republic. But a special mission to Haiti was delayed, apparently by a transportation problem.
A state department spokesman said the United States would provide a plane if asked. There was no immediate request.
A foreign office spokesman said Venezuela's President Romulo Betancourt personally assured President Juan Bosch by phone today that his country would furnish the Dominican Republic any air and naval support it might need.
The OAS was working against a Dominican ultimatum giving Haiti
THE UNITED STATES was not expected to be a member of the mission because of troubles this country has had with the Haiti regime of François Duvalier.
24 hours to halt what it called "aggressive" policies toward Dominican envoys in Haiti. The threat of Dominican military action was raised if Haiti refused.
Reports from Port-Au-Prince said the city was quiet, if tense, however. U.S. sources also said they believed the Haitian and Dominican governments would accept the good offices of the OAS to patch up their differences.
The OAS was working against a Dominican ultimatum giving the regime of President François Duvalier 24 hours to halt what it called "aggressive" policies toward Dominican envoys in Haiti. It raised a threat of military action if Haiti refused.
The U.S. Navy was reported alert to the possibility it might have to remove about 1,000 U.S. citizens from the island although the plan was not put into effect immediately. Navy authorities said there was ample power in the Caribbean to protect U.S. citizens.
OAS COUNCIL Chairman Gonzalo Facio met with envvoys from the United States, El Salvador, Ecuador, Chile and Colombia to set a departure time for the mission. It was expected to leave this afternoon.
U. S. sources said the Haitian and the Dominican governments had indicated they would accept the good offices of the OAS to patch up their differences.
THE OAS COUNCIL met in a special session last night to hear the Dominican charges that Haitian authorities had harassed Dominican diplomats and broken into the Dominican consulate in Port-Au-Prince.
***
Dominicans Under 'State of Alert'
By United Press International
The Dominican Republic cancelled troop leaves under a state of alert today and threatened to send gunboats to the Haitian capital of Port-Au-Prince in a bitter rift that stirred fears of armed conflict between the two neighboring Caribbean nations.
The Dominicans charged that Haitian troops seized their embassy in Port-Au-Prince and captured opposition Haitian personalities who had taken asylum there.
Haiti declared it would defend itself by "all available means."
THE DOMINICANS charged that Haiti had developed secret ties with communist Poland and Czechoslovakia that were "furthering communist infiltration in the Caribbean area." Haiti countered by charging the Dominican government was trying to wage a "megalomaniacal" democratic crusade.
Anti-American feeling in Haiti was reported to have grown in recent weeks following U.S. action in cutting off economic aid to the dictatorial regime of President François Duvalier.
The new flareup was the latest in a long series of disputes between the two nations who share the island of Hispaniola. It added to political tension that has been mounting steadily in Port-Au-Prince and stemmed from international dissension over Duvalier's determination to remain in power.
Boston Paper Tells Youths' Story Of Air Raid on Cuban Refinery
✳ ✳ ✳
Customs Checks Possible Violations
WASHINGTON — (UPI) The Customs Bureau is investigating reports of a one-plane bombing raid on Havana to determine whether the attack violated the Neutrality or Munitions Control Acts, a spokesman said today.
A Federal Aviation Agency (FAA) spokesman said in New York meantime that a twin-engine Beechcraft which may have been used in the raid has been seized, pending an investigation.
The customs spokesman said agents were investigating the story of Alexander Rorke, a free-lance reporter and photographer, who said he took part in the raid.
The spokesman also said he expected investigators to look into a newspaper story (Boston Traveler) quoting a 21-year-old Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) student and a pilot who said they also went on the raid.
Weather
Clear to partly cloudy skies in Northeast Kansas are forecast to continue through tomorrow, but drier air narrowed chances of moisture for large areas of the state missed by weekend rains.
Top readings today were predicted to range in the 60s with some 70-degree readings in the Southeast. Lows tonight are anticipated to range from the 39s in the Northwest to the upper 40s in the Southeast.
BOSTON — (UPI) — The Boston Traveler told today the story of a Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) student and a daredevil pilot who admitted their part in last Thursday's bombing raid on a Cuban refinery near Havana.
In a copyrighted story, the 21- year-old student called it an "almost terrifying experience" but said he would be willing to do it again.
"I leaned back in my seat and prayed after we dropped the bombs and our plane zoomed out less than 100 feet above the ground," the crew-cut third-year student was quoted as saying. "I felt sick at my stomach and I was wringing with sweat."
THE BOMBS did not explode but the Cuban government said it was holding the United States responsible and would protest to the United Nations.
The student and the pilot, both Americans requested that they not be identified for fear of reprisal from the U.S. government, the Traveler said in the story by John Raymond. The student also said MIT officials might enforce academic discipline.
They were accompanied on the raid by Alexander I. Rorke Jr., head of a group called "The U.S. Freedom Fighters," and an unidentified Cuban exile leader from Miami. Miami sources told the Traveler the Cuban, who was the bombardier, was a member of the militant exile group known as the Christian Democrats.
The student said the twin-engine plane swept over Havana at tree-
HE SAID "We had trouble with the fuses. We tried to work out a concussion type cap for the big bomb, but didn't have any luck. A timed detonator didn't work either; we ended up using regular fuses."
top level and headed toward the Esso-Shell refinery. Their beacon was a 100-foot tower that spouts flame 24-hours a day.
"My right wing nearly tipped the tower as we came in on our first run," the pilot said. "I wish we'd gotten a bomb down that thing.
"I WASN'T SCARED particularly; I was too busy flying the plane to worry. After the first pass, when we dropped the 100-pounder and one napalm, I made a 180 degree tight turn, so tight I kept the refinery under my wing tip at all times.
"We made a second pass and then Rorke yelled, 'let's get the hell out of here!!' I yelled back, 'that's exactly what we're doing.'
"When we hit the coast and were over the water again I dropped back down 50 feet and flew by altimeter at that height nearly all the way back to our base. We had to keep low to duck radar."
They said there was no interference from the ground and they saw none of Fidel Castro's planes.
JUST BEFORE they passed over Havana, they said, a search light flashed once across the sky, but they did not see it again.
The student said he went along on the flight for the excitement but "I've always been in sympathy with the Cuban exiles."
He met Rorke a month ago after hearing him on a radio interview.
"I told him I was familiar with explosives and would like to help in some way if I could," the student said.
"I think the United States is selling out Cuba. I don't want to criticize the White House or the Pentagon, but I disagree with them."
The student said he missed two days of classes.
Page 2
University Daily: Kansan
Monday, April 29, 1963
Investment Opportunity
Kansans have a reputation for being politically conservative, and this conservatism extends to financial matters as well. When the Wichita University issue was being debated, those who opposed WU's entrance into the state system gave voice to a common cry—Kansas is not a wealthy state and therefore cannot afford three major state-supported universities.
Whether these Kansans actually could not afford WU or just did not want to afford it is a many-pronged question. But just for the sake of argument, grant that Kansas does not have the wealth it needs to support three major universities.
WHY DOES Kansas lack this wealth? Answering this question is much simpler than devising a foolproof plan to correct the situation. Kansas does not have enough industry.
How can Kansas get more industry? This, too is a complex question. But at least a few of the partial answers relate to state-supported higher education.
In a recent speech to the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce, Chancellor Wescoe said that in the University, Lawrence has the key to unlock the potential of research-based industry like that found in other university towns across the country.
Other ingredients are already here. The transportation hub of the Midwest is only a few miles away. Labor is abundant, and because of lower living costs, wages are not as high as those on the coasts. The climate, although we all complain about it occasionally, is far from disagreeable.
WHAT IS missing? The key word in research-based industry is research. There is a university here, and it does some fine research. But in this respect it does not compare with the University of Michigan or the University of California at Berkeley. These universities help draw research-based industry to Michigan and California.
This is the industry that carries a large share of the state tax load, brings wealth to the state,
and brings federally sponsored and industrysponsored research to the universities. This is the industry that pays its own way and then some. This is the industry that helps make average universities great and great universities greater. This is the industry that could be and should be in Lawrence.
What was farm land a few years ago is now the site of a giant Western Electric plant at Lees Summit, Mo., on the other side of Kansas City. Why is this plant in Lees Summit instead of Lawrence? Of course, the reasons are many. But if the KU electrical engineering department were renowned for its research, this could have been an important, and perhaps even decisive, factor in Western Electric's choice of a location for its plant.
THIS IS just one example of what KU could do for the state of Kansas. The wealth that Kansans want is in industry like this. It will not come by accident—it will come because some Kansans got tired of talking and decided to do something.
There are many ways to fight for this industry. Tax holidays, free building sites and low-cost utilities are three. And building a strong university is another.
A reputation for research is built on the faculty and research facilities—neither of which are purchased by good intentions. A university that pays its faculty members salaries 20 per cent below the national average can hardly expect to attract very many top people, let alone keep the ones it already has. And neither can a university with inadequate research facilities. KU is such a university.
IT TAKES money to buy what KU needs—a lot of money—money that must come from the Kansas Legislature. This money would not be a gift. It would be a sound investment—an investment not just in the education of Kansans but also in the economy of the state. Even the most tight-fisted Kansan should not complain about an economically sound investment.
— Dennis Branstiter
Editor
American Sincerity
... Letters ...
As a student from another country I couldn't help feeling so disgusted after reading Miss Salva Haddad's comments on her stay at KU, which appeared in the April 22nd issue of the University Daily Kansas. She said "she will miss the casual, friendly and informal life of KU but won't miss American insincerity." Giving her the benefit of the doubt I wonder if she meant she won't miss the so-called
"American insincerity" because she will find it anywhere or worse if she meant it exactly as the words imply. If the latter is true, even without her permission, I apologize for her, I, for sure, know that we women often tend to confuse anybody much worse ourselves. Right, Americans are too considerate, too nice to be true but that does not mean that they are insincere. It will probably be better if she said American tactfulness instead of the rather misunderstood word,
"Oh, Boy—We're In The Clear!"
STEEL IMPORTS
STEEL SUBSTITUTES
insincerity. If we have limited vocabulary and we don't know the right words to say, better not say anything. . . it is too unfair and dangerous, fellow student. Right? After all, as she implied we are supposed to be learning not only academically but socially as well.
STEEL IMPORTS
STEEL SUBSTITUTES
STEEL PRICE RISES
HERBLOCK
THE WASHINGTON POST
For almost two years now I've been living with people in KU, Lawrence, Kansas, U.S.A. I do not claim I am satisfied with everything. I've made a lot of friends as well as enemies. I've met people from all walks of life. I've been in almost any kind of situation. As of now, in spite of the very limited chance I had in knowing people, I can give a general impression that Americans are no different from people of my country, . . . from people of any other countries in the world. Basically we are all alike. We seek personal satisfaction by generally the same path. We feel pains because of the same reasons. We fight for the same cause. Nowadays can anybody say "I know you are an American you must be X adjective; you are an Asian you must be Y adjective; you are a European you must be Z adjective?"
The only fundamental difference I can clearly see is in the outside physical appearance. Perhaps, some day I can see more than just that. Or will there be a day?
Graduate student from the Philippines
Short Ones
Josefina A. Tecson
The place where optimism most flourishes is the lunatic asylum.
—Havelock Ellis
* *
Nothing so needs reforming as other people's habits.-Mark Twain
* *
What we call "morals" is simply blind obedience to words of command. —Havelock Ellis
Sound and Fury
Scholarship Halls Mismanaged
(Editor's note: This is a copy of a letter sent to the office of the dean of women.)
At Sellards Hall we have just received assessments of $25,00 apiece to cover the "operational deficit" of the hall. I understand that the same thing has taken place at the other scholarship halls. Now, this is all very well. The expenses of the hall must be paid, and we have contracted to pay for any deficits that occur. Yet, it seems to me that the regularity with which this sort of thing occurs points up a grave deficiency in the authority that runs the scholarship halls. This deficiency may be analyzed as either dishonesty or apathetic stupidity, and either way we don't stand to come out in very good shape. It is bad enough to be brought to the suspicion that the venerable personages in authority for the scholarship halls are so stupid as to hide their heads in the sand, ignoring rising costs and leaving the operating budget for these halls at a level that might have sufficed heaven-only-knows-how-many years ago. But, it is much worse to come to suspect that these same worthies have failed to raise the budget on purpose with the intent of deceiving the girls who live in these halls. Is it possible that an attempt is being made to camouflage the real expenses of living in a scholarship hall so as to create the appearance of granting larger scholarships than these really are?
FINALLY, I think this episode points up one thing clearly for the benefit of the general citizenry of this country. Deficit financing, no matter by what size bureaucracy it is done, eventually catches up with the citizen. It is he, the individual member of this glorious mass society, who must pay for the "good of the whole." What will happen to the individual citizens of the nation when the government calls for the payment of its "operational deficit?" Hide your heads in the sand as you will, reality is still there, and it is going to get you yet.
Now, I am not ungrateful for my own scholarship hall grant. It has been a thing of great value to me, and it has made the furtherance of my education much more possible than it would otherwise have been. But justice is justice, and honesty is honesty; and I must defend both or lack them myself. I realize that this same thing has been going on for years, and others accept the situation. But this makes it all the more necessary for me to rise and defend what no one else has spoken for. I cannot hide behind the deficiencies of the past. I also completely realize that my protest will be little more than a gasp in the silence; and little will be changed at any rate. But "one must fight, if only to have fought."
EVEN ASSUMING that this situation is due only to oversight, I feel I have grounds for complaint. At this point in the semester, funds begin to get rather low, especially for the girls who live in scholarship halls. Would it not be much more logical and much more fair to distribute the costs—all the costs—throughout the semester, rather than to hit us with a large lump expense at a time when it is much harder for us to find the funds to pay it?
Leanna Koehn
Dodge City sophomore
BOOK REVIEWS
THE VOODOO MAD (Signet, 50 cents).—Fans of Mad magazine—and others—will have a ball with this collection. We see the familiar big-eared Mad symbol on the cover, with pins stuck in him labeled TV, Hollywood, Republicans, Democrats, John Birch Society and Madison Ave. That is the subject matter. Mad lampoons anyone and everyone, and Nixon, Conrad Hilton, Perry Mason, Hoffa, Von Braun, Rickover are among the victims.
* *
MARRIAGE AND MORALS, by Bertrand Russell (Bantam Classics, 60 cents)—a work that dates to the 1920s and one that has helped to make Russell a respected and also reviled name. Russell proposes a rational approach to sex and love, one based on the realities of need and desire rather than on ancient tribal and religious taboos. He treats free love and trial marriage, and his ideas have brought him under considerable attack.
Daily Hansan
111 Flint Hall University of Kansas student newspaper
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912
Telephone Viking 3-2700
Extension 711, news room
Extension 736, 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.
Fred Zimmerman ... Managing Editor
Dennis Branstiter ... Editorial Editor
Jack Cannon ... Business Manager
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
3.2 American Spirits Enliven I-Club Meeting
By Vinay Kothari
It was a different type of meeting last Saturday for International Club members.
The members, who were used to observing the club's panel discussions, music and dancing from other lands, speeches, or cultural shows of various countries at the club's regular meetings, were surprised to find beer at the club's meeting at the Castle Tea Room.
More than 200 persons attended the club's beer party.
Augelli Terms El Salvadorans' Visit a Success
"The El Salvadorans felt they learned a great deal about this sector of the American scene, and the KU students connected with the visit felt they learned much from the visitors," he said.
The visit of the El Salvadoran group to the KU campus last week benefited both the guests and the hosts, according to John P. Augelli, chairman of the KU Latin American Areas Studies program and coordinator of the visit.
"The entire program came off very well, and the visitors were very pleased with the reception they received from the KU students," Prof Augelli said.
THE 13 STUDENT leaders from the University of El Salvador visited the KU campus last week as part of a 30-day tour of the United States sponsored by the U.S. Department of State.
The tour is intended to offer the students a better idea of American life in general, and particularly college life in America.
The group left the campus Saturday morning on their way to DePauw University at Greencastle, Ind. After the visit there, the El Salvadorans will visit Miami, Fla., and Washington, D.C.
THE PARTY began at 8 p.m. with few in attendance. But as time passed, people started to come and beer started to disappear.
Some members, who never had drunk before, took advantage of the club's free beer.
As beer started disappearing, the party became lively.
A student from Europe began playing a guitar. With suggestions, a group of about 20 persons moved from the third floor to the second floor and played American music and sang folk songs.
IN A SHORT period of time, the whole house was flooded with music. Persons dozing in corners were awakened by the noise and they also joined the group to share the fun.
Some people found the beer a little bitter, but after a few drinks they forgot that the beer was bitter and stopped complaining.
The party lasted till midnight. At midnight the group dispersed.
Iowa Grows Brave Teenagers
Police arrested the two youths at the scene of an accident.
DES MOINES, Iowa — (UPI) — Credit two Des Moines teen-age boys with nerve.
They were prying a hub cap off a squad car while officers investigated the accident.
Portraits of Distinction
摄影
HIXON STUDIO
Young Demos to Hear Overland Park Mayor
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
The newly-elected mayor of Overland Park will speak at a Young Democrats meeting tomorrow at 7:30 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union.
Marvin Rainey, the 29-year-old mayor, will discuss the politics and problems of suburban areas at the meeting.
Rainey, who was formerly election commissioner of Johnson County, is the first officially endorsed Democratic mayor in Kansas. Only two communities in the state, Overland Park and Prairie Village, have bipartisan municipal elections.
Orr to Present College Life Lecture
"Creation and Evolution" and "Science versus the Bible" are the topics of today's College Life lecture series, sponsored by the Campus Crusade for Christ.
J. Edwin Orr, Ph.D., DD., will present the first lecture at 4:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Orr, who earned his Ph. D. at Oxford University, has lectured on all six continents.
German Art is Topic Of Humanities Talk
A professor from Wayne State University will lecture tomorrow night at the Humanities Lecture on German expressionism, an art movement important at the time of World War I.
The lecture will be held in Fraser Theater at 8 p.m.
Fraternity Jewelry
Ernst Scheyer, professor of Art History will speak on "Albert Bloch: an American Blaue Reiter (Blue Rider)."
Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 29, 1963
University Daily Kansan
SPORTS KU Baseball Hopes Vanish
The Kansas Jayhawker baseball team, one of the pre-season favorites for the Big Eight crown, saw its burble burst over the weekend as the Oklahoma State Cowboys won two of a three game series.
The two clubs traded shutouts in Friday's seven innning doubleheader, but the real heartbreaker came Saturday afternoon. Battling cold temperatures, mist and a strong southwesterly wind, the Jayhawkers and the Cowboys were tied 3-3 after thirteen innings.
THE TOP OF the 14th inning was Hiroshima, Oklahoma State style, as the Cowboys exploded for seven runs, and then held the whawkers scoreless to win 10-3 to
have the deciding game of the series. The two losses to Oklahoma State practically eliminated the Jayhawkers from any title hopes. The Jayhawkers sported a 5-4 record going into the series, which meant if they could sweep the series their title hopes would be kept alive. KU now stands 6-6 and a first division berth is in jeopardy by the Cowboys who are close behind with a 5-7 record.
Rain caused the postponement of Saturday's remaining conference games which included Missouri at Kansas State, Colorado at Oklahoma and Iowa State at Nebraska.
Baseball Standings
IN OTHER LEAGUE games Friday,
Missouri ran its winning streak
Oklahoma ... 9 0
Missouri ... 10 1
Colorado ... 6 3
Kansas ... 6 6
Oklahoma State ... 5 7
Nebraska ... 4 7
Iowa State ... 2 9
Kansas State ... 1 10
to 10 games by defeating Kansas State 4-1 and 8-2. Nebraska and Iowa State split a doubleheader, the Cyclones winning the opener 3-0, and the Cornhuskers the second game 4-0.
Oklahoma, which leads the league with a 9-0 record, had its two Friday games against Colorado, 6-3 in league play, postponed also.
Saturday's game between the Jayhawkers and the Cowboys saw a pitching duel between Oklahoma State's Littleton Fowler, who relieved in the sixth, and KU's Carl Nelson, who replaced Roger Borck in the eighth inning. Despite pitching six innings on Friday, Nelson held the Cowboys scoreless until the 14th inning when Jerry Waldschmidt relieved with two men on base and one out.
Cricket Match Canceled
The KU Cricket Club's players' first game of the season against the Kansas City Cricket Club Saturday was postponed because of bad weather.
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Drake Relays Is Sad Affair
The Drake Relays was most unpleasant for the Kansas Jayhawkers and their fellow Big Eight members.
For the first time since 1946 and only the third time since 1916, the conference was shut out of the victory column. The closest the Big Eight and Kansas could come to a victory was in the shotput. Jay-hawker Yul Yost was edged out of a gold medal by Texas A&M's Danny Roberts on his next to last shot.
Yost, who had put 56-1 in the preliminaries, was leading until Roberts heaved 57-6 to win and send Yost to the runner up spot. Roberts victory gave him the Midland's Circuit crown. Roberts won the Texas Relays, but lost to Yost at the Kansas Relays.
The Jayhawker two-mile team which had been victorious at the Kansas Relays saw a consecutive victory streak of five broken by Oregon State, which won easily by 20 yards. The Jayhawkers could manage only fifth as Ohio, Nebraska and Missouri, whom KU outduelled at the Kansas Relays, finished ahead in that order.
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Sayers Leads Reds In Scrimmage Session
KU's All-Big Eight halfback Gale Sayers scored two touchdowns and was instrumental in setting up two more as the Red team composed of the first and second units defeated the White team 50-6, Saturday afternoon.
The two teams scrimmaged for three hours in Memorial Stadium despite light mist and chilly temperatures. The Jayhawker football team is in the midst of its spring practice session in preparation for the Varsity-Alumni game to be held May 18.
THE JAYHAWKER PASSING attack posed the number one problem following the scrimmage. Four quarterback candidates threw a total of 62 passes and completed only 25 Brian Palmer, the most experienced of the prospects, completed 7 of 16.
Sid Micke hit 8 of 17, Dave Crandall, a converted slot-back was unsuccessful in five attempts, and freshman Steve Renko hit 10 of 24. Coach Jack Mitchell singled out Micke as the top performer.
"Our receiving was just absolutely terrible," said Mitchell following the scrimmage. "That's probably the worst part of the situation."
The KU coach praised the morale and the enthusiasm of the squad. "We've got one of the most enthusiastic groups we've ever had. I didn't realize that before today."
VETERAN FULLBACK Ken Coleman was also a scoring standout as he scored twice, once on a two-yard plunge which capitalized a 75 yard drive and once on a 11-yard run, which followed a 54-yard pass interception-run by Sayers.
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Missouri Hands KU 9-6 Loss in Golf
The Missouri Tiger golf team dropped the KU Jayhawkers' season record to 5-4 with a 9-6 win at Lawrence Country Club Friday afternoon.
KU's other three golfers and their scores; Frank Kirk, 83, John Hanna, 82, and Reid Holbrook, 84. The Jayhawkers next action is at Topeka Thursday against Washburn.
Jayhawker Paul Carlson was medalist for the meet with a 73 on the par-72 course. Carlson defeated Rich Poe who shot 77, 3-0. Dick Haitbrink defeated Gary Stickfaden 2 1/2-1/2. Haitbrink shot an 83 while Stickfaden shot 84.
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Page 5
Harriman To Tell JFK Of His Laos Talks
LONDON — (UPI) — Undersecretary of State Averell Harriman flew to Washington today to report to President Kennedy on his Laos crisis talks with Soviet and British leaders.
Harriman, who arrived last night from Moscow, conferred with Prime Minister Harold Macmillan and Lord Privy Seal Edward Heath.
Diplomatic sources said they agreed to push a strong diplomatic initiative in Moscow and in Laos to save the neutrality and independence of the southeast Asian kingdom.
HEATH, ostensibly reflecting the mood of today's meeting with Harriman, said the present situation in Laos was not only dangerous to the countries already involved but also to Thailand.
The cease-fire was holding, he added, and this was a good opportunity for the International Control Commission (ICC) to visit the area.
Heath said Britain has been in touch also with the Red Chinese government but has not received an answer so far. He rejected the idea of reconvening the Geneva Conference.
One of the immediate plans is to get the International Control Commission (ICC), composed of India, Canada and Poland, to put inspection
teams into the Plain of Jars, the chief area of collision between the pro-communist Pathet Lao forces and the neutralist troops of Prince Souvanna Phouma, the premier of the coalition government.
HARRIMAN, who met with Premier Nikita Khrushchev in Moscow last week and with foreign Minister Andrei Gromyko, has received the Kremlin's acknowledgement "in principle" that joint Anglo-American-Soviet action is necessary to resolve the Laos crisis.
DENVER —(UPI) —When Arthur Valdez offered to plead guilty to petty larceny if Deputy Dist. Atty. Gilbert Alexander would drop charges of grand larceny, burglary and conspiracy against him. Alexander refused.
Macmillan endorsed this plan today and also backed the suggestion that the ambassadors of the three nations in Vientiane should keep close contact for on-the-spot Laos peace efforts.
Crime Doesn't Pay?
Valdez was charged with stealing $50 in pennies, nine cases of whiskey and 30 cartons of cigarettes from a Denver tavern.
Yesterday a jury took only 30 minutes to acquit Valdez of all charges.
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University Daily Kansan Monday, April 29,1963
Top KU Women Students Honored By AWS Tonight
The All Women's Day activities of the Associated Women Students will conclude today with the annual Honors Night and an art display.
Honors Night, which is designed to recognize outstanding women on campus, will begin at 7:30 p.m. at Hoch Auditorium.
THE HONORS NIGHT events will include the installation of the AWS Senate, the announcement of counselors for freshman residence halls, the new members of the AWS Fashion Board, Mortar Board, and Cwens.
The outstanding woman from each living group will be announced as will the American Association of University Women (AAUW) year's membership award to the outstanding senior woman as chosen at the Junior-Senior Brunch yesterday.
The candidates for the AAUW award are Susan Callender, Bonner
Regents Rename Lonborg Head Of Athletic Dept.
A. C. (Dutch) Lonborg, KU Athletic Director, was given a one-year extension in his duties by the Kansas Board of Regents Friday.
The decision was made by the Regents after the withdrawal of a proposal by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe to reorganize the KU Athletic Department.
Chancellor Wescoe's plan was presented in March and would have elevated Lonborg to the position of special representative to the Big Eight Conference. Head football coach Jack Mitchell would have assumed the duties of direction and coordination of athletics inside the University.
THE REGENTS' DECISION waived the normal mandatory retirement age for Lonborg at 65.
However, the Board of Regents did approve Chancellor Wescoe's proposal that Charles H. Oldfather, professor of law, be appointed the Chancellor's representative to the Athletic Board as well as chairman of the Board.
Springs; Gail Eberhardt, Wichita; Marilyn Mueller, Houston, Texas; Joanne Stover, Colby, and Janice Wise, Kansas City, Mo.
AN EXHIBIT of art work by KU women was put on display this afternoon in front of Hoch Auditorium. In case of rain, the exhibit is to be moved to the second floor of Strong Hall.
All Women's Day activities during the weekend included the Junior-Senior Brunch and a sophomore picnic—both held on Sunday.
Approximately 300 junior and senior women were entertained by a vocal solo from Bonnie Ward, Topeka junior, and a fashion show sponsored by the AWS Mademoiselle Fashion Board.
THE FASHIONS, which were furnished by the Jay Shoppe, included shorts, swim suits, shifts, sheaths, suits, and the perennial cut-offs, all for spring and summer.
Judy Gatton, Wichita sophomore, and Phyllis Schneider, Shawnee Mission freshman, were the fashion commentators.
The fashions were modeled by women chosen by each living group to participate in the Fashion Board's recent "Best Dressed Coed" contest.
THE GUESTS included: Emily Taylor, dean of women; Mrs. Kala Stroup, Mrs. Janet Coleman and Miss Karlene Howell—assistants to the dean of women. Male guests were W. Clarke Wescoe, L. C. Woodruff, Raymond Nichols, James Logan, Donald Alderson, Burton Marvin, James Surface, and George B. Smith.
The AWS sophomore picnic was held Sunday evening.
See Us Before You Buy TYPEWRITERS
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The AWS All Women's Day activities began last Wednesday with an exchange dinner among all the women's organized living groups. The foreign women students of People-to-People and the People-to-People Big Sisters were guests.
LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER
735 Mass.
A SYMPOSIUM on the Roles of Women in Modern Society was held Thursday as the second All Women's Day activity.
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The AWS All Women's Day steering committee included Miss Karlene Howell, adviser; Lesley Hagood, Prairie Village junior, chairman; Nancy Bena, Pittsburg junior; Mary Ann Cheatham, Tulsa freshman; Mary Kline, Wichita sophomore; Mary Morozzo, Council Grove sophomore; Rosemary Delich, Kansas City sophomore; Marjorie Hamlett, Wichita junior; Juanita Almquist, Overland Park junior, and April Knief, Mission sophomore.
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DALLAS—(UPI)—David C. Barrett got bored with the whole thing and walked away yesterday.
Meredith Wilson's THE MUSIC MAN
A five-man band led by a red-shirted guitar player became angry when Barrett walked away from their impromptu concert in a city park and beat him up.
Boss Forced to Hold Secretary VENTURA, Calif. — (UPI) — County Supervisor Fred Ireland had a problem yesterday most men would like.
He wrote a polite note to the board saying he thought his new office was fine. "But I don't have any furniture, so my secretary has to sit on our lap."
Boss Forced to Hold Secretary
The board got the hint and ordered the furniture.
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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 available. Not responsible for errors and superscripted life.
FOR RENT
Medical Students! Furnished apartment
June 1st *419* E20, K.C. Kansas, 5-3
5 furnished apartments 1 block from campus. Utilities paid. Laundry privileges, business service. Private entrance and bath, available now. 1142 Indiana, tf
2 bedroom ground floor apartment on East side. Large yard. Utilities paid. Secondly furnished. $65.00. One bedroom second floor apartment. $50.00. Call 3-6294.
Very nice basement apartment for 2 men
or fall semester. See at 1103.
19th Tert. S-1
DeSoto, Kansas. New furnished duplex, 2
years old. Back yard电话 16892—DeSoto, Kansas. 5-1
Large 2 room nicely furnished apartment. Private entrance and bath—$35.00 per month. 2 bedroom nicely furnished apartment. Private entrance and bath, fireplace and garage—$80.00 per month. Nicely furnished 3 bedroom apartment, private entrance and bath only $25.00 per person per month. Nicely furnished 2 bedroom apartment, private entrance and bath—$35.00 per month. Nicely furnished 3 rooms, private entrance and bath—$55.00 per month. Extra large lovely furnished 2 bedroom apartment with private entrance and bath, bedroom apartment with private entrance and bath—$79.50 per month. All above apartments available June 1st. All utilities paid. Call VI 3-0298 or VI 3-7830. 5-1
FRE-Med Seniors; For rent (or sale) 1½;
story older house; five rooms, heated
bedroom, kitchen, entertainment,
and front porch. Recently redecorated,
painted, and floors refinished. 9
blocks, or $20.00 per week. Rent $88.00
or $20.00 per week. CALL TOMO
TOWIE VI 5-2505. TIME 5-1
Comfortable, quiet, 4 room apartment—furnished for couple—living room, kitchen, laundry room, bathroom, bath entrance, much storage space and airconditioned. Call VI 3-5863. 5-1
CRECENT HEIGHTS Apartments, 25th & Rosebud: Rear entrances, large utility staircases, street parking, built in skylights & refrigerators, 2 bdrms, 840 sq. ft, living area, individual controlled heating, fully carpeted, draped garbage dispensers, location of equipment, rental rents. Discount for 1 year's lease. Manager, 2436 Redbud Lane. Phone VI 2-3711.
Furnished, modern, air-conditioned,
bedroom house — close to KU. Vacant
June 1 — shown by appointment. Cali
VI 3-0698. 4-25
Vacancy at Emery apartments. 1423
Ohio. Efficiency type of apartment for rent here lst. $55 and $65 with water and paper call. Can V-31-8190 for further formation. 5-6
HOME for Summer session—two bedrooms with study—within walking distance of any building on campus-VI 2-2278. 4-30
Graduate or older undergraduate mate.
A few studio apartments available for
June 1st. New kitchens, quiet, cool, ideal
for a study room or apartment.
Private parking, 1½ blocks from Union.
Best of neighbors. Call VI 3-8534 for
appointment.
4-30
5 room apartment on 25th Available
room, couple only. Phone VI
7819 evenings.
FOR SALE
Attractive 3 room furnished second floor apartment. Newly decorated rooms, nicely furnished and clean. Walking distance to KU. All rooms paid except electric. City VI C 2-2593.
STEREO SET. Garrard changer. Ronette cartridge. Portable model in leather, with companion speaker. Like new, must sacrificite! Call VI 2-1739. 5-2
1961 Volkswagen. Excellent condition.
Small down payment. See at 1244 La. 4-29
White floor length wedding dress, size
9-10. Call VI 2-0522. 4-29
1958 Ford retractable hardtop, black and
gray. Holdall 400. Cash Call. 6676
after 5 p.m. 3 p.m. 4-30
DEMONSTRATOR CLOSE O OUTS
Stereos - Phonos - Radio Radios $9.95
Portable Stereo now $19.95
Portable Stereo now $65.00 $49.95 Automatic phonograph now $25.00 $15.95 G.E. Portable now $25.00 $15.95 G.E. Portable now $50.00 $199.95 G.E. Stereo Multiple $95.00 $175.00 Deluxe Stereo Multiple $95.00 $175.00 Deluxe Stereo only $100.00 Ray Stoneboxs Coffee Table Stereo Mass. St. 5-7
Falcon and Comet owners! 600-13 brand new first line 100 Level (four full piles) from $24.99 to $45.99 or $24.99-$45.99 f
1959 Renault Dauphine. Excellent condition. Recent valve and ring job. Tires and body good. 30,000 original miles, one owner. $550,000. Phone VI-2-3945. 4-29
Gretch amplifier—twint '10' ovals and one '4'
Treble speaker—4 lacks and vibrato with complete controls—brand new-Ray Hischek-503 Templin-Call VI 2-1200.
8 formal cocktail dresses—sizes 10-12.
One white wool evening jacket, one set
Wilson golf irons and one 17" RCA TV
console. Call VI 3-8404. 4-30
RENAULT AND VOLKSWAGEN OWN-
cloth covers $8.88, new 36 month pre-
mium nylon tubeless tires now $15.00
backer's back! count Tire Center -929 Mass,
5-6
English made racing bicycle. Royal 3
Moonlight most new Call Cycling
Bay, VY 2-1340. 4-29
1954 Chevy station wagon $175.00. 1953
Chevrolet station wagon 00-08-01
appreciate. Hot rod material — 1954
Studebaker Commander V-8, and 1956
commander V-10. End of E. 19th. Call VI 3-162. 4-29
MOBILE HOME FOR SALE - 45'x8" 1958 Great Lakes Model - Two bedroom. Inquire at Skyline Trailer Court, 631 East 23rd.
1955 Ford Customline V-8, radio, heater,
overdrive, 7 tires, new interior, recently
painted, new engine, 20 miles per gallon.
Excellent condition. $530.00. Call after
6 p.m. VI 3-1772 and ask for Carlos or
Julio. 4-30
New and used portables, standards and
electrics. Royal, Olympia, Smith Corona,
Corona, Portable, Portable, typing papers. Lawrence Typewriter, 735
Mass. Phone VI T-3-3644.
"YPING PAPER BARGAINS: Pink typing paper 85c per ream. Yellow typing paper 100c per ream. Per pound. The Lawrence Outlook, 1005 Massachusetts, open all day Saturday. tf
Printed Biology Study Notes: 70 pages,
bensive outline and definitions; revised
for all classes. Formally known as the
biology book. Call VI 2-3701. Free deli-
very. $4.50.
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center - most complete shop nearest — Pet phone 91-5239 Modern, self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 pm 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
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
BUSINESS SERVICES
Tutor — Mrs. William Birner, former children's librarian and school teacher,
professor of English, tutor children in speech, English, reading and history through May 29th. Call at 6:30 p.m., except for evaluation appointment. Time and fee to be arranged.
Transportation plus parking convenience and an opportunity to earn extra money, ride a new motor scooter of your choice, demonstrate and sell in your spare time. Get our deal—Blevin's Bike Shop, 7th and Michigan. tf
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center, 1218 Conn. Personal service—sectionalized birds, campers, chameleons, turtles on bighorns, etc., plus complete line pet supplies. **tf**
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
warding to Lilly Hall. Ola Smith
939% Mass. Call Mt 3-5263.
RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267.
TYPING
Will type term papers and reports on
Russell. Russell 1511 w.21st, phone VI 3-6440. tfr
1511 w.21st, phone VI 3-6440. tfr
Will do neat and accurate typing in my home. Experienced in themes, theses, and term papers. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Adcock, VI 2-1795. tt
"GOOD TYPING CREATES a favorable impression with instructors." For excellent typing of theses and term papers, call Miss Louise Pope, VI 3-1097. tf
Fast, accurate and work by experienced typist. References. Phone VI 3-6506. tf
Secretary and English major will do expert typing of papers, Mrs. Compton, 1311 N.H. after 6 p.m. Particular attention to problems of foreign students. tf
Efficient typist. Would like typing in her
theses, letters. Call anytime at VI 3-2651
Theses, term papers, reports, typed quickly and accurately. Experienced typist; electric typewriter. Marian Graham. 1619 Del. — I 3-0483. tt
Dissertations, theses, manuscripts and term papers typed on new electric typewriter. Experience in keys. Experience in education and sciences. Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. VI 2-1546. ft
Good typist. Would like to do term papers and theses. Mrs. Oxford. II- 20673.
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, theses. Manage documents. Easilyetric typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patti. VI 3-8379. tt
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, books, articles and conferences. Electric typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney, 2521 Ala. 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. Mellis sand Jones, VI 3-5267. tt
Experienced typist. Contact Mrs. Hayes at VI 2-0057.
4-36
MILKILLENS SOS — always first quality typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines with tape transcriptions. Office hours 7 a.m. to 12 p.m. + 1021x3 Mast! Phone VI 3-5290.
Experienced typist does term papers
Experienced typewriter does term papers
electric typewriter. Special symbols and
signs. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs
Brady at 200 Rhode Island Island VI
3-7485.
Prompt neat accurate work on wide carriage electric typewriter. Journalism-Business secretary experience. Charlotte Weber, VI 3-3485. tf
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast accurate, neat work, reasonable rates Familier with legal terms. Marsha Goff VI 2-1749. tf
EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. tt
Delivery boy and part time kitchen help
Gene Durham, Campus Hideaway. 4-30
HELP WANTED
MISCELLANEOUS
"Turn Toward Peace," or "Speak up for
Peace," or "Work for Peace," or "Wait
for War"-Free Bumper stickers-Write
Jim Matsus, 840'2 Ky.-No obligation.
Will care for children in my home. 2 years old and older, Convenient to KU.
Fenced in yard, references. Phone VI 3-
6763. 5-7
WANTED
Graduate student's or staff member's wife to work in Women's Sportswear Shop. Phone VI 2-0562 for information between 9:30 and 6:00. 4-29
Jsed cars - highest prices paid. Call VI 3-811. 601 Vermont. tf
$25.00 REWARD for the return of notes in gray-green binder with label "Visual Return" to John Pain, psychology department, 1 Strong Hall. 5-3
A brown wallet, long style that is carried in coat pocket. Lost on campus last Monday. A reward is offered. Call VI 3-839. 4-29
Pair of brown dark glasses in a maroon case. Lost Friday between Summerfield and Strong, Contact Katie Lowman at VI 3-9123, Room 40, GSP. 4-29
Magneta silk scarf with green pattern,
parking lot. Reward. Call VI 3-7683 5-1
STRICK'S DRIVE IN
"Table service only"
6:00 a.m.-10:00 p.m. weekdays
8:00 a.m.-8:00 p.m. Sun.
732 N. 2nd (Highway 40-59 —
4 blocks N. of Kaw bridge)
NEW
APARTMENTS
$75.00
and
One or Two
Bedrooms
$85.00
We are presently decorating these units. Tenants renting now may select wall colors. .drapes. .etc.
All Units Are Air Conditioned, Carpeted and Have Disposals. Provincial Furniture Available. Swimming Pool Available.
Ph. VI2-3416 1912 W. 25th Day or Night
PARK PLAZA SOUTH
SOUTH
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified
OFFER GOOD THROUGH MAY 3,1963
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Monday, April 29, 1963
Tri-Delts—
(Continued from page 1)
than footballs. The female contestants clad in football padding and helmets, dived into the middle of the circle to battle for possession of the footballs. One by one the contestants were eliminated until only two were left to scramble for the remaining football.
Next to musical football in roughness was the egg swat. Girls with raw eggs attached to the seat of their pants gathered in the middle of the circle. At the sound of the starter's gun, each girl swatted each other with rolled up newspapers in an attempt to break the eggs.
The spectators sat and stood on the side of the hill behind the Sigma Chi house and cheered as the events proceeded.
Castro Receives Hero's Welcome In Russia
MOSCOW — (UPI)— Cuban Premier Fidel Castro, who received a revolutionary hero's welcome to Russia, conferred privately with Premier Nikita Khrushchev for two hours in the Kremlin today.
Castro also paid a courtesy call on President Leonid Brezhnev, the Soviet news agency Tass said.
Details of the Khrushchev-Castro conference were not disclosed.
This meeting and others during Castro's extended stay are expected to deal with a wide range of questions, including economic aid for Cuba, Soviet military presence on the Caribbean island and the problem of armed attacks against Castro's Communist regime.
THE TONE FOR CASTRO'S visit was set during yesterday's welcoming ceremonies at Vnukova airport and in Red Square. Veteran Western observers said the red carpet treatment was the best ever accorded a foreigner here.
The length of Castro's visit has not been announced, but it was expected to be at least several weeks.
While outwardly the visit of Cuba's leader seemed all sweetness and light, diplomatic observers detected a lack of spark which characterized his 1960 meetings with Khrushchev in New York.
SOME WESTERN OBSERVERS believed Castro's feelings still are ruffled over the Kremlin's decision to pull Soviet rockets out of Cuba last fall. Removal of the rockets was negotiated over Castro's head by the Soviet Union and the United States.
Only hours before Castro's arrival in Moscow the Russians announced the successful launching of the 16th unmanned satellite in their "cosmos" series designed to pave the way for future manned space flights.
There have been unconfirmed reports here of a possible manned space event during Castro's visit.
History Professor
To Address ROTC
Raymond G. O'Connor, associate professor of history, will speak to the ROTC cadets on "Force and Diplomacy" at 7 tonight in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Kansam Classified Ads Get Results!
JOE'S BAKERY Open 24 Hours Night Deliveries
412 W. 9th VI 3-4720
Official Bulletin
TODAY
College Life Lecture Series, 4:30 p.m.
Union Forum Room, Dr. J. Edwin Orr
University of Oxford graduate in Philoso-
bhy.
Quill Club, 8:00 p.m., Pan American Room, Union Island. Everyone welcome. Eagleness Inn
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
Catholic Masses, 7:00 a.m. 11:40 a.m.
sacrament Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford
River
College Life Lecture Series, 7:30 p.m.
Union Forum Room, Dr. J. Edwin Orr.
University of Oxford graduate in philosophy.
Two Senior Women To Present Recital
Joanne Randall, Aberdeen, S. D., senior, and Sharon Lea Scoville, Kansas City senior, will give a recital at 8 p.m. today in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Miss Randall, who is majoring in music education with a minor in voice, is active in various musical organizations. She has appeared in the productions of "Most Happy Fella," "Hello Kansas," and "Joan of Arc."
For her part of the program she will present songs by Mozart, Hue, Staub, Delibes and Peter Worlock.
Miss Scoville is a theatre-voice major. Her appearances include the musical productions of "The Consul.",
"Albert Herring," "Brigadoon",
"Hello Kansas," and "Most Happy Fella."
Miss Scoville will sing works by Saint-Saens, Brahms, and Morean. The program is open to the public.
The program is open to the public without charge.
Australian Geneticist To Lecture Today
A University lecture on "Canalization of Genetic Variation" will be given at 4 p.m. today in Bailey Auditorium by A. S. Fraser, an Austrian geneticist.
Canalization, used in connection with genetic variation, is a new concept, not yet well established.
Fraser, who has recently accepted a professorship in genetics at the University of California, Davis, California, has been doing research for the Commonwealth Industrial and Scientific Research Organization in Canberra, Australia.
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Badminton ... $4
Golf ... $5
SENTREND Man Strikes Judge
GREAT BEND — (UPI) — Bill
Daniels, 32, got into a scuffle at a
cafe Monday. When officers arrived
to break it up, he hit one in the
face.
Yesterday, Judge Roy Butler sentenced him to four months in city jail and fined him $75. Daniels responded by hitting the judge in the face.
The jurist calmly added another six months to the sentence.
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
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
D&G
AUTO SERVICE
VI 2-0753
½ blk. E. 12th & Haskell
On Campus with Max Shulman
(Author of "I Was a Teen-age Dwarf", "The Many
Loves of Dobie Gillis", etc.)
HOW TO SEE EUROPE FOR ONLY $300 A DAY: NO. 1
Summer vacation is just around the corner, and naturally all of you are going to Europe. Perhaps I can offer a handy tip or two. (I must confess that I myself have never been to Europe, but I do have a French poole and a German shepherd, so I am not entirely unqualified.)
First let me say that no trip to Europe is complete without a visit to England, Scotland, Wales, Ireland, France, Germany, Spain, Portugal, Italy, Lichtenstein, Holland, Belgium, Luxembourg, Switzerland, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Finland, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia, Russia, Greece, Yugoslavia, Albania, Crete, Sardinia, Sicily, Hungary, Rumania, Bulgaria, Lapland, and Andorra.
Let us take up these countries in order. First, England.
OWLBOY
Another "must" while in London is a visit to the palace of the Duke of Marlborough. Marlborough is spelled Marlborough, but pronounced Marlboro. English spelling is very quaint, but terribly disorganized. The late George Bernard Shaw, author of Little Women, fought all his life to simplify English spelling. They tell a story about Shaw once asking a friend, "What does g-h-o-t-i spell?"
The old ones are thrown away
The capital of England is London-or Liverpool, as it is sometimes called. There are many interesting things to see in London-chiefly the changing of the guards. The guards are changed daily. The old ones are thrown away.
The friend pondered a bit and replied, "Goatee."
Shaw sniggered. "Pshaw," said Shaw. "G-h-o-t-i does not spell goatze. It spells fish."
"How is that?" said the friend.
Shaw answered, "Gh as in enough, o as in women, ti as in motion. Put them all together, you get fish."
This was very clever of Shaw when you consider that he was a vegetarian. And a good thing he was. As Disraeli once remarked to Guy Fawkes, "If Shaw were not a vegetarian, no lamb chop in London would be safe."
But I digress. We were speaking of the palace of the Duke of Marlborough—or Marlboro, as it is called in the United States. It is called Marlboro by every smoker who enjoys a fine, rich breed of tobacco, who appreciates a pure white filter, who likes a soft pack that is really soft, a Flip-Top box that really flips. Be sure you are well supplied with Marlboros when you make your trip abroad. After a long, tiring day of sightseeing there is nothing so welcome as a good flavorful Marlboro and a foot-bath with hot Epson salts.
Epsom salts can be obtained in England at Epsom Downs, Kensington salts can be obtained at Kensington Gardens, Albert salts can be obtained at Albert Hall, Hyde salts can be obtained at Hyde Park, and the crown jewels can be obtained at the Tower of London.
The guards at the Tower of London are called Beefeaters because they are always beefing about what they get to eat. This is also known as "cricket" or "petrol."
Well, I guess that about covers England. In next week's column we will visit the Land of the Midnight Sun—France.
- * *
M
Wherever you may roam in Europe and in all fifty states of the Union, you'll find Marlboro ever-present and ever-pleasant—filter, flavor, pack or box.
A
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Key Rexall Drugs
Western Auto
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Little Banquet
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ok
Undergraduate Research Expands at KU
By Margaret Hughes
By Margaret Hughes A learned man once said that education and research are the two purposes of a university.
American universities have plenty of education; but research, at least on an undergraduate level, is often overlooked.
At the University of Kansas, undergraduate research is encouraged and supported under a program of grants-in-aid and individual supervision.
HERE IS HOW the program works; through the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences office, outstanding students with specialized interests receive funds for a year or a semester of research. Described by the National Science Foundation as a "semi-professional junior colleague, not an hourly laborer," the student works closely with a professor, assisting him on a research project.
Dr. Frederick E. Samson, coordinator of the research program in science and head of the physiology and comparative biochemistry department, says, "There is really no administration — we just bring the student and the professor together and pass out the chews."
THE PROGRAM presently is supported by the Carnegie Foundation, the National Science Foundation, the Kansas Heart Association, and the University Research Fund.
This year there are about 65 KU undergraduates with research grants. There will be 80 students next year.
Students' subjects range from predatory mites to banking in the early West, to learning and perception. Although much of the research is done in KU laboratories and libraries, several researchers will travel this summer.
UNDERGRADUATES in the science fields are directed by Dr. Samson and they hold monthly meetings to report on their research, exchange ideas, and read scientific literature. These meetings are valuable, Dr. Samson believes, as a means of communication and practice grounds for formal presentations of research papers. "Our researchers have become expert in the procedure of presenting papers."
Students doing research in the humanities and social sciences held similar meetings last year with Dr. Richard DeGeorge, associate professor of philosophy. Since Dr. DeGeorge is on leave this year, there has been no co-ordination of these students. "But we hope to resume the meetings next year," said Dr. Francis H. Heller, associate dean of the College. "They are a most effective part of the program."
Dr. Samson feels the ten-week summer session is the most fruitful phase of the program. Working at least 40 hours a week without classes gives the student a chance to become completely absorbed in his work, he said.
A TYPICAL STUDENT reaction to the research program came from John Atkinson, Topeka sophomore. Atkinson has been assisting Dr. Richard Johnson, assistant professor of zoology, for over a year. Their
project is a study of the breeding biology of purple martins.
"The program has stimulated my interest in science and research, said Atkinson, who plans a medical career. He added that the grant has helped him finance his college education.
Other students find the program a valuable preview of graduate school. Most of them are highly enthusiastic about their research.
There are several extra incentives besides the annual stipend for the student researchers. Each fall the Kansas Heart Association, one of the supporters of the research program, holds a contest for the best research paper. Gary Copeland, Martin City, Mo., junior, Steve Patterson, Shawnee Mission senior, and Hugh Dick, Zurich senior, won the top prizes last fall.
EVERY SPRING a student-faculty committee publishes "Search," a booklet containing outstanding research materials compiled by undergraduates. The third issue of "Search" will be published early
next month, according to Dr. Delbert M. Shankel, associate professor of bacteriology and faculty adviser. The 73-page booklet will contain nine articles and three abstracts.
"SEARCH" IS also a "public relations" device, used by the university to publicize the work of the undergraduate research program, according to Dr. Samson.
The history of the formal program is rather short. Dr. Samson said, "In a sense, undergraduate research is a very old thing. Formerly, however, was unorganized and unfinanced."
In 1956 the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences received its first grant from the Carnegie Foundation. Twenty students participated in the first program.
The Carnegie grant will expire this year, but support will be continued through funds from the University Research budget and the College office. The program is gradually expanding, limited only by the number of students who are able to assist faculty researchers.
Daily hansan
60th Year, No. 131
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
Tuesday, April 30, 1963
Douthart, Sellards Face Higher Costs
The Women's Scholarship Hall Committee has decided to raise the house bills of Douthart and Sellards women's scholarship halls from $35 to $40 a month next year.
Miss Emily Taylor, dean of women and chairman of the committee, said the increase would bring the payment more in line with actual operating expenses.
The decision was made last week, she said.
Bloch Art Exhibit Will Open Tonight
In Munich he became part of the Blaue Reiter movement, organized by Franz Marc and Wassily Kandinsky and later joined by Paul Klee. His style developed in relation to that movement.
Bloch, who retired as KU professor of drawing and painting and head of the department of drawing and painting in 1955, spent 12 years in Munich until 1921. He then returned to the United States, his birthplace, and taught at the Chicago Art Institute from 1922-1923.
His work has been described as independent and honest.
Because the Humanities Lecture at 8 tonight is on German expressionism, of which Bloch was a part, the exhibit will open tonight instead of Sunday.
BEFORE HE WENT to Munich, he worked as a political cartoonist and news reporter.
An exhibit of water colors, drawings and dry point of Albert Bloeh, former KU professor, will open with a reception and refreshments at 9 tonight in Spooner Art Museum.
ERNST SCHEYER, professor of art history and humanities and chairman of the department at Wayne State University. Wayne Indiana, will lecture on Bloch's historical position, and about the Russian and American members of Elaua Reiter. The Humanities Lecture will be in Fraser Theater.
'Cyrano' Production Opens Tonight, 8:30
"Cyrano de Bergerac," the final production of the 1962-63 season of the University Theatre, opens at 8:30 tonight in Murphy Hall.
The production, which runs through Saturday is a romantic melodrama about a man who is impeded in love by his large nose.
Identification cards may be exchanged for $1.20 seats.
Dean Taylor was asked about the house bills because of a letter sent to her. The letter, from Leanna Koehn, Dodge City sophomore who is a resident of Sellards Hall, said Sellards Hall residents had been assessed $25 each to cover "operational deficits" of the hall.
Dean Taylor said such assessments were ordinary procedure, if operating costs exceeded income.
She said each resident of Sellards and Douthart pays $35 a month. From this sum, all food, electricity, gas, and other bills must be paid, she said.
The University does not make up any deficits.
Dean Taylor said each girl who signed a contract for residence in either Douthart or Sellards agreed ahead of time to pay any necessary assessments.
Since the residents of the halls plan and prepare their own meals and assume all other responsibility for running the hall, the women themselves are responsible for any deficits incurred, Dean Taylor said.
The assessments were necessary because of the rising living costs, she said. The committee decided to raise the monthly fees to reduce the chance of extra assessments.
If operating expenses are less than income, refunds are paid at the end of the year, she said.
Men's scholarship halls operate under the same system, according to Harold Pontius, accountant in the dormitory office.
The amount of the assessments is determined by dividing the amount of the deficit by the number of residents in each hall.
Battenfeld and Foster each had assessments of $8 a man. Stephenson had a $6 a man assessment, and Douthart had a $38 assessment, Pontius said.
But Dean Taylor said she had looked over the financial statements of the two halls, and saw almost no chance for further economies.
Miss Koehn stated in her letter that the women have agreed to pay for any deficits incurred.
He said extra assessments were necessary in Battenfeld, Foster and Stephenson balls, as well as in Douthart and Sellards.
(20)
George Beckmann, professor of history has been appointed to the newly created position of Associate Dean of Faculties and Chairman of the Council for International Programs.
Prof. Beckmann Given New Post
He held Fulbright and Ford Foundation fellowships in 1952-53, another Ford Foundation fellowship in 1954, and a Fulbright Fellowship in 1960-61, all for research and study in Japan.
He received his bachelor's degree from Harvard in 1948 in Eastern History and languages, and his Ph.D from Stanford in 1952.
The position was created by the Kansas Board of Regents in an effort to coordinate the University's expanding programs in international education.
BECKMANN, who is currently on leave as a staff member of the International Training and Research Program of the Ford Foundation, has been teaching at KU since 1951.
The programs which have made the Board of Regents feel Beckmann's position was necessary include the enrollment of more than 350 foreign students at KU, an extensive exchange program of both faculty and students with the University of Costa Rica, the Summer Language Institutes in Europe, foreign faculty members teaching at KU, and numerous exchanges, grants and fellowships from other foreign universities.
During World War II he served as a Japanese language officer in Naval Intelligence and later attended Tokyo Imperial University.
Orr Says Creation Wasn't Accidental
By Jackie Helstrom
Life was first generated from chemicals, but the creation didn't come about by chance, J. Edwin Orr, College Life lecturer said yesterday.
Orr was speaking to members of the local College Life group that is sponsored by the Campus Crusade for Christ.
In his talk he was supporting a theistic progressive creation theory as an explanation of the existence of life. This is a theory of interrupted evolution.
He also outlined five other beliefs that people hold and discussed each in the light of a Christian concept.
If life began with one cell and has developed into the complex organization of billions of cells, the process has taken some kind of organization. Ory said.
HE SAID that no Christian could believe either the atheistic theory of spontaneous evolution that asserts that life produced itself spontaneously or the pantheistic theory of eternal existence that asserts life has always existed and will exist through all eternity as it is today.
He said there are four theories that the good Christian can accept.
He can accept the theistic theory of immediate creation. By accepting this he believes man was created at 9 a.m. Oct.23,4004 B.C.
"This theory depends on a lack of scientific knowledge," Orr said. "All you have to do is visit the Grand Canyon or Lake Erie to know the earth has existed more than 6,000 years."
He said deism is contradicted by the scriptures, because Almighty God is the father of every man, whom he created for himself and in whom he takes a personal interest.
There is another thelastic theory that Orr outlined which draws its total support from a retranslation of the Hebrew text of Genesis. By this translation it asserts the world was in a state of evolution when a disaster occurred. God remade the world in six days.
"THE DEISTIC theory of mediate evolution asserts the idea that God set the ball rolling and hasn't interfered since. He sort of abdicated." Orr said.
At the end of his talk, Orr read from his Bible the creation story in the first chapter of Genesis and asserted after each phrase that he could not see anything said in the book that was contradictory to any scientific principles of evolution.
Corr will give the second lecture of his series, "Arguments for Agnosticism," a discussion of the fallacies of atheism and agnosticism at 7:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
OAS Team In Haiti To Work For Peace
FORT AU PRINCE, Haiti—(UPI)
A five-man truce team from the Organization of American States arrived today for on-the-spot efforts to stave off threatened war between Haiti and the Dominican Republic.
THE PEACE-MAKERS, headed by Colombia's Alberto Zuleta Angel, were met on their arrival by representatives of the Haitian foreign office. They were scheduled to meet immediately with Haiti's Foreign Minister Rene Chalmers at the palace.
Truce team members saw no evidence of military movements in Port Au Prince, at least at the airport where their commercial transport landed. Two U.S. Marine Corps helicopters were on the field.
The helicopters were assumed to be here to aid in the withdrawal of the 30-man U.S. naval training mission which Haiti called on the United States to pull out last Friday.
ONLY THE usual handful of Haitian army transport craft was in evidence at the airfield. In downtown Port au Prince, apparent calm existed. There was no sign of unusual military activity.
The OAS group confirmed on its arrival that Haiti, as pledged, had withdrawn police forces from the Dominican Embassy, as demanded by the Dominican government.
Weather
The weather will be clear and cold tonight with frost likely in the northeast portion of the state. The low tonight will be in the 30's throughout most of Kansas. Wednesday will be generally fair and warmer. The high is expected to be in the 60's.
A late spring chill was rushing eastward out of the state today with clearing skies and warmer temperatures.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, April 30, 1963
Rocky Road for Nelson
When people talk about the 1964 Presidential race, the question always is the same: Who will be the Republican candidate?
Given the popularity of Kennedy and the lack of a clear-cut leader of Republican forces, whoever is nominated likely will be chosen by party leaders on their prediction of how good a sacrificial lamb he will make.
WILL IT BE SEN. Barry Goldwater? Not if we can believe the Senator himself. Even if he were willing, there is strong doubt that he could swing the party's nomination.
How about Gov. Nelson Rockefeller of New York? He certainly has left the general impression he is willing to do battle with Kennedy. But there seems to be worry in Republican circles as regards the Governor.
This concern is less over whether Rockefeller can be elected president as much as whether he can be made a Republican. Conservative Republicans view him as a latter-day New Frontiersman cloaked in Hart, Schaeffner and Marx clothing.
WITH THE LARGE advantage of registered voters belonging to the Democrats, all hopes of Republican victory in 1964 must ride with attracting the votes of those who belong to neither party—the people who vote for the man, not the party.
This would seem to favor Rockefeller; or maybe George Romney, another popular figure who has not established a controversial record in public affairs.
But, then again, Romney joins Goldwater among the ranks of Republican likelies who say, "Not me." If their positions can be changed remains to be seen.
BUT TO RETURN to the widely-held idea that Kennedy will defeat anyone nominated by
the Republicans, who wants to be a sacrificial lamb for the Republicans in 1964?
A wild guess here sees none other than Richard Nixon as the ticket leader in 1964. Not that you are urged to bet your grocery money on Nixon winning the nomination.
But somehow, there is the feeling that the Republicans with the best chance of drawing the needed independent votes — Rockefeller and Romney — are far from likely convention favorites.
ROCKEFELLER, SO FAR, has been doing all the offensive punching in the early scuffling for the inside track to the Republican nomination. But, should Nixon decide he may as well run for the roses again (he has nothing more to lose), the New York man is vulnerable.
His divorce has not been a political football yet; but it will be, either among party faithful or in the final race against Kennedy. It can be argued that this is not a legitimate campaign issue, but you can bet it will be one. Family and religion in the United States are always important considerations.
In short, a divorced governor is one thing; a divorced presidential candidate is another.
ALL THIS POLEMIC genius between insight and political barometers could amount to nothing if Sen. Goldwater caught the presidential fever. But it seems doubtful. He does not appear eager to climb into the ring with all the odds favoring Kennedy.
Who will be willing to face the proven matador of 1960? Nixon: he has nothing to lose, everything to gain, would (or could) cement his party leadership by martyrdom, and the party may find no one acceptable who could do better.
Stranger things have happened.
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"Silent Spring" Stimulates Pesticides Controversy
By Terry Ostmeyer
One of the most controversial and intriguing developments in the field of conservation in America today is the increasing concern over the use of pesticides.
For years chemicals have been the accepted solution to destroying insects, rodents, and other forms of life harmful to man's successful co-existence with nature.
FOR THE most part, this use of pesticides had been carried on with seemingly little adverse concern, but recently the matter has soared into the public eye through criticism from many fronts. And the pros and cons of the chemical warfare against pests have been widely voiced.
National and state governments, civic organizations, medical groups, chemical manufacturers, and many more have delved deeply into the problem of an effective yet safe pest control.
Some say there is no problem because of the need for such control. Others feel the use of pesticides has endangered mankind sufficiently to overshadow such a need, at least when it is done artificially through chemicals.
MUCH OF the controversy can be attributed to the charges set forth in the book, "Silent Spring." by Rachel Carson.
Miss Carson, the noted author of "The Sea Around Us," says in her new book that the careless users of pesticides not only were poisoning pests, but valuable wildlife and man himself.
She attacks agricultural chemical companies and the U.S. Department of Agriculture for
their laxity in controlling pesticides and failure in developing a safer means for control.
Miss Carson feels that pesticides in the U.S. have been used too freely by people with little knowledge of their effects, which she says can be harmful, and not just to pests.
"THERE IS still very limited awareness of the nature of the threat," she writes. "It is the public that is being asked to assume the risks that the insect controllers calculate. The public must decide whether it wishes to continue on the present road, and it can do so only when in full possession of the facts."
The facts Miss Carson presents include dangers to both man and wildlife. She says several pesticides can be rated as being related to causing cancer. She cites the recent cranberry scare of four years ago.
Miss Carson's charges in this respect are echoed by others, such as Douglas Campbell, a San Francisco psychiatrist and professor at the University of California.
CAMPBELL HOLDS that many virus infections and nervous disorders suffered by people could be the result of toxic conditions from repeated small doses of insecticides.
--though. In an effort to steer away some of the critical gossip, the Manufacturing Chemists Association and the National Agricultural Chemicals Association have been giving the news media various monthly feature stories emphasizing the positive side of pesticides.
Dr. James DeWitt of the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service has said findings show pesticides have led to the near-extinction of some species of birds.
Concerning wildlife, Miss Carson says the extensive use of pesticides "has led to the direct killing of birds, mammals, fishes, and practically every form of wildlife."
THE NATIONAL Academy of
Sciences-National Research Council, however, states that the "damage to wildlife has been relatively insignificant and in the vast majority of cases undetectable" despite the heavy use of pesticides on croplands.
Many of the chemical manufacturers say those who are closest to the land, the farmers, have welcomed the developments in pesticides and have been convinced of their value. The chemical industry believes most of the criticism of its products comes from non-agricultural people.
The clash between Miss Carson and the Department of Agriculture seems mainly to rest on the question of surplus. The latter say that without such chemicals the U.S. could not produce food at its present rate of quality and quantity.
Miss Carson's most widely accepted plea is that biological controls be used instead of pesticides.
MISS CARSON argues that America already over-produces and spends large sums to keep land out of production. The Department of Agriculture feels such a surplus could disappear very fast, though.
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The greatest concern now by both sides in the issue of the use of pesticides is to overcome the remarkable resistance that many insects have developed against some of the most effective chemicals.
The biological control method appears to be very important in solving this problem. This method employs the selection and use of certain insects that are natural parasites and devour other harmful insects. Application of this method borders on the experimental level, but development is rapidly progressing.
ONE THING is certain concerning the pesticide question, and that is the tremendous attention and influence Miss Carson's "Silent Spring" has created.
Most noticeable is the recent legislative action in various states around the country.
In the past four months, 40 bills have been introduced in state legislatures calling for stricter controls on the use of pesticides.
A study of pesticides being conducted by President Kennedy's Advisory Committee on Science and Technology has earned the greatest attention, however. The committee's report will be released soon, and those who know say it will acknowledge the need for pesticides, but also may recommend federal steps to insure better control.
THE AGRICULTURAL chemical industry's position already has been shaken by two bills introduced in Congress to tighten government controls of pesticide use.
The chemical manufacturers have not been standing still,
The latter organization also is developing a safety program in a few states to convince the users of the chemicals to follow the manufacturers' directions to avoid accidents stemming from improper use of pesticides.
THE MOST interesting development arising out of the pesticide controversy is the fact that despite the criticism voiced in "Silent Spring" and by others, the sales of pesticide chemicals are climbing toward new heights.
Last year sales of pesticides increased 16 per cent over 1961, keeping with a trend that has seen a sales growth of 72 per cent since 1955.
As the planting season got underway this spring, the nation's chemical manufacturers reported that farmers and gardeners are buying more of their products than a year ago at this time.
The chemical producers say a rash of new chemicals is largely responsible for this growth in sales. Almost 5,300 new pesticide compounds were registered with the Department of Agriculture last year alone, the most since registration first was required in 1948.
THIS YEAR registrations are ahead of the 1962 pace, and no letup seems evident as research for pesticides is expected to reach close to $40 million, over 10 per cent of the industry's sales.
Tuesday, April 30, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Rockefeller, Goldwater?
Page 3
YD, YR Presidents View'64 Election
Appraisals of President Kennedy and forecasts of the 1964 presidential candidates are widespread. The election is still months off, but students, voters, and politicians are beginning to beat political drums with increased fervor.
What do KU's Republican and Democratic leaders think about the national political scene?
Comments obtained from Max Logan, Holliday junior and chairman of the KU Young Democrats, and from Reuben McCornack, Abille junior and chairman of the KU Young Republics, in telephone interviews Sunday were as follows:
- QUESTION — What are your feelings toward President John Kennedy and his administration?
Logan—"Being a good Democrat, I think Kennedy has done as good a job as possible. He took the position when U.S. prestige was low and has turned this low standing to one of high standing.
"He realized the necessity of asserting U.S. power in places like Berlin, Laos and Viet-Nam. On the domestic scene, he has tried to be fair with everyone. He's tried to deal fairly with both labor and business."
"He had a poor economy to start with, and he has tried to alleviate the problems in that respect. His record is far better than the eight years of the Eisenhower administration."
McCORNACK—"I think he's using too much executive authority. There needs to be more legislative power. He's assuming power he shouldn't."
"In the area of agriculture, they're putting in more controls for the farmer, which I don't like.
"As concerns the national economy, I think things could be better."
- Question—What issues do you think will become dominant in the months preceding the 1964 election?
LOGAN—"I think the Republicans are going to be pushing Cuba. Mostly, I think the issues will be foreign relations and Kennedy's budget."
McCornack—I think the issue of foreign affairs, the role of government in the economy and the role of executive authority will be important. Of course, civil rights will be an issue in the election if two liberal candidates run against each other."
- Question—Among what groups and in what areas do you think the Republicans will grow stronger and the Democrats will become weaker, and vice versa?
Logan-"I really don't think the Republicans are going to make any gains other than in the areas where they're already strong. I don't think the Republicans will gain in the South as they expect.
"IF SOUTHERN Democrats get behind Goldwater, they might make some gains. The Republicans would be the Kennedy supporters and the
Democrats would be Goldwater supporters in the South.
"I think with Kennedy running in 1964, he's going to pull a lot of Democrats with him. I don't think we'll lose any seats, and I think we'll pick up a lot."
McCormack—"We're going to make great gains in the Chicago area, which is normally Democratic. We're going to have great gains also on the East and West coasts and in almost all other areas that Republicans are weak."
- Question—Who do you think will be the 1964 Republican presidential candidate?
LOGAN—'With Nelson Rockefeller in New York, Goldwater in Arizona and then the darkhorses, it's kind of a funny thing. A lot depends on the national convention.
"If Rockefeller proceeds to marry this divorcee, I don't think he will get the nomination. The liberals, with Rockefeller's marital problems, might split between him and (Gov. George) Romney.
McCORNACK—Declined comment.
• Question—Who do you think will be the Democrats' presidential candidates in 1964?
"The conservatives, of course, will
Logan-"I think Kennedy will be the only boy."
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support Goldwater. Right now, with the emphasis on foreign affairs, I think they're going to nominate Barry Goldwater."
McCornack—"Kennedy."
McCORNACK—Declined comment.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 30, 1963
Better Controls Business School Day Begins
Better Controls Found In New GeneticsTheory
A new theory on determining the evolution or variation of living organisms, called canalization, may revolutionize hereditary concepts, according to a noted geneticist.
Alexander S. Fraser, professor of genetics at the University of California at Berkeley, said at the University Lecture yesterday that the aim of canalization is to better explain and predict genetic variation.
The new method, canalization, is an extension of Darwin's theory of natural selection involving the modification of genes so that by various genetic routes similar-looking individuals develop.
PROF. FRASER, who studied at the University of New Zealand and the University of Edinburgh, said he has spent much of his time putting models of genetics in computers to determine their evolution, but his main work with canalization stems from dissatisfaction of geneticists in the 1940's.
THE PROFESSOR said this method can proceed in two ways. One way is a normal situation where there is a large number of genes which offer a wide variation. The other way is a combination of the normal and the rare mutations.
He said geneticists concentrate on the latter because there are less genes to deal with, each with its characteristic rate of mutation.
THE VARIATIONS in the more normal situation must be used in the process, he said, or the extreme mutations will form their own new norms.
"The new change which is obtained from canalization is constant, and in this constancy there is no variation, thus standardization," the professor said.
Prof. Fraser said stresses or changes can be inflicted upon these genetic norms with temperature variations and other means, which produces the effect of a complete character, yet an abnormal character.
HE SAID THE abnormal character can then be grown back on the norm, this time without stress. This will give an acquired inheritance, he added.
Canalization is not only of behavior elements, the geneticist said, but it is also of environmental elements.
Thus, the professor said, canalization can take all variations and make them alike.
"Having done this, these genes are now new norms. They have no apparent function and now new uses can be found," he said.
The School of Business Honors Banquet tonight will have as its speaker Ned Fleming, president ot Fleming Company, Topeka. He will speak about business opportunities available and potential for industrial expansion in the Mid-West.
The banquet, at 6:30 in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union, precedes tomorrow's annual School of Business Day.
The Aqua Tones, Lawrence female barbershop quartet which won second place in an international contest in Toronto. Canada, will sing.
Several awards will be presented, including the Alpha Kappa Psi Award to the outstanding male senior in the School of Business; the Delta Sigma Pi Award to the person having the highest scholastic standing in the School of Business; the Chi Chi Theta Award to the outstanding senior woman in the School of Business; the Wallstreet Journal Award to the highest ranking graduating senior who is majoring in finance, and the Haskins and Sells Award to the outstanding accounting major.
The Solon E, Summerfield Award winner, highest ranking junior at the end of his junior year, will be recognized at the banquet.
Names of the nine newly-admitted members of the Beta Gamma Sigma (national honorary business fraternity) will be announced.
Master of Ceremonies will be Gene Gaines, Joplin, Mo., senior, and new president of the Business School Council. Awards will be presented by Wiley S. Mitchell, professor of business administration and dean of the school of business.
No classes will meet in the School of Business after 10:30 a.m., when a
The first students to be graduated in the Ph.D. program in Germanic languages and literatures at KU have accepted professorial appointments at other universities. Instructorships have been offered to several master's degree candidates in the program.
KU Graduates of Germanics Accept Teaching Positions
The doctoral candidates are Walter Speidel, Lawrence, who will be assistant professor next fall at Brigham Young University, and Mrs. Erna M. Moore, Lawrence, who will be assistant professor at Texas Christian University.
Both have been assistant instructors on the KU staff.
Candidates for the master of arts
degree for instructorships are:
Darwin Daicoff, assistant professor of economics; Howard F. Stettler, professor of business administration, and Sidney P. Feldman, associate professor of business administration, will debate with Harry G. Shaffer, assistant professor of economics; Charles B. Saunders, associate professor of business administration, and John Ise, professor emeritus of economics.
Lothar K. Schweder, Wuppertal,
Germany, Washburn University;
Louise Miller, Chicago, Ill., Uni-
versity of Missouri; Glen Schoen-
fish, Lawrence, Wyandotte High
School in Kansas City, and Wilhelm
G. Grothmann, Hucker-Aschen,
Germany. Purdue University.
Judith, Wager, Port Washington, N.Y., another M.A. degree candidate, has received KU's direct exchange scholarship to Bonn University in Germany for next year.
The traditional faculty-student baseball game, accompanied by a "beer bust" at the schoolhouse on East Fifteenth St., will be at 1:30 p.m. Wednesday.
debate on planned obsolescence is scheduled.
Sharon Graves, Logan senior, will hold a teaching assistantship in the KU German department while doing graduate study.
At 8 p.m. there will be a dance at Heck's Barn.
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Tuesday, April 30, 1963 University Daily Kansan Page 5
Banquet Will Honor Retiring Chemistry Prof
"The Scholar-A Personal Nobleman" is the speech to be made by R. Q. Brewster, retiring professor of chemistry , at the Chemistry Honors Banquet, at 6:30 Thursday evening.
C. A. VanderWerf, professor of chemistry, will be master of ceremonies at the banquet in the Big Eight Room of the Kansas Union. He and other members of the chemistry department will present the following fifteen awards:
Robert R. Gatts has been appointed professor and chairman of the department of mechanical engineering effective September 1.
Engineering Dept Chairman Named
Prof. Gatts has been employed by General Electric Company for the past four years. For the past two and one half years he has held the position of mechanics of materials engineer for the G.E. Knolls Atomic Power Laboratory in Schenectady, N.Y.
Donald E. Metzler, associate dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture, has carried the additional duties of acting chairman in the current academic year.
Educated in the public schools of Berlin Heights, Ohio, Prof. Gatts did undergraduate study at Kent State University and received both the bachelor of mechanical engineering and master of science degrees from Ohio State University in 1951. His Ph.D. degree came from Ohio State in 1959.
Mrs. Gatts is a registered nurse They have five children, ages four to twelve.
THE DuPONT teaching scholarship will be a stipend, awarded to a graduate student, (in his next-to-last year), who is interested in teaching. The Phillips Petroleum Company Fellowship, to be awarded to the outstanding next-to-last year graduate student, includes tuition and a stipend to finance research toward the Ph. D. degree.
The outstanding teaching assistant will receive an all-expense-paid trip to the fall meeting of the American Chemical Society (in New York City this year).
Phi Lambda Upsilon will present a cash award to the outstanding first year graduate student.
THE OUTSTANDING senior chemistry major's name is added to the Alpha Chi Sigma plaque. His name is chosen on the basis of scholarship. The American Institute of Chemists awards a medal to the outstanding chemistry major. This year, the same student is to receive both awards.
An incoming freshman will receive the Brewster scholarship, a cash award to be presented by Brewster.
To outstanding undergraduates will go four general chemistry awards, two analytical chemistry awards, one organic chemistry award and one physical chemistry award.
Each recipient will receive a scroll and, respectively, one of three books: "The Handbook of Chemistry and Physics," "Chemical Analysis," by Laitinen, "The Merck Index" and "The Annual Reviews of Physical Chemistry."
Official Bulletin
Tau Sigma, 7 p.m. Robinson Gym.
Methodist Community Worship, 9:15
TODAY
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
Dandurtr Life Lecture Series, 7.30 p.m.
Union Forum Room, Dr. J. Edwin Orr,
University of Oxford graduate in philosophy.
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses, 7:00 a.m., 11:40 a.m.
St. Stephen Catholic Chapel, 1910 Strat-
ford Road.
Le quipque-nique annuel du Cercle F. Fraser a lieu de la mairie 302 390 rue Missouri. On vous prie de vous inscrive au bureau. 108 Fraser, et de payement à la secrête avant 16 h. 30, mercredi.
Paul G. Hausman, director of engineering research services and associate professor of materials engineering, will chair an Engineering Conference for the American Society of Tool and Manufacturing Engineers in Chicago.
The two-day conference which starts April 28 will be part of a week-long program of technical meetings and a tool and manufacturing equipment show.
Hausman to Head ASTE Conference
Grant Snyder and Howard Rust, instructors of materials engineering also plan to attend.
Senior Class '64
CORRECTION
Committee Applications
Due Today
5 p.m.
127 Strong
Alumni Office
DON'T MISS
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April 30, May 1, 2, 3, 4
8:30 p.m.
I.D.'s Admit
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Tickets at University
Theatre Box Office
STUDENTS RESERVED SEATS FOR 1963 FOOTBALL
Students may order Season Tickets for next fall's home football games according to the following priority schedule.
Monday, May 6 and Tuesday, May 7
Students who will be in the fall semester,1963:
Seniors, Graduate Students, Law Students
Wednesday, May 8
Students who will be Juniors in the fall semester, 1963:
Thursday, May 9
Students who will be in the fall semester, 1963: Sophomores
PLEASE READ THE FOLLOWING CAREFULLY
Tickets will be applied for at Allen Field House — 8:30 to 12:00 a.m. and 1:30 to 5:00 p.m. daily. Enter north doors of the Field House and go down the east corridor; ID cards must be presented and each student should be prepared to pay a fee of $1.50 per season ticket at this time to cover the costs of administration.
Group applications, within a priority group, will be limited to not more than twenty-five (25). (Exceptions will be considered in the case of exceptionally large pledge classes or classes within men's and women's residence halls.) It should be noted that independent groups can apply in groups if they so desire. The person(s) applying for a group must present ID cards for all members of the group.
Orders may be placed according to the above schedule or on a later priority day. Tickets ordered now will be picked up next fall during the enrollment period.
After all applications are in a drawing will be held, within each priority group, to determine seat location. In this way, an equal opportunity will be afforded to each student so long as you have made your application on your assigned priority date. Individual orders and group orders will each be numbered and carry the same weight in the drawing of lots. The ASC Athletic Seating Committee will draw the lots soon after the end of the ticket application period May 11.
Season tickets for student spouses who are themselves students may be ordered at the earlier priority of either spouse. Season tickets for student spouses who are not themselves students may be ordered at the time their student spouse orders his or her ticket. The price for all student spouse tickets is $7.50. A price of $6.50 applies to housemothers, whose orders may be placed during any priority period.
New 1963 medical students will apply at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City for their season tickets.
Pep Club members must present evidence of membership to be assigned seats in pep club sections. Members of the University Marching Band will have seats reserved automatically and need not order tickets.
To speed up group applications, arrange ID cards according to the following: A-F, G-L, M-R, S-Z, and present these grouped ID's to the proper tables set up in the Field House Lobby.
NOTE: ID Cards Alone Will NOT Admit Students to Football Games Next Fall. A Reserved Seat Ticket Will Be Necessary
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 30, 1963
Speaker Sees Similarities In Military Reluctance
The reluctance of the United States and Russia to use military force in recent confrontations has many parallels an associate professor of history said last night.
Prof. Raymond O'Connor, speaking to KU Reserve Officer Training Corps cadets and midshipmen in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union, said U.S. military force was not used in the Hungarian revolt because America didn't have a preponderance of military force in terms of conventional warfare.
"WE WOULD have had to rely on nuclear weapons," Prof. O'Connor said in answer to a question following his talk on "Force and Diplomacy." "And then there would have been a thermonuclear war."
Prof. O'Connor said the same thing was true of each country's role in the Cuban Crisis — only in reverse order.
"We had the conventional forces, but I don't think they did," Prof. O'Connor said.
HE SAID HE didn't think Russia was capable of waging a conventional war with the United States in the Western Hemisphere.
Prof. O'Connor recalled the use of U.S. military force from the American Revolution to the present.
He said the development of devastating nuclear weapons has led to a greater understanding of military affairs on the part of the average person.
HE SAID THE American Revolution did not stand as a victory for the United States because there were more British troops here in strategic positions after the war than before.
Bible As Textile Book To Be Lecture Topic
Miss Louisa Bellinger of the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., will speak to the Kansas Society of the Archaeological Institute of America Thursday.
Miss Bellinger will speak on "The Bible as a Source Book for the Study of Textiles," at 7:30 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
He spoke of the role of force in the expansion of the country in the 1800's and said:
"Nearly all of this territory was acquired through the use of military force, either active or latent."
He said the Korean War wasn't a military victory, but showed the validity of limited warfare as an objective.
REFERRING TO the early years of the Eisenhower administration, Prof. O'Connor said the policy of massive retaliation allowed only nuclear war or retreat.
The professor called the Cuban crisis "an exceedingly severe threat to the American defense system."
He said the decision for using military force in the future might be made on the basis of "vital interest" instead of capability.
O'Connor said the United States is in the same position as European
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Prof. O'Connor also defended President Kennedy's prohibition of exile groups invading Cuba, explaining that the U.S. wants to be in control of matters that could lead to war.
"WEWOULD have been in violation of the United Nations Charter," he said. "If we're going to follow the patterns or policies of our adversaries, then we're no better than they are."
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Roy Towne, 84, KU faculty member for many years, died at his Everett, Wash., home last week. He had been in ill health for some time.
Retired KU Professor Dies At 84
Prof. Towne, who retired from teaching in 1949, was a faculty member in the Romance Languages department. He previously taught Latin and Greek at Hammeline University, St. Paul, Minn., and a Washburn University in Topeka. He changed his field to French at KU and became assistant professor before his retirement.
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Tuesday, April 30, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
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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
1950 Plymouth, sharp—$125.00; 1954 Chevy Station wagon—$150.00; 6 cylinder Oldsmobile motor, good condition, will keep 4 years; 1954-55 Ford 4-years 5.7-14 tubeless tires; 1958-60 Benson's, 1802 Harper, end of E, 1958 Phone VI 3-1626.
Hi-Fi speakers. 2 Coral 12 t.x. triaxial
Hi-Fi speakers. 2 Coral 12 t.x. triaxial
Hi-Fi speakers. Call ViT 3-3445.
1954 Chevy convert, radio, heater, power brakes, power steering, automatic transmission. Leaving town, must sell—call in evening at 5:00 p.m. VI, 3:16, 5-6
BRITISH MOTORS USED CARS-Imports: 1955 Mercedes Benz 300 S L Gulliver roadster; 1955 Ferrari 3 leader 750 Monza; 1961 VW sedan; 1962 VW sedan Domestic Cars—1960 Falcon st, trans.驾椅; 1961 Dodge d, trans.驾椅 4 dr. Std.; 1980 Cadillac 60 special series, full power; 1958 Ford Fairlane 2 dr; 1958 Dodge d' 2 dr. H.T., A.T.; 1957 humline conv., radio, A.T.; 1956 Ford h.T., radio, A.T., 704 Ph. VI- 38367.
STEREO SET. Garrard changer, Ronette cartridge. Portable model in leather, with companion speaker. Like new, must sacrifice! Call VI 2-1739. 5-2
DEMONSTRATOR CLOSE O'UTS
Stereos - Phono Stereo Radiol! $159.95.
Motorola Console only $115.00. $99.95.
Portable Stereo now $65.00. $49.95. Automatic phonograph—$25.00. $199.95. G.E. portable projector $35.00. $199.95. Portable now $60.00. $199.95. G.E. stereo Multiple—$95.00. $175.00. Deluxe Stereo Multiple—$125.00. $139.95. Coffee Table Stereo only $100.00. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. St.
1958 Ford retractable hardtop, black and
white. Capacity 000 Call. Cash.
60676 after 5:30 p.m.
Gretch amplifier—twin 10" ovals and one 4" Treble speaker—4 jacks and vibrata with complete controls—brand new Ray Hischek —503 Templin—CALL VI 2-1200.
Falcon and Comet owners! 600-13 brand new first line 100 Level (four full piles) from Comet! Save up to $259 per piece of $26.40—Now $16.40 plus Tax—Free installation at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass.
8 formal cocktail dresses—sizes 10-12
One white wool evening jacket, one set
Wilson golf irons and one 17" RCA TV
console. Call VI 3-8404. 4-30
RENAULT AND VOLKSWAGEN OWNERS ATTENTION! Bucket seat terry cloth covers $6.88, new 36 month premium nylon tubeless tires now $15.00 exchange plus tax. Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center—929 Mass. 5-6
Printed Biology Study Notes: 70 pages,
complete outline of lecture; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised
for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta Notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50. tt
1955 Ford Customline V-8, radiator, heater, overdrive, 7 tires, new interior, recently painted, new engine, 20 miles per gallon. Excellent condition. $530.00. Call after 6 p.m. VI 3-1772 and ask for Carlos or Julio. 4-30
New and used portables, standards and
electrics. Royal, Olympia, Smith Corona,
portable portables. Box typing papers. Lawrence Typewriter, 738
Mass. Phone VI 3-3644.
"YPING PAPER BARGAINS: Pink typing paper $8c per ream. Yellow typing paper $6c per ream. Per pound. The Lawrence Outlook, 1005 Massachusetts, open all day Saturday. tt
HAPPY SHOPPING always at Grant's Drive-In Pet Center—most complete shop location — Pet phone VT 3-201-650-4000 Modern, self-service. Open 8 to 6:30 pm. 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
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
MOBILE HOME FOR SALE — 45 x8' 1958
Great Lakes Model — Two bedroom.
Inquire at Skyline Trailer Court, 631 East
23rd.
FOR RENT
Medical Students' Furnished apartment
June 1st, 4129 Aton, K-C Kansas, 5-3
5 furnished apartments 1 block from campus. Utilities paid. Laundry privileges, business service. Private entrance and bath, available now. 1142 Indiana, tf
1 bedroom ground floor apartment on East side, Large yard. Utilities paid. second floor furnished. $65.00. One bedroom second floor apartment. $30.00. Call 86294. 5-2
Very nice basement apartment for 2 men.
Summer or fall semester. See at 112-835-
51-1
PRE-Med Seniors: For rent (or sale) 11% story older house; five rooms, heated room, and front porch. Recently redecorated, painted and floors refinished. 9 blocks from MC. MCR. Price $58.00 per bedroom. $20.00 per week. Call Maxton viomie XI 5-2505. 5-1
DeSoto, Kamsas. New furnished duplex, 2
years old. Back yard. Call 14092—Dosse, Kamsas. 5-1
CRESCENT HEIGHTS Apartments, 25th &
Rosebud: Rear entrances, large utility
room, balconies, sun decks, concrete or
brick walled bathrooms, generator,
2 bdrmts, 840 sq. ft. living area,
individual controlled heating, fully carpeted & draped, garbage disposals, air-
conditioners, gas furnace, Discount for 1 year's lease. Manager,
436 Redbud Lane. Phone VI 2-3711.
Large 2 room nicely furnished apartment. Private entrance and bath—$35.00 per month. 2 bedroom nicely furnished extra large apartment with private entrance and garage—$49.00 per month. Nicely furnished 3 bedroom apartment, private entrance and bath only $25.00 per person per month. Nicely furnished 2 bedroom apartment, private entrance and garage—$49.00 per month. Nicely furnished 3 rooms, private entrance and bath—$55.00 per month. Extra large lovely furnished 2 bedroom apartment with private entrance and bath. 2 bedroom apartment Nicely furnished 3 rooms, private entrance and bath—$79.50 per month. All above apartments available June 1st. All utilities paid. Call VI 3-0298 or VI 3-7830. 5-1
Attractive 3 room furnished second floor. Beautiful hallway with newly decorated rooms, nicely furnished and clean. Walking distance to KU. Elegant double bedroom with alce electe city. Call VI 2-2593. 5-2
Graduate or older undergraduate men. A few studio apartments available for June 1st. New kitchens, quiet, cool, ideal study conditions, clean and inexpensive. $1/4 blocks from Union. Best of neighbors. Call VI 3-8834 for appointment.
Comfortable, quiet, 4 room apartment—furnished for couple—living room, kitchen, study bedroom, private bath and amenities, much music, child-‐conditioned. Call VI 3-‐5863. 5–‐1
HOME for Summer session- two bedrooms with study-within walking distance of any building on campus-VI 2-2278. 4-30
Vacancy at Emery apartments. 1423
Ohio, Efficiency type of apartment for
renewal. 1st lst. $5 and $65 with water and
gas pat. Call 3-8190 for further
formation.
5-6
5 room apartment on 25th Available
and coupled only phone VI
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HELP WANTED
Delivery boy and part time kitchen help
Gene Durham, Campus Hideaway, 4-30
LOST
$25.00 REWARD for the return of notes in gray-green binder with label "Visual Encounter" of teacher E. Epstein. Return to John Park, psychology department. 1 Strong Hall. 5-3
Magenta silk sifar with green pattern.
parking lot. Reward. Call VI S-7630. 5-1
Tutor — Mrs. William Birner, former children's librarian and school teacher, teaches children in speech, English, reading and history through May 29th. Call 6:30 p.m., except for evaluation appointment. Time fee to be arranged.
BUSINESS SERVICES
Transportation plus parking convenience ride a new motor scooter of your choice demonstrate and sell in your spare time. Blevin's Bike Shop, 74 th and Michigan.
GRANT'S Drive-In Pet Center, 1218
Conn. Personal service - sectionalized
birds, hunters, chameleons, turtles
pigeons, etc., plus complete list of
pet supplies. **tf**
RENT a new electric portable sewing machine, $1 per week. Free delivery if rented for two weeks or more. White Sewing Center, 916 Mass. VI 3-1267.
DRESS MAKING and alterations. For-
mance by Ola Smith. Ola Smith.
93%'s MV5. Call VI 3-5263.
Church group will pick up unwanted clothing and misc. runmage without charge. Clean those closets now. Call VI 2-1861. 5-6
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"Turn Toward Peace," or "Speak up for Peace," or "Work for Peace" or "Wait for War"-Free Bumper stickers-Write Jim Masters, 840; Ky-No obligation.
Will care for children in my home. 2 years old and older. Convenient to KU.
Fenced in yard, references. Phone VI 3-
6763. 5-7
TYPING
"GOOD TYPING CREATES a favorable impression with instructors." For excellent typing of theses and term papers, call Miss Louise Pope, VI 3-1097. tt
Will type term papers and reports on
Russell, Rusei, Russell, Russei,
1811 W. 21st, phone VI 3-6440
1811 W. 21st, phone VI 3-6440
Will do neat and accurate typing in my home. Experienced in themes, theses, and term papers. Electric typewriter. Mrs. Adcock, VI 2-1795. tt
Fast, accurate and work by experienced typist. References. Phone VI 3-6506. tf
Secretary and English major will do expert typing of papers. Mrs. Compton, PhD, is responsible for ISI1 NH. after 6 p.m. Particular attention to problems of foreign students. tf
Theses, term papers, reports, typed quickly and accurately. Experienced typist; electric typewriter. Marian Graham. 1619 Del . VI 3-0483. tf
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Good typist. Would like to do term papers, and theses. Mrs. Oxford. VI 2-0673.
Dissertations, theses, manuscripts and term papers typed on new electric typewriter or computer. Reqs. keys. Experience in education and selences. Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert. VI 2-1546. ff.
Efficient typist. Would like typing in her
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theses, letters. Call anytime at VI 3-2651.
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EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Immediate attention to term papers, reports, theses, these. Typical assignments with an electronic typewriter. Reasonable rates. Call Mrs. Charles Patty, VI 3-8379.
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, books, and articles. Romance rails. Electric writer. Mrs. McEldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI. 36-813
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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
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MILLIKENES SOS — always first quality typing on LB M. Carbon ribbon machines.
hours—7 a.m. to tap transcriptions.
hours—7 a.m. to 12 p.m. → 00211₂ Mast
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Prompt neat accurate work on wide carriage electric typewriter. Journalism-business secretary experience. Charlotte Weber, VI 3-3495.
experienced typist does term papers. experienced typist does term papers. electric typewriter. Special symbols and signs. Prompt and reasonable rates. Mrs. Clark at 200 Rhode Island. Phone VI 3-7485.
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EXPERIENCED TYPIST: Will type theses, term papers, and themes, neatly on new electric typewriter. Call Mrs. Fulcher, VI 3-0558, 1031 Miss. **tt**
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, April 30, 1963
AWS Outstanding
Janice Wise, Kansas City, Mo., was named the outstanding KU senior woman at the AWS Honors Night yesterday and received the American Association of University Women Award-a year's membership in AAUW.
The AWS Honors Night was designed to recognize the women on campus who had made outstanding contributions the past year.
AWS Memorial scholarships were awarded to Lynette Berg, Topeka freshman; Lois Miller, Alma freshman, and Claudia Reeder, Overland Park freshman.
The scholarship fund was established in 1948 in memory of KU women who have died while attending the University.
Marcia Allen, Overland Park; Beth Beamer, Topeka; Lytaeine Berg, Topeka; Robin J. Bruner, Newton; Jewelda Devore, Bellville; Donna Dickson, Leavenworth; Anne Donald, Prairie Village; App., Tribune; Wilma Eyman, McAlison
THE NEW MEMBERS OF CWENs, the honorary sophomore organization, were announced. The members, all freshmen, are'
Sara FrANDLE, Perry; Carolyn Geiman,
McPherson; Danielle Goering, Mound-
ridge; Alice Griffith, Lawrence; Cindy
Brismoreame, Heilsen; Kathryn Heilsen, IL.; Carolyn Hoke,
Praible Village; Margaret Hughes, Ottawa;
Mary Lanning, Lawrence; Diane Larson,
Kansas City; Rebecca Larson, Tulsa,
Okla. Judith Lebeman, McBrien,
Iowa; Des Moines, Iowa; Grechen Maalsch, Leewood; Carol McMahon, Wichita.
Kaye McCready, Prairie Village; Mary Mangan, Dodge City; Elizabeth March, Cusa; Mo. Janet Phibert, St. Louis; Mo.; Nancy Razak, Wichita; Claudia Reeder, Overland Park; Sheila Reynolds,utchinson; Oralogyne Ogallala, Schwiezman; Schwine, Shawnee; Cheris Shelton, Edina, Mum; Sharon Stalcup, Lawrence; Camille Storey, Overland Park; Martha Stout, La Marque; Ill.; Nancy Sturgis, St. Louis,
Margaret Tietze, Bartlesville, Okla:
Beverly, Tartt, Baxter Springs, Valerie
Hanson, Lakewood, St. Louis, St.
Joseph, Mo.; Judith Wise, Prairie Village,
and Martha Yankey, Wichita.
MISS CARYL KELLEY, assistant to the dean of women, and Miss Mary Frances Watson. Wichita graduate student, were made honorary Cwens.
A Fulbright Grant for study in Ger-
many to Catherine Zellif,
Bristol City Senior.
THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES officers and the AWS Senate were installed. The Senate members are: Ann Leffler, Pittsburgh junior; JoLynne Talbott, Overland Park junior; Jill Newburg, Webster Groves freshman; June Neele, Wichita junior; Joan Fowler, Shawnee Mission freshman; Wendy Wilkerson, Wichita junior; Barbara Kibler, Topeka freshman; Betty Dwyer, Wichita junior; Beetle Beamer, Topkea freshman; Claudia Reeder, Overland Park freshman; Palsy Renkal, Holt Junior.
KU Man's Art Work Humanities Subject
Ernest Scheyer, professor of art at Wayne State University in Detroit, will give the Humanities Lecture at 8 p.m. today in Fraser Theater.
Prof. Scheyer will talk on "Albert Bloch: An American Blane Reiter." His address will be followed by a reception and the opening at the Museum of Art of an exhibition featuring the work of the late Bloch, a KU professor.
Peggy Harris, Leawood junior; Carol Mahanian, North Carolina; Hugo Hogan, Prairie Village junior; Patti Behen, Kansas City junior; Pamela Rice, Jordan Whitcher, Prairie Village sophomore.
The House officers are JoLynne Talley, vice-president; Robert Hill, Village junior, vice-president; Karen Stevenson, Wichita Junior, secretary-treasurer; the Senate Dwyer, representative of the Senate
AWS COLLEGE FASHION Board members
Karen McCarty, Wichita Junior; Judy Gatton, Wichita sophomore; Johanna DeGroot, Wichita sophomore; Janet Duncan, Ottawa sophomore; Marciu sophomore; Nate Egyp, Etopa sophomore; Loretta Marcoux, Havensville junior; Susan Nash, La Grange, Ill. sophomore; Susan Schrader, Kinsley junior; Pamela Stone, Wichita sophomore; Joana Wright, Shawnee Mishna freshman and Martha Yankee, Wichita freshman.
The upperclass Residence Hall Student Acidents were announced. They are:
Anh Benz, Borger, Texas, Junior; Mary Brooks, Hinsdale, Ill., sophomore; Sandra Garvey, St. Louis, Mo., junior; Judy Getberg, St. Louis, sophomore; Sandra Bolton,ington
Sharon Heinlen, Independence, Mo. sophomore; Rose Mary Hoerl, Norfolk, Mo. sophomore; Rose Mary Horner, Norfolk, Mo. sophomore; Carroll Kincardin, Huntington, West Va., junior; Linda O'Mara, Duque, Iowa, junior; John Nesby, Mo.; minor, Lindy Snider, Bethesda, Md., junior; Margo Van-Antwerp, Plymouth, Mich. sophomore; Marissa Schoenfelder, Furnes, Walker, Bethany, Mo. sophomore; Bette Weinsilhobur, Augusta junior; Janice Whitaker, Little River sophomore; Marrena Whalker, Wichita sophomore; Marriett Will, Memphis, Teenn. sophomore.
THE FRESHMAN RESIDENCE Hall Counselors are:
Juanita Almquist, Overland Park junior; Lois Borland Allotta sophomore; Dorothy Blair sophomore; Coralie Carson, Cameron, Mo. sophomore; Marsha Carver, Evanston, sophomore; Kristen Renshawrence junior; Carole Claney, Lawrence junior; Mary Dunlap, Lawrence sophomore; Margaret Eckler, Atchison junior; Sophomore; Susie Gerlith, Tarko Mo.
Hilda Gibson, Lawrence junior; Lesley Hagood, Prairie Village junior; Martha Hershey, Salina, sophomore; Joanne Larsen, Lawndon, sophomore; Mena Mosenck, Wichita sophomore; Mary Molden, Omaha, Neb. junior; Christi Sleeker, Leaward junior; Denise Storick, Kansas Mo., junior; Martha Thompson, Wichita junior, and Karen Vice, St. John junior.
MORTAR BOARD members are:
Mary Bumgartner, Overland Park; Kathleen Baysinger, Kansas City, Mo.; Karen Beale, Kansas City, Mo.; Sandra Bornholdt, La Cross; Kav Consolver, Wichita; Betty Dwyer, Wichita; Barbara Edwards, Fort Leavenworth; Karen Beal, Coulson; Gibson, Wisconsin; Bob Coulson, Mission Bay; Barbara Kibler, Toquea; Margaret Harris, Leawood; Janet Johnson, Cimarron; Patsy Kendall, Holton; Karen McCarty, Kansas City; Sarah McCarty, Martha Parmley, Wichita; Pamela Rice, Wichita; Martha Shirley, Manikato; Jo-Lynne Talbott, Overland Park; Diane Smith, Overland Park; Johnson, Wichita; all-juniors; Susan Col, John sophomore and Marsha Dutton, Colby senior.
PHL BETA KAPPA members are;
Women Named
Mary Jean Cowell, St. Louis, Mo., senior; Gail Eberhart, Wichita state; Nadine Prouty, Newton senior, and Martha Mission senior—all elected spring, 1962.
Carolyn Nelson, Clifton junior; seniors; Carol Betlock, Leont; Barbara Carrara, Stamford; Thelma Carney, Deso台; Marsha Dutton, Colby; Sondra Ewald, Kansas City, Mo.; Drew Lawrence, Lawrence, Nicutt, Sabeth Dier, Kaufman, McPherson; Susan McCalla, Lawrence; Diane Mulane, Oklahoma City, Okla.; Linda Nelson, Kansas City, Mo.
Sara Pfeiffer, Parsons senior; Linda Power, Shawnee Mission; Christina Robinson, St. Marys; Martha Schwartz, Manhattan; Susan Shotill, Kansas City, Mo. Wanda Salma, Catherine Zeliff, Baldwin City—all elected spring 1963.
The following were selected by their living groups as outstanding women:
Carolyn Toews, Inman senior, Alpha Chi Omega; Karen Kmpmeier, Bartlesville, Okla., senior, Alpha Delta Pi; Karen Bentley, Kansas City, Alpha Sonja Halverson, St Joseph Mo., senior, Alpha Omicron Pi; Carolyn Power, Kansas City, Mo., sophomore, Alpha Phi; Karen Emel, Colby junior, Chicago, Ill.; Karen Holloway, Chicago, freshman, M. freshman, Corbin; Carolyn Heard, Russell senior, Delta Delta Delta; Sharon Dobbins, LawrenceDelta, Delta Gamma;
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Deadline Tomorrow For ASC Committees
The application deadline for appointments to the All Student Council committees is tomorrow.
Persons interested in the committees may obtain application blanks from their living group presidents, the ASC office, ASC representatives, or the Dean of Students office.
Catherine Zeliff, Baldwin City senior,
Douthart; Rich Moyer, Shawnee Mission
Pinetta; Piet Beta; Carol McMahan,
Wichita freshman, Gertrude Sellars
Pennsorl.
The Honors Night program concluded the AWS All Women's Day activities.
Anne Peterson, Clifton senior, Hashinger; Gail Eberhardt, Wichita senior, Kappa Alpha Theta; Gretchen Lee, Florissant, M. Kappa KappaGamma, C. Craven, Lawrence senior Lewis; Reese Reynolds junior; Susan Callender, Bonner Springs senior, Pi Beta Phil; Jane Breckenridge, Louisburg sophomore, Sellards; Karen Stevenson, Wichita junior; Sigma Kappa, and Judy Ricketts, Ness City senior, Watkins.
The applications must be submitted to a party president, the ASC office or the Dean of Students.
POPE WEST
TITLING
Dad's A Good Egg Be Sure To Coddle Him
He may have turned his pocketbook inside out to give you an education. The family treasure that will be spent on your college training will not be without sweat and sacrifice. One way to show your appreciation is to live within your allowance. That means good money management and an Economy Checking Account in our bank can be helpful. In any amount, your account is welcome.
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