Russian Naval Forces Threaten Red China
LONDON—(UPI)—Diplomatic dispatches said today the Soviet Union is strengthening its border guards along the frontier with Communist China and sending naval reinforcements to the Far East as precautionary moves in the worsening Sino-Soviet rift.
The moves coincided with Soviet press reports today that Chinese Communist authorities last year machinegunned to death dozens of men, women and children who sought permission to cross the border from Sinkiang Province to the Soviet Union. The shooting allegedly occurred in May, 1962.
THE STRENGTHENING of guards along the 3,500-mile Siberian Frontier was believed designed to discourage any further "provocations" by China along the disputed border. The Soviets have accused Peking of 5,000 border violations last year.
The show of naval strength in the Far East appeared largely aimed at Asian public opinion as a reminder that the Soviet Union has important political stakes in the area and the strength to defend them. Moscow has warned Peking to halt provocations or face a decisive rebuff.
No immediate clash is anticipate between the two Communist giants, according to diplomatic sources. But Moscow apparently is taking precautionary measures to discourage any possible "adventurist" moves.
Diplomatic sources said Moscow would be prepared for forceful counter-action should there be further Chinese violations of the border which extends through the vast wastes of Central Asia and often is poorly delineated.
UNCONFIRMED REPORTS have circulated in diplomatic circles that the Soviets may be shifting some of their troops from East Germany to the Chinese border. There have been no discernible signs of a major troop movement, however.
The Soviets have 22 fully equipped divisions in East Germany and reports have mentioned movement of a few divisions. The reports coincided with recent Soviet suggestions that both East and West thin out their troop strength in Central Europe.
The border troubles followed publication by the Peking regime of old maps on which territory now held by the Soviet Union was alleged to have been seized by Czarist Russia. One of the main areas is that around Vladivostok, the main Soviet naval base in the Far East.
In July, the Soviet staged what was termed by experts as unprecedented show of naval power in the Far East when for the first time it celebrated Navy Day off the port of Vladivostok. On that occasion the admiral of the fleet S. G. Gorshkov, commander-in-chief of the Soviet navy, reviewed a display of powerful surface ships and rocket-equipped submarines.
DIPLOMATIC REPORTS said some of the units sent into the Vladivostok area have remained and other surface ships equipped with guided missiles, and submarines have joined them.
Communist China's navy consists mainly of small craft so the Soviet reinforcements are considered largely for demonstrative purposes to impress the Asians.
Men Questioned in Bombings
BIRMINGHAM—(UPI)Two suspects being held in connection with recent racial bombings in this steel city undergo further questioning today by state investigators.
State authorities have kept secret details of the arrests of the two suspects and results of earlier questioning.
The suspects, both with Ku Klux Klan backgrounds, underwent questioning by state investigators yesterday at the city jail.
Col. Al Lingo, head of the state police, identified the men arrested Sunday night, as R. E. Chambliss, 59, and Charles Cagle, 22, both of the Birmingham area.
The worst of the bombings on Sept. 15, killed four Negro girls in the 16th Street Baptist Church. The city has had 23 bombings since 1956 and none have been solved.
The arrests came as a surprise to local authorities, but police chief Jamie Moore said "We have been aware of some of the suspects questioned by state investigators and had knowledge of their activities."
However, Moore said the authorities did not have enough evidence on any of them for a conviction.
Negro leader Martin Luther King Jr. said yesterday that possible progress in the investigation of the bombings eliminated the necessity for immediate racial demonstrations.
Sooners Move Back on Top
A decade ago, the University of Oklahoma was the New York Yankees of college football, winning national championships like the Yankees win World Series.
Five years ago, the Sooners did a most un-Yankee-like thing. They started losing. This year all is well and Oklahoma is once again the No.1 football team in the nation.
Yesterday, the Sooners were named the top team in the country in both the Associated Press and United Press International polls following Saturday's 17-12 victory over last year's national champions. Southern California. The defending Big Eight champs have this weekend off, but they play the University of Texas a week from Saturday. Texas is ranked third.
Three other Big Eight teams were mentioned in the season's (Continued on page 12)
Daily hansan
61st Year. No.13
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Tuesday, Oct. 1, 1963
Valachi Tells Senators About Gangland Scheme
WASHINGTON—(UPI) —Underworld informer Joseph Valachi said today that jailer Cosa Nostra leader Vito Genovese still has gambling interests in Las Vegas, Nev., in association with gambler Meyer Lansky.
Valachi also told of gangland murders in a struggle for control of New York mobs as he resumed his testimony before the senate investigations subcommittee.
The subcommittee unveiled a master chart naming the leaders of New York's notorious five families which allegedly dominate the rackets in that city.
It said Genovese, Carlo Gambino, Guiseppe (Joe) Magliocco, Joseph
Bonanno and Gaetano Lucchese now control the underworld with the aid of seven underbosses.
Sen. Jacob Javits, R-N.Y., recalled that Valachi testified Friday that Genovese, now serving a 15-year term for narcotics violations at the federal prison in Leavenworth, had interests in Las Vegas.
Valachi also said that a rumor circulated in his gang that Abe Reles, a witness against Genovese who was being held in protective custody more than 10 years ago, was thrown out of a hotel window by police who were guarding him.
The boys talked about it, Valachi said. I believed it.
Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy said
Ring Or Not To Ring That 's The Question
The crowd roars; arms wave; Gale Sayers crosses the goal line for a touchdown against Syracuse. But missing from this enthusiasm Saturday was the familiar gong from the big bell at the north end of Memorial Stadium.
The bell was rented by Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity and has been used to gong out KU touchdowns and field goals several seasons.
Arthur C., (Duteh) Lonborg, director of athletics, said he doubted the bell would be placed on the field for future games. Law enforcement officers have decided it would be better no to have it on the field, he said.
Lonborg said the decision was made mainly because of a fight over the bell at the Nebraska-KU game here last year which Nebraska won, 40-16
Exuberant Nebraska fans rushed on the field several times to ring the bell when Nebraska scored. KU fans, defending the bell, challenged the
Nebraska fans to a fight that was broken up by police.
"We want to avoid fights if we can." Lonborg said.
William R. Lennard, Ottawa senior and TKE president, said the bell's frame was broken when it was moved from the field for the summer, but it had been fixed.
The University had assured the TKE's twice the bell would be moved to the field for last Saturday's game. Lennard said.
Members of the fraternity and Lonborg were to meet today to discuss the matter.
Lennard said the bell cost the TKEs $60 annually and the bill has already been paid for the season.
"We're trying to get it back on the field," Lennard said he felt the bell was a real spirit builder.
Neither Lennard or Lonborg are sure where the bell is now, but they think it is probably still in the stadium.
meantime that the government plans to use Valachi later as a witness in federal criminal trials against certain leaders of organized crime.
The attorney general, who opened the hearings last week by warning that Cosa Nostra is a powerful invisible government with a multimillion dollar income, declined to specify the cases in which Valachi would be used.
But he made clear in an interview with UPI that he hoped the testimony of the confessed killer and convicted narcotics peddler would help send some of his former cohorts to prison
The red-blue-and-green chart unveiled by the subcommittee showed a series of gangland assassinations dating back to 1930.
Valachi told how he joined Cosa Nostra after stealing was getting tough in New York when police began using radios and street lights were turned on all night.
He said he was talked into joining the Maran Ano group by Bobby Doyle, alias Girolamo Santuccio, and a man he called The Gap whose real name was Dominick Petrelli.
As Valachi resumed his testimony, the caucus room was as crowded as on Friday. Police said U.S. marshals were spotted throughout the spectator area as a security precaution for Valachi, who is said to have a $100,000 price on his head.
Valachi dealt in considerable detail with his New York City criminal activities before he joined Costa Nostra. He said he first learned of murder-for-hire while serving a 44-month sentence in Sing Sing in the mid-1920s.
BULLETIN
The English Proficiency examination will not be given tonight, as indicated on the IBM cards. The examination will be given Oct. 10. The Registrar's office said the IBM machines left off the zero when the class cards were printed.
'Noise' Shrugged Off
Quake Awoke KU Professor
By Don Black
It had been an ordinary day. Herbert Galton had a busy day meeting people and doing research for his book on Slavic languages and literature.
He grew tired and went to bed early to rest for another day.
At 5:17 a.m., an earthquake struck Skopie, Yugoslavia. The KU associate professor of Slavic languages and literature was awakened by a noise. He thought perhaps a nearby structure had fallen—a common occurrence—and he merely pulled up the covers and went back to sleep.
Later in the morning of July 26 he awoke and noticed the full impact of the earthquake.
"IT WAS EXACTLY like you could imagine it to be," Prof. Galton said. "People were crushed and mangled, dead mothers were still holding their live children. It was horrible, a tragedy."
Prof. Galton returned recently (Continued on page 12)
Weather
Fair skies will prevail in the KU area through tomorrow. Not much change in temperatures is expected tonight or tomorrow. The low tonight will be in the 50s and the high tomorrow will range in the mid to upper 80s, the weather bureau said.
TREVANT
HERBERT GALTON, associate professor of Slavic languages recalls to his wife his experiences in Skopje, Yugoslavia. Prof. Galton was asleep in the city at the time of the earthquake there in July.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Oct.1, 1963
The Human Rights Report
(Editor's note: Printed below is a condensed version of the report submitted by the Human Rights Committee. No attempt has been made to interpret the report, except in cases where interpretation was supplied by the Committee.
In the full report, fraternity and sorority responses were tabulated separately, as were responses from large dormitory men and large dormitory women. These have been combined in the version below.
General attitude:
I would be willing to admit members of the following groups: (1) To close kinship by marriage; (2) To my club or fraternity as personal friends; (3) To my living group but not necessarily as close friends; (4) To a classroom of about 30 participants; (5) Would bar from the University; (NA) No Answer.
The top lines for each classification is per cent; the second line is the number of replies for each answer.
English
| English |
|---|
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | NA |
|---|
| All Students (304) | 95% | 3% | 0% | 0% | 0% | 1% |
| 291 | 9 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 3 |
| Apts. and Boarding Houses (58) | 91 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 6 |
| 53 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 3 |
| Fraternities & Sororities (68) | 100 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| 68 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Large Res. Halls (81) | 98 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| 79 | 2 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Married Students (55) | 95 | 5 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| 52 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Italian
| Istanbul |
|---|
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | NA |
|---|
| All Students (304) | 62% | 21% | 10% | 5% | 0% | 1% |
| 92 | 64 | 31 | 14 | 0 | 3 |
| Apts. & Boarding Houses (58) | 69 | 14 | 10 | 3 | 0 | 3 |
| 40 | 8 | 6 | 2 | 0 | 2 |
| Fraternities and Sororities (68) | 35 | 34 | 13 | 16 | 0 | 1 |
| 24 | 23 | 9 | 11 | 0 | 1 |
| Large Res. | 72 | 14 | 14 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| Halls (81) | 58 | 11 | 11 | 1 | 0 | 0 |
| Married | 69 | 22 | 9 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Students (55) | 38 | 12 | 5 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Negro
| Negro |
|---|
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 |
|---|
| All Students (304) | 16% | 39% | 21% | 19% | 3% | 1% |
| 49 | 120 | 64 | 59 | 8 | 4 |
| Apts. and Boarding Houses (58) | 29 | 34 | 12 | 19 | 0 | 0 |
| Fraternities & Sororities (68) | 17 | 20 | 7 | 11 | 0 | 3 |
| 1 | 29 | 16 | 49 | 3 | 1 |
| Large Res. Halls (81) | 12 | 44 | 37 | 4 | 2 | 0 |
| 10 | 36 | 30 | 3 | 2 | 0 |
| Married | 15 | 44 | 22 | 18 | 2 | 0 |
| Students | 8 | 24 | 12 | 10 | 1 | 0 |
Japanese
| All Students (304) | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | NA |
|---|
| 33% | 34% | 20% | 11% | 1% | 1% |
|---|
| 100 | 103 | 61 | 34 | 2 | 4 |
|---|
| Apts. and Boarding Houses (58) | 43 | 26 | 14 | 21 | 0 | 5 |
| 25 | 16 | 8 | 6 | 0 | 3 |
| Fraternities and Sororities (68) | 16 | 26 | 25 | 29 | 0 | 3 |
| 11 | 18 | 17 | 20 | 0 | 2 |
| Large Res. Halls (81) | 30 | 42 | 25 | 4 | 0 | 0 |
| 24 | 34 | 20 | 3 | 0 | 0 |
| Married | 40 | 31 | 18 | 9 | 0 | 2 |
| Students | 22 | 17 | 10 | 5 | 0 | 1 |
There is obviously significant discrimination on the basis of ethnic or racial group in marriage and close friendship. Japanese are significantly less accepted than Italians, and Negroes are significantly less accepted than the other three groups. However, these generalizations do not hold for each set of responses and it is impossible to summarize the grids completely.
Question I: It is best that Negroes have their own fraternities and sororites since they have their own particular attitudes and interests which they can best engage in together.
(SA) Strongly Agree; (A) Agree; (U) Uncertain;
(D) Disagree; (SD) Strongly Disagree; (NA) No Answer.
| All Students (304) | SA | A | U | D | SD | NA |
|---|
| 19% | 35% | 11% | 19% | 13% | 2% |
|---|
| 59 | 107 | 34 | 58 | 39 | 7 |
|---|
| Apts. and Boarding Houses (58) | 19 | 29 | 9 | 22 | 19 | 2 |
| 11 | 17 | 5 | 13 | 11 | 1 |
| Fraternities and Sororities (68) | 26 | 51 | 9 | 9 | 4 | 0 |
| 18 | 35 | 6 | 6 | 3 | 0 |
| Large Res. Halls (81) | 15 | 35 | 14 | 22 | 12 | 2 |
| 12 | 28 | 11 | 18 | 10 | 2 |
| Married | 24 | 25 | 15 | 18 | 15 | 4 |
| Students (55) | 13 | 14 | 8 | 10 | 8 | 2 |
As would be expected, fraternity and sorority members are most in favor of the present situation, although no significant group of KU students is particularly opposed.
Question 2. In my opinion, it is in poor taste for a white girl at KU to date a Negro boy.
| | SA | A | U | D | SD | NA |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| All Students | 45% | 22% | 10% | 11% | 11% | 1% |
| (304) | 136 | 68 | 30 | 34 | 34 | 2 |
Apts. and Boarding Houses (58) 38 17 10 14 19 2
22 10 6 8 11 1
Fraternities and Sororities (68) 60 25 9 3 3 3
41 17 6 2 2 0
Large Residence 41 30 7 11 10 1
Halls (81) 33 24 6 9 8 1
Married 47 22 5 13 13 0
Students 26 12 3 7 7 0
A substantial majority of KU students regard interracial dating as poor taste. The variations in the groups provide an interesting comment on student concepts of good taste.
Question 3. In my opinion, it is all right for owners of apartments and boarding houses offering service to KU students to refuse service to Negro students if they wish.
| SA | A | U | D | SD | NA |
|---|
| All Students (304) | 18% 55 | 26% 79 | 8% 24 | 20% 61 | 27% 83 | 1% 2 |
|---|
| Apts. and Boarding Houses (58) | 19 | 22 | 9 | 24 | 26 | 0 |
| Fraternities and Sororities (68) | 24 | 34 | 10 | 19 | 13 | 0 |
| Large Residence Halls (81) | 16 | 23 | 7 | 13 | 9 | 0 |
| Married Students (55) | 22 | 27 | 4 | 20 | 27 | 0 |
The general population of KU students is almost exactly evenly divided on this question. Fraternity and sorority students agree with the statement significantly more strongly than other students but neither opinion is significantly dominant.
Question 4. In my opinion, it is wrong for Negroes and whites to intermarry.
| All Students (304) | SA | A | U | D | SD | NA |
|---|
| 41% | 24% | 9% | 15% | 12% | 0% |
|---|
| 124 | 72 | 27 | 45 | 35 | 1 |
|---|
| Apts. and Boarding Houses (58) | 36 | 16 | 10 | 16 | 22 | 0 |
| 21 | 9 | 6 | 9 | 13 | 0 |
| Fraternities and Sororities (68) | 47 | 32 | 6 | 12 | 3 | 0 |
| 32 | 22 | 4 | 8 | 2 | 0 |
| Large Residence Halls (81) | 43 | 25 | 11 | 12 | 7 | 1 |
| 35 | 20 | 9 | 10 | 6 | 1 |
| Married | 45 | 18 | 7 | 18 | 11 | 0 |
| Students (55) | 25 | 10 | 4 | 10 | 6 | 0 |
The results are indicative of a strong moral opinion against intermarriage. All groups were more than 50% in favor of the proposition.
Question 5. Negroes should be able to go to the same taverns as whites in the Lawrence area. Although no investigations have been undertaken this fall, as of last spring, two Lawrence taverns out of fifteen refused to serve Negroes. Neither of them were normally frequented by students.
| | SA | A | U | D | SD | NA |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| All Students (304) | 39% | 42% | 70% | 6% | 5% | 1% |
| | 119 | 129 | 22 | 18 | 14 | 2 |
| *Apts. and Boarding* houses (58) | 43 | 43 | 3 | 5 | 5 | 0 |
| | 25 | 25 | 2 | 3 | 3 | 0 |
| Fraternities and Sororities (68) | 24 | 51 | 13 | 9 | 3 | 0 |
| | 16 | 35 | 9 | 6 | 2 | 0 |
| Large Residence Halls (81) | 41 | 41 | 9 | 5 | 2 | 2 |
| | 33 | 33 | 7 | 4 | 2 | 2 |
| Married Students (55) | 38 | 44 | 5 | 9 | 4 | 0 |
| | | Figures not given | | | | |
Question 6. I would be disappointed to discover that I had a Negro instructor for a course.
There seemed to be little disagreement on this issue. The race of the students instructor appears to be irrelavant.
| SA | A | U | D | SD | NA |
|---|
| All Students (304) | 2% 7 | 4% 12 | 6% 17 | 32% 98 | 55% 167 | 1% 3 |
|---|
| Apts. and Boarding Houses (58) | 0 | 5 | 5 | 29 | 55 | 5 |
| 0 | 3 | 3 | 17 | 32 | 3 |
| Fraternities and Sororities (68) | 0 | 3 | 9 | 44 | 44 | 0 |
| 0 | 2 | 6 | 30 | 30 | 0 |
| Large Residence Halls (81) | 0 | 6 | 1 | 33 | 58 | 1 |
| 0 | 5 | 1 | 27 | 47 | 1 |
| Married Students (55) | 4 | 4 | 11 | 25 | 56 | 0 |
| 2 | 2 | 6 | 14 | 31 | 0 |
The survey indicates overwhelming disagreement with the statement.
Question 7. Negro athletes dominate KU's athletic teams too much.
| | SA | A | U | D | SD | NA |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| All Students | 1% | 7% | 12% | 45% | 34% | 2% |
| (304) | 3 | 22 | 36 | 136 | 102 | 5 |
Apts. and Boarding Houses (58) 0 7 17 47 26 3
0 4 10 27 15 2
Fraternities and Sororities (68) 1 3 16 51 28 0
1 2 11 35 19 0
Large Residence 1 2 15 41 38 2
Halls (81) 1 2 12 33 31 2
Married 0 5 16 44 33 2
Students (55) 0 3 9 24 18 1
Question 8. In my opinion, a Negro should not enter a previously all-white church under ordinary circumstances.
A solid majority disagreed with the test statement Since all churches in Lawrence are integrated, this opinion reflects current practice.
| All Students (304) | SA | A | U | D | SD | NA |
|---|
| 3% 10 | 10% 31 | 12% 37 | 32% 97 | 40% 123 | 2% 2 |
|---|
| Apts. and Boarding Houses (58) | 3 | 17 | 2 | 28 | 45 | 5 |
| 2 | 10 | 1 | 16 | 26 | 3 |
| Fraternities and Sororities (68) | 3 | 9 | 24 | 34 | 31 | 0 |
| 2 | 6 | 16 | 23 | 21 | 0 |
| Large Residence Halls (81) | 2 | 7 | 12 | 30 | 46 | 2 |
| 2 | 6 | 10 | 24 | 37 | 2 |
| Married Students (55) | 4 | 11 | 15 | 33 | 36 | 2 |
| 2 | 6 | 8 | 18 | 20 | 1 |
Question 9. In my opinion, it is in poor taste for a KU girl to date a foreign student:
From Europe
| From Europe |
|---|
| SA 0% | A 1% | U 12% | D 47% | SD 38% | NA 1% |
|---|
| All Students (304) | 1 | 4 | 36 | 142 | 117 | 1 |
| Apts. and Boarding Houses (58) | 2 | 0 | 10 | 40 | 47 | 2 |
| Fraternities and Sororities (63) | 0 | 1 | 16 | 54 | 26 | 1 |
| Large Residence Halls (81) | 0 | 2 | 12 | 49 | 36 | 1 |
| Married Students (55) | 0 | 2 | 11 | 49 | 36 | 2 |
| SA number |
|---|
| SA 18% | A 23% | A 26% | U 17% | D 19% | NA 3% |
|---|
| All Students (304) | 55 | 71 | 61 | 51 | 57 | 9 |
| Apts. and Boarding Houses (58) | 22 | 21 | 9 | 12 | 33 | 3 |
| 13 | 12 | 5 | 7 | 19 | 2 |
| Fraternities and Sororities (68) | 18 | 28 | 29 | 16 | 7 | 0 |
| 12 | 19 | 20 | 11 | 5 | 0 |
| Large Residence | 20 | 30 | 16 | 15 | 17 | 2 |
| Halls (81) | 16 | 24 | 13 | 12 | 14 | 2 |
| Married | 16 | 24 | 24 | 15 | 15 | 7 |
| Students (55) | 9 | 13 | 13 | 8 | 8 | 4 |
From Africa
From the Orient
From the Ordn
All Students (304)
SA A U D SD NA
8% 19% 24% 24% 2%
24 57 73 72 72 2%
Apts. and Boarding Houses (58)
10 19 16 19 34 2
6 11 9 11 20 1
Fraternities and Sororities (68)
7 29 37 16 9 1
5 20 25 11 6 1
Large Residence
Halls (81)
11 30 26 21 22 2
9 24 21 17 18 2
Married
5 20 20 29 22 4
Students (55)
3 11 11 16 12 ?
The survey indicates that while only 1% of the student body thinks it in poor taste to date an European, 41% oppose KU girls dating Africans (37% favor it), and 27% oppose KU girls dating Orientals. Foreign student discrimination is apparently based on race and perhaps cultural factors rather than non-American national origin. All groups were significantly more opposed to a KU girl dating an American Negro than an African.
Question 10. Dealing with racial discrimination in Lawrence taverns is the responsibility of: (a) KU administration; (b) Lawrence city government; (c) the All Student Council; (d) individual students; (e) none of these.
| a | b | c | d | e |
|---|
| All Students (304) | 19% | 66% | 27% | 33% | 26% |
| 58 | 201 | 82 | 101 | 80 |
| Apartments and Boarding Houses (58) | 26 | 57 | 31 | 41 | 22 |
| 15 | 33 | 18 | 24- | 13 |
| Fraternities and Sororities (68) | 10 | 68 | 26 | 23 | 31 |
| 7 | 46 | 18 | 15 | 21 |
| Large Residence Halls (81) | 17 | 68 | 23 | 35 | 36 |
| 14 | 55 | 19 | 28 | 29 |
| Married Students (55) | 25 | 67 | 24 | 31 | 20 |
| 14 | 37 | 13 | 17 | 11 |
This question response indicates that, for all groups listed, only the Lawrence city government has the support of a majority of KU students in its efforts to desegregate all Lawrence taverns. A rather significant percentage of those surveyed (26%) favor no action.
Question 11. The removal of fraternity constitutional clauses which discriminate on the basis of race should be undertaken by: (a) the All Student Council; (b) individual students; (c) KU administration; (d) the Interfraternity Council; (e) the fraternity having the clause; (f) none of these.
$ \mathrm{l e m s}^{Q'} $
H
A stude
| | a | b | c | d | e | f |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| All. Students (304) | 19% | 16% | 25% | 40% | 73% | 11% |
| | 59 | 48 | 77 | 120 | 222 | 32 |
| Apts. and Boarding Houses (58) | 24 | 19 | 33 | 48 | 69 | 17 |
| | 14 | 11 | 19 | 28 | 40 | 10 |
| Fraternities and Sororities (68) | 4 | 7 | 12 | 24 | 72 | 15 |
| | 3 | 5 | 8 | 16 | 49 | 10 |
| Large Residence Halls (81) | 21 | 15 | 27 | 42 | 79 | 7 |
| | 17 | 12 | 22 | 34 | 64 | 6 |
| Married Students (55) | 18 | 18 | 27 | 38 | 71 | 7 |
| | 18 | 10 | 15 | 21 | 39 | 4 |
(Continued on page 3)
Human Rights Committee--gaslight tavern
(Continued from page 2)
Question 12. In my opinion, there are serious problems of discrimination against foreign students at KU.
| SA | A | U | D | SD | NA |
|---|
All Students (304) | 4% | 14% | 27% | 43% | 11% | 1% |
| 11 | 44 | 83 | 130 | 33 | 1 |
| Apts. and Boarding Houses (58) | 3 | 10 | 22 | 48 | 14 | 2 |
| 2 | 6 | 13 | 28 | 8 | 1 |
| Fraternities and Sororities (68) | 1 | 19 | 21 | 44 | 15 | 0 |
| 1 | 13 | 14 | 30 | 10 | 0 |
| Large Residence | 2 | 17 | 27 | 41 | 12 | 0 |
| Halls (81) | 2 | 14 | 22 | 33 | 10 | 0 |
| Married | 5 | 11 | 44 | 29 | 7 | 4 |
| Students (55) | 3 | 6 | 24 | 16 | 4 | 2 |
Page 3
Apparently, in the opinion of most students, foreign student discrimination is not a problem at KU.
Question 13. In my opinion, an organized effort to increase student awareness of these issues should be made.
| SA | A | U | D | SD | NA |
|---|
| All Students (304) | 22% | 30% | 20% | 20% | 7% | 1% |
| 67 | 91 | 60 | 60 | 22 | 4 |
| Apts. and Boarding Houses (58) | 19 | 29 | 17 | 22 | 10 | 2 |
| 11 | 17 | 10 | 13 | 6 | 1 |
Fraternities and Sororities (68) 13 26 28 21 10 1
9 18 19 14 7 1
Large Residence 21 40 17 20 2 0
Halls (81) 17 32 14 16 2 0
Married 22 24 20 20 11 4
Students (55) 12 13 11 11 6 2
Question 14. In my opinion, a definite "student bill of rights" should be developed by the All Student Council, dealing not only with social issues, but also with academic freedom, student-faculty relations, etc.
Tuesday, Oct. 1, 1963
| SA | A | U | D | SD | NA |
|---|
| All Students (304) | 18% | 26% | 24% | 17% | 13% | 1% |
| 54 | 79 | 74 | 53 | 39 | 3 |
| Apts. and Boarding Houses (58) | 16 | 26 | 24 | 22 | 9 | 3 |
| 9 | 15 | 14 | 13 | 5 | 3 |
| Fraternities and Sororities (68) | 13 | 19 | 28 | 9 | 16 | 0 |
| 9 | 13 | 19 | 6 | 11 | 0 |
| Large Residence | 20 | 35 | 22 | 15 | 9 | 0 |
| Halls (81) | 16 | 28 | 18 | 12 | 7 | 0 |
| Married | 16 | 20 | 27 | 13 | 22 | 2 |
| Students (55) | 9 | 11 | 15 | 7 | 12 | 1 |
Although the survey shows student opinion more inclined to such A.S.C. action than not, it certainly constitutes no clear mandate for sweeping legislation nor an affirmation of student government authority.
BOOK REVIEWS
THE SENATE ESTABLISHMENT, by Joseph S. Clark and other U.S. senators (American Century, $1.50; cloth-bound, $3.50).
This book may become a document of historical importance. It is small, but hard-hitting, with a foreword by James MacGregor Burns, a preface by Sen. Clark (D-Pa.), and a speech by Clark, along with comments by Paul Douglas of Illinois, Proxmire of Wisconsin, Mansfield of Montana, Javits of New York and others.
Clark contends that there is a Senate "establishment," which he says is the "antithesis of democracy." To him there is a kind of power elite that runs the show, and is uninterested in anyone who is not a member of the elite.
Clark says a small minority controls Senate committee appointments, chairman selections, and what legislation will get to the floor. He contends that those who vote wrongly are punished.
This is a book of significant implications, one that should be read by all Americans interested in our political process.
This edition is hailed as the definitive one, for it contains more than 10,000 words not included in the first American edition. These were incorporated by Max Brod, Kafka's friend and literary executor, and they appear in an appendix of uncompleted chapters and deleted passages.
THE TRIAL, by Franz Kafka (Modern Library, $2.45).
Otherwise this is still one of the brilliant works of our time, a novel complex and puzzling to many, and one of the most influential works of the 20th century.
It is a symbolic presentation of the relation between mankind and divine authority, its hero a representation of the modern-day intellectual, frustrated and doomed. His trial begins on his birthday, which starts a lifetime nightmare in which he tries unsuccessfully, to defend himself.
Worth Repeating...
I have seldom seen much ostentation and much learning met together. The sun, rising and declining, makes long shadows; at midday, when he is highest, none at all.Joseph Hall
Now that the Senate has passed the test ban treaty, even the milk tastes fresher.—The Colorado Daily
Youth, though it may lack knowledge, is certainly not devoid of intelligence; it sees through shams with sharp and terrible eyes.—H. L. Mencken
Dailij Hansan
111 Flint Hall
University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1898, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom
University 4-1918, business office
Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service and the University of New York News service; United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $3 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the weekends. Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Oct. 1, 1963
Around the Campus
Plan to Aid Parents
Inquisitive parents who visit the University during Parents' Day. Oct. 12. will have an opportunity this year to direct their questions to a special panel.
Represetantives from various departments of the University will be in the Kansas Union from 10 to 11 a.m. to confer with parents and their sons and daughters.
A second innovation of the annual event will be the University Theatre's production of Eugene O'Neil's "The Emperor Jones" starring Clayton Corbin.
Traditional portions of the program are an All-University open house from 9 to noon including an informal reception at 10 a.m. in the Kansas Union. Buffet luncheons will be served in the organized houses and dormitories.
Parents of new students will be able to purchase tickets for the Kansas-Iowa State football game at a special price of $2.50.
Art Exhibit to Feature Prints
The exhibition opening Oct. 6 at the Museum of Art will be a presentation of graphic work by Pieter Bruegel the Elder.
The show will present more than 70 examples of the engraving style of the 16th century artist.
The artist, Bruegel has often been identified for his depiction of peasants, and the exhibition has examples of these paintings as well as landscapes in the Alps and satirical subjects.
A reception will be held at the opening from 3:00-5:00 p.m.
Women's Rush Orientation Set
Sorority rush registration will be explained at Panhellenic orientation meetings next week.
Three sessions will be Wednesday, Oct. 9, in Fraser Theater. Women from Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall will meet at 7 p.m.; freshmen from Grace Pearson and Corbin Halls at 8 p.m., and upperclass women at 9:30 p.m:
"Every woman who plans to go through rush must attend a meeting," Mrs. J. B. Stroup, Panhellenic adviser, said. "Even a woman who has registered before, or is only considering going through rush, should attend."
Registration for rush will be Oct.15 in the Dean of Women's office.
At the orientation meetings, Panhellenic presidents and executive council members will explain rush procedure. Rush application forms will be distributed.
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Page 5
Merger Promises More KU Drama
KU's two student theater organizations, the University Players and the National Collegiate Players, have merged.
The new group will be called the University of Kansas National Collegiate Players.
NCP President Sylvia Groth, Mayville, N.D. graduate student said:
"UP TO NOW the University Players has been a very active organization with no recognition or national standing. National College Players has had national standing but has not had a large enough membership to do many things. Now we can become a much more vital organization able to sponsor campus-wide activities."
Last spring, National Collegiate Players became a member of the National Association of Honorary Societies.
NCP has been open previously only to students with 60 hours of college credit and a grade-point-average of 1.5. The University Players has had an apprentice system under which anyone who earned five points by assisting or acting in KU productions could become a member.
AS REORGANIZED. KU-NCP
will offer local membership in NCP for students with under 60 hours college credit, associate membership for students, with 60 hours and a grade point average less than 1.5, and initiated membership in the national chapter of NCP for students with 60 hours and a grade point average of 1.5 or better.
"We intend to establish a relationship with Student Union Activities (SUA) to bring more theater to KU." Fisher said.
In the past, University Players has presented one full production on the Experimental Theatre Series each year. The members were responsible for direction, casting, costumes, sets and publicity. Their last four productions were "The Fantasticks," "The Boy Friend," "Tea and Sympathy" and "Desire Under the Elms."
National Collegiate Players last year offered its first production, dramatizations of six J. D. Salinger stories in an evening called "An Actor's Salinger." The production was given two nights to invited audiences in the Experimental Theatre. Their other activities included critiques of other regularly scheduled KU theater productions.
Carnival Queen Hopefuls to Meet
The 30 women chosen queen candidates for the Student Union Activities (SUA) Carnival will meet at a coffee in the English Room of the Student Union at 7:30 tonight.
Mickey Sue Blaine, last year's queen, will talk to the candidates about proper dress and when they should attend the carnival. All contestants will wear name tags and will walk around the ballroom during the carnival before the final judging.
The 30 women are:
Pictures of each of the contestants will go on display in the Union this Saturday.
Margo Vanantwerp, Ginny Wilds,
Sharon Rogers, Hashinger Hall;
Nanne Chalgren, Carruth-O'Leary;
Toppy Yould, Becky Hill, Polly
Williams, Lewis Hall; Beverly
Montgomery, Kay Stonenberg, Barhara Joan Johnson, Corbin Hall;
Karen Wight, Constance Myers,
Jeree Johnson, Gertrude Sellards
Pearson.
Deborah Fowler, Grace Pearson; Bushra Karamen, Watkins; Joan Davis, Douthart Hall; Myrlene Eklund, Miller Hall; Barbara Cooke, Sellards.
Lorelei Richardson, Alpha Chi Omega; Barbara Collister, Alpha Delta Pi; Sandra Sanders, Alpha Omicron Pic; Carolyn Power, Al-
PAYING JOBS IN EUROPE
Grand Duchy of Luxemboug, Oct. 2 1963—The American Student Information Service is accepting applications for summer jobs in Europe. Openings include office jobs, lifeguarding, factory work, shipboard work, child care work, resort and sales work. Wages range to $400 a month.
ASIS also announced that residual funds permit the first 4000 applicants travel grants of $165 each. Interested students should write to Dept. O, ASIS, 22 Ave. de la Liberté, Luxembourg City, Grand Duchy of Luxembourg, requesting the ASIS 24-page prospectus with job selection and travel grant and job applications. Send $1 for the prospectus and airmail postage. The first 8000 inquiries receive a $1 credit towards the new book: Earn, Learn and Travel in Europe.
attending the carnival.
pha Phi; Jan Betts, Chi Omega;
Deborah Galbraith, Delta Delta
Delta; Kristine Bergman, Delta
Gamma; JuJu Schaberg, Gamma
Phia Beta; Lyn Harrington, Kappa
Alpha Theta; Mimi Frink, Kappa
Kappa Gamma; Jill Newburg, Pi
Beta Phi; Susan Higbee, Sigma
Kappa.
The queen will be chosen the night of the carnival, October 12. by the popular vote of the students
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A revised constitution of University Party will be submitted for approval Wednesday at UP's first general assembly meeting of the year.
The meeting will be at 7:00 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
UP Constitution To Be Presented
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Charles Marvin, Lawrence senior and independent co-chairman of UP, said last night that a major change in the constitution would involve representation on the general assembly.
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"We plan to allot additional assembly seats to houses and dorms which sell large numbers of membership cards," Marvin said. "But each affiliated house will have a minimum of two representatives."
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Another proposed constitutional change would place the vice-chairman of the party in charge of Campus Committee meetings. The two co-chairman of UP presently preside over the Campus Committee.
University Daily Kansan
To Fete Jewish Holiday
The members of the Lawrence Hillel Chapter will celebrate the traditional holiday of Sukkoth with an informal dance and program at 8 p.m. Saturday at the Jewish Community Center.
Tuesday, Oct. 1, 1963
DeadlineForQueenNominations Set As Homecoming Approaches
Homecoming is Nov. 2—more than one month away—but the process of choosing the queen and her two attendants has begun.
Nominations are being sought now by the Queen committee. They must be filed by noon, Oct. 8, in the Dean of Women's office.
To be eligible for nomination, a candidate must have attended KU at least one semester, be regularly enrolled this fall semester and be single.
Philip Hartley, associate professor of business administration and Queen Committee chairman, said letters have been mailed to the women's organized houses, telling them of the procedure—one nomination a house except for certain large dormitories.
Any eligible KU woman not a member of an organized house may have her name placed in candidacy by submitting a petition signed by 25 students. Directions for nominating by petition are available in the Dean of Women's office.
Richard H. Benson, associate professor of geology, has been appointed general chairman for this year's homecoming activities.
Reuben McCornack. Abilene senior and student body president, announced the appointments. Other chairmen appointed are:
Vincent Bilotta, Alumni Association field secretary, arangements committee; Robert Montgomery, assistant professor of design, ceremonies committee; Frank Burge, Kansas Union director, Student Union Activities committee; Bruce Linton, professor of journalism, public relations committee; Phillip Hartley, associate professor of business administration, queen committee, and Gerhardt Zuther, assistant professor of English, house decorations committee.
DICK CRAYNE, AN IOWA fullback, kicked a 102-yard punt in a 1934 game against Indiana. He had a 35 mile-an-hour wind at his back at the time.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Law Admissions Test Dates Set
The law school admissions test, which is required of students planning to attend the School of Law, will be given Nov. 9 in Lawrence, Topeka and Kansas City, Mo.
Applications for the Princeton test must be submitted to the Educational Testing Service at Princeton by Oct. 26 with a $12 registration fee. Registration forms are available at the School of Law office and the guidance bureau.
Students planning to attend either of Kansas' two law schools, KU or Washburn, must take the test. The quarterly examination will be given again in February.
Acting Dean of the Pharmacy School, Duane G. Wenzel, suffered a fractured right leg Friday when he fell on a newly waxed floor in Mallot Hall.
Acting Dean Breaks Leg in Fall to Floor
Wenzel has been acting dean since last June when he replaced Dean J. Allen Reese.
He was in good condition at Lawrence Memorial Hospital.
ROCKY MARCIANOA H A M-mered out the best knockout average among heavyweight champions. 878 for 43 kayoes among his 49 straight professional victories.
French Ph.D. exam: 9:30-11:30 a.m.
Oct. 5, 110 Fraser.
Official Bulletin
SNEA Membership Drive, Sept. 30-Oct
4. Pay dues on 1st floor Bailey, 8:30-3:30
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Catholic; Mass: 5 p.m. St. Lawrence
Catholic; Mass: 5 p.m. Stratford. Rosary
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El Ateneo se Reunira miercoles, el Dia 2 de Octubre, a las 4:30 de latard en la sala 12 de Fraser. Se presentan un recital todos estan cordianamente invitados. Todos estan cordianamente invitados.
Quack Club practice for trvouts, 7-9 p.m. Robinson Pool. All K.U. girls eligi-
K. U. Nurses Club, 7 p.m., Fraser Dining Room. Introduction of officers and description of club program and purpose. Catholic Inquiry Class, 7 p.m., St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center, 1915 Stratford Rd. Open to all.
Western Civ. Discussion, 9 p.m. St.
Lakeview Catholic Student Center 1915
Strafford Rd.
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m. 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford. Timely Topics, 7 p.m. St. Lawrence Catholic Hodgenville, 7 p.m. Religion vs. Science "Where Ignorant Armies Clash by Night"—Rev. Brendan Downey, O.S.B.
Civil Rights Council, 7:30 p.m., Kansas Union.
ROGER DAVIS, CHICAGO Bears' offensive guard, raises trains, buys and sells field trail dogs as a hobby when at home in Solon, Ohio.
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Tuesday, Oct. 1, 1963
University Daily Kansan
Page 7
HRC Backs Voluntary Fraternity Integration
(Second of a Three-Part Series)
By Fred Frailey
Administrative pressure forcing fraternities to accept Negroes is not the way to solve discriminatory practices in Greek houses, the chairman of the Human Rights Committee believes.
But Frank Thompson, Iola senior and chairman of the HRC, is quick to say his committee also opposes discriminatory practices that exist in fraternities and sororites at KU.
Thompson's committee introduced a "Declaration of Human Rights" to the ASC last week. The proposed legislation results from a survey
A. W. Kuchler, professor of geography has received a $20,500 grant from the National Science Foundation to prepare an international bibliography of vegetation maps.
Geography Professor Receives Study Aid
The five-year grant will enable Prof. Kuchler to list most, if not all, of the known vegetation maps in the reference work. He will engage the help of collaborators throughout the world.
At present, Pref. Kuchler expects the bibliography to be printed in three volumes. It will be published here.
Prof. Kuchler, on leave in the current academic year, also is preparing a vegetation map of the United States and research papers to be presented at two international congresses of scientists next summer.
made last spring by the HRC on civil rights attitudes of students.
THE BILL outlines a statement of policy on human rights which encompasses almost every aspect of University life.
Because the bill makes only vague reference to the University's present compliance with all but a few of the policy statements, it was returned to the ASC's committee of committees and legislation for style changes. The bill will come before the student governing body again next
The bill will come before the student governing body again next Tuesday.
ONE SIX-SECTION segment of the HRC's bill concerns human rights in student organizations and advocates that:
- The HRC work with organizations having discriminatory clauses in obtaining removal of such restrictions.
- No incoming group whose constitution discriminates on race or national origin be recognized in the University.
- Existing organizations having discriminatory clauses inform prospective members that such restrictions exist.
- Efforts to eliminate discriminatory practices be made through education and moral persuasion by the HRC and individual students.
- The ASC uphold the right of any group to select members without restrictions on race, religion or national origin, but disapprove of forcing a social group to accept any person if it does not wish.
Thompson, who is a fraternity member, says these provisions are realistic because they are "within the realm of possibility" and because they are generally in accord with student feeling as expressed in the HRC's survey.
New Dean to Be Introduced
Joseph W. McGuire, new dean of the KU School of Business, will be presented to the student body for the first time at 7:30 p.m. today in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
The Society for the Advancement of Management (SAM) is sponsoring the program. Dean McGuire will express his impressions and expectations of the School of Business.
But he says the section on ASC disapproval of forcing organizations to accept unwanted persons does not represent approval of discriminatory practices.
"THE BILL MAKES it quite clear that we believe racial discrimination is an injury to persons affected and a detriment to the welfare of our society." Thompson says.
"But to tell a fraternity to pledge a Negro is not the kind of thing we want to do. Neither is it the wish of the student body. As the bill states, we feel it better to end discriminatory practices through persuasion."
Thompson also points out that the bill does not represent an attempt to disrupt fraternity traditions.
"If somebody gets the idea that the HRC wants to eliminate the 'black ball' system or the system of rushing, they are mistaken," he says.
THOMPSON believes a Negro will be pledged in a white fraternity within six years. He says his prediction is based on gradual changes in attitudes of KU students and on impressions gained from talks with fraternity leaders.
"If fraternities are to cooperate with student government in eliminating discriminatory practices, it is only fair that they know our purpose is not the destruction of fraternities but the destruction of discrimination."
"Only a few years ago, almost every fraternity at KU had clauses in their constitutions exempting Negroes from membership," he said. "Now only one fraternity has such a clause. Not many years ago, Jews were widely discriminated against by fraternities. Now they are accepted into most of them.
sonal instead of institutional."
"The real leaders of the fraternity system here want to pledge a qualified Negro into a good fraternity to prove that the discrimination is per-
EVEN IF IT wished, would the ASC have the power to force integration of Greek houses? Thompson doubts that it would.
"Chancellor Wescoe has reminded us that all authority rests eventually with the State Board of Re-
regents. The University administration is not bound to follow the legislation of the ASC, and in turn the administration is responsible to the regents.
"So the authority of the ASC to issue such an ultimatum would be shaky."
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Oct. 1, 1963
Ellsworth Residents Vote Today To Decide MRA Affiliation
Ellsworth Hall residents were voting today whether to join the men's Residence Association, following last night's recommendation by the Ellsworth Congress against affiliation.
The MRA is composed of large men's residence halls Joseph R. Pearson and Templin halls the present members of the organization.
Larry DeMarca, Kansas City, Mo., senior who is president of Ellsworth, said the Congress apparently felt it had not learned enough of the MRA to justify spending the $100 necessary for affiliation. MRA dues are 15 cents each for the 670 men living in Ellsworth.
SHOULD THE Ellsworth Congress recommendation be supported by the residents today, the hall could not join the Association of University Residence Halls, the AURH chairman said last night after learning of the action.
The AURH is a coordinating body formed last year by the MRA, the Men's Scholarship Hall Council and the Inter-Residence Council, a women's residence hall group.
Jim Tschechetelin, Prairie Village junior and AURH chairman, said the MRA should have to approve Ellsworth membership in the AURH.
"So if Ellsworth votes not to join the MRA would have to approve sible for it to join the AURH," Tschechtelin said.
KU Carillon Bells Called Second Best
Ronald Barnes, former KU carilonneur, described the KU carillon bells as second best in America, surpassed only by the bells in the National Cathedral of the Episcopal Church in Washington, D.C.
Barnes is now carillonneur for the National Cathedral.
Barnes received high praise from Washington music critics for the dedication recital of the bells in the National Cathedral.
The music critic of the Washington Post called Barnes "an artist outstanding for his supreme art."
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DeMAREA EXPLAINED that the question being put before Ellsworth residents today concerns approval of the MRA constitution. Approval is necessary before the hall congress can vote to join the group.
The vote of the Ellsworth Congress was 21-5 against recommending affiliation.
to learn more about the MRA." DeMarea said. "They don't want to put out this money until they know what they are spending it for."
"Members of the Congress want
DeMarca said that the large percentage of new students in Ellsworth had some effect on the vote of the Congress again if the hall votes against the MRA constitution today.
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The State Board of Regents meeting here last week decided that the retirement age for teaching faculty at the five state institutions under its jurisdiction will remain at age 70.
Regents Leave Retirement Age at 70
The Board relaxed its previous ruling that administrators must give up their administrative duties at age 65 by permitting the institutions to
request continuance of individuals in their administrative offices on a year-to-year basis until age 70.
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University Daily Kansam
Tuesday, Oct.1, 1963
Page 9
74 35
DON'T WORRY about the KU player in the middle of this wild scramble in the KU-Syracuse game. He's Richard Pratt (74), right tackle, who is KU's heftiest player at 264 pounds. Syracuse players are James Cripps (83), Henry Huettner (63) and Jim Nance (35).
Action Begins Tomorrow in World Series
NEW YORK — (UPI) — Manager Ralph Houk of the Yankees hoped today for the breaks and Skipper Walter Alston of the Dodgers for a healthy Sandy Koufax for the World Series opening tomorrow in Yankee Stadium.
Koufax has been reported suffering from the aftermath of a slight case of the flu.
Houk agrees with Alston that pitching will decide the Series victory.
Although the Yankees are conceded to have more depth in the pitching department, the Dodgers starting trio of Koutafax, Johnny Podres and Don Drysdale and their relief ace, Ron Perranoski, are accorded a slight edge over the Yankees big four. They are starters Ford, Al Downing and Jim Bouton with Hal Reniff the No. 1 man in the bullpen.
Like Koufax, Perranoski has had a touch of the flu.
Podres, who beat the Yankees 2-0 at Yankee Stadium in 1955 to give the Dodgers their first World Series triumph, was hit hard by the Philadelphia Phillies in his final series tune-up Saturday night.
Among his regulars, Alston had a question mark in rookie third baseman Ken McMullen. McMullen reinjured a muscle in his left leg Thursday night, but Alston thinks he will be ready to play tomorrow. If he isn't, he will shift Jim Gilliam to third base and put Rookie Dick Tracewski, a slick fielder but weak hitter, at second.
Alston refused to name a starting lineup until I find out if McMullen will play.
Alston is expected to go with shortstop Maury Wills leading off followed by Gilliam and right fielder Tommy Davis, the National League batting champion.
Big Frank Howard, playing right field will hit in the clean-up spot followed by ex-Yankee Bill Skow-
stop Kubek, second baseman Bobby Richardson, left fielder Tom Tresh, Mantle, Maris, catcher Elston Howard, first baseman Joe Pepitone, third baseman Clete Boyer, and Ford.
ron at first. Centerfielder Willie Davis will bat sixth, followed by catcher Johnny Rosebore, McMullen or Tracewski and Koufax.
Houk named this lineup and batting order for the first game; short-
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Alterations
926 Mass.
VI 3-0501
Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Oct. 1, 1963
Upsets by League Teams Don't Surprise Mitchell
By Roy Miller (Sports Editor)
The professor of international politics, dressed in a wool suit and smoking a pipe, paced back and forth in front of his desk.
He was talking to two of his students. The one wearing a black knit shirt was from Pakistan. The other, wearing a flannel shirt and dark-rimmed glasses, was from Japan.
The professor and his students weren't discussing problems of population in Japan or India's relations with Pakistan.
INSTEAD, THE subject they were discussing was the same one being talked over almost every other place and by almost everyone else—or so it seemed yesterday.
"What happened to Colorado?" cur political science professor asked one of his students.
"I DIDN'T THINK Syracuse would lose to Kansas," the other foreign student added to the discussion.
"Oklahoma really took care of Southern California, didn't they," the student from Pakistan said.
A few minutes later the professor was behind his podium, lecturing on the spiraling arms race.
But his thoughts may have still been on Saturday when Oklahoma upset the No.1 rated team in the nation. Southern California; Missouri knocked off No.8 ranked Arkansas; Nebraska defeated the Big Ten's Minnesota; Iowa State beat Virginia Military Institute (VMI) and KU university.
Most fans and observers seemed surprised by the general success of teams of the Big Eight over the weekend. But only one of the games surprised Jack Mitchell, KU's football coach.
"I PICKED every one of them right." Mitchell said yesterday, in the coaches dressing room in Allen Field House. "I felt Southern California was over-rated.
"And, I've said all along Misc-
courius better than Arkansas.
I am so proud of you. You are a great leader and a great friend. You are the most important person in my life. You are always there for me. You are the best friend I have ever had. You are the one who makes me laugh. You are the one who helps me feel happy. You are the one who makes me smile. You are the one who makes me happy. You are the one who makes me smile. You are the one who makes me happy. You are the one who makes me happy. You are the one who makes me happy. You are the one who makes me happy. You are the one who makes me happy. You are the one who makes me happy. You are the one who makes me happy. You are the one who makes me happy. You are the one who makes me happy. You are the one who makes me happy. You are the one who makes me happy.
souri was better than Arkansas. "The one that really surprised me was our game. That was the biggest upset.
"I'm not saying the Big Eight didn't do a good job. It's just that the league is so strong, it was expected."
ASKED YESTERDAY if his team's victory over the Eastern
68
LOOK OUT BELOW!-Bill Levine,
215-pound guard for Wyoming,
practices before the Cowboys'
game this Saturday with KU.
independent team would boost KU in the league picture, Mitchell said no. He thinks the forecast that places KU fourth in the conference behind Oklahoma, Nebraska and Missouri holds true.
KU travels to Laramie, Wyo.
Saturday for its second meeting
with the University of Wyoming.
The first meeting between the Jay-
hawks and Cowboys here in 1961
ended in a 6-6 score.
passing attack. The Cowboys completed 13 of 24 passing attempts for 185 yards and two touchdowns against Utah State Saturday.
Mitchell said yesterday he is most concerned over Wyoming's
The Cowboys opened their season with a 35-0 victory over Montana State and defeated Utah State Saturday, 21-14.
"Films of the Syracuse game confirmed we had the greatest team effort I've ever seen," Mitchell said. "I don't know how long we can keep it up.
"WYOMING COULD be a shook.
They could be as good as :yracuse.
Utah State was surposed to be as good as Syracuse.
"We don't know whether we're better than Syracuse, or it was luck, a fluke. But, if we're able to give that kind of an effort every week, we'll be hard to beat."
Brian Schweda yesterday regained his starting position at left tackle from Richard Pratt. Bob Robben returned to right end ahead of Larry Fairchild on the second team.
"They scramble like mad on defense and they're quick and fast," Jack Scofield, a KU assistant coach who scouted the Wyoming-Utah State game, said. Scofield said the Cowboys had eight to nine players in on every tackle.
Gale Sayers, KU's right half-back, needs only six yards rushing against Wyoming to become No. 6 on the list of all-time Jayhawk rushers. The pre-season all-America has gained 190 yards in KU's first two games, bringing his career total to 1,315.
Fumble prevention will be emphasized in practices this week, Mitchell said yesterday. The Jayhawks, who lost several key fumbles against Syracuse, lost the ball only seven times all last season on fumbles.
In just two games this season KU fumbles have been recovered six times by opposing players.
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ALLEN'S NEWS 1115 Mass.
Touch Football
There are at least two sure things in Lawrence every fall.
For one, Lawrence High School will win all its football games and finish as the No.1 rated team in the state. And, for another sure thing, Beta Theta Pi fraternity will win the A Hill championship in intramural touch football.
Betas Never Lose
The Betas will be trying for their sixth consecutive championship this year. But, with only three returning lettermen (yes, they even have their own lettermen), the team is taking a wait and see attitude about this year's possibilities.
The Beta's domination doesn't end with the A division. The fraternity's B team will be trying for its fifth consecutive championship.
Bill Geiger, Leavenworth junior, is coach of New York Yankees of KU intramurals. The other returnees besides Geiger are John McCormick, Bartlesville, Okla., senior, and Bob Swan, Topeka senior.
The Betas started their winning ways in 1936 with a title in the B division. Seven A Hill trophies were in the Beta trophy case before the current streak began in 1958.
Geiger attributes the team's success to "full house participation." He said only two members are physical education majors.
The team takes the competition seriously. Try-outs begin during orientation week. Practices are held daily before the season begins Oct. 8 when the Betas play Phi Kappa Theta.
Phi Delta Theta and Sigma Nu jumped off to opening round wins in Fraternity "A" touch football intramurals yesterday.
Robert Mitchum Elsa Martinelli Jack Hawkins RAMPAGE
Starts Saturday GRANADA
Doris Day James Garner "THE THRILL OF IT ALL"
In Color!
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Granada
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The TKE's scored their two-point safety when they caught Trotter in the end zone on one play.
FEDERICO
FELLINI'S
8 1/2
SIGMA NU defeated Phi Kappa Theta, 13-0, on two double passes. Quarterback Jim Foster started both plays, and Mel Howell caught both touchdown passes. Tom Reed tossed one of the scoring passes, and Tom Hunter threw the other.
Starts Sunday!
The Phi Delts defeated Tau Kappa Epsilon, 12-2, on the passing of Dave Trotter. Trotter completed one touchdown pass to Gary Ace, and another to Steve Pine.
VARSITY ARTRACIONS
Butch Schaefer kicked the extra point on the second touchdown.
Foster Hall defeated Templin, 13-2, in Independent "A" play. Chuck Schelb threw both touchdown passes for Foster.
In Fraternity "B" play, Phi Gamma Delta defeated Phi Delta Theta. 6-0, and Phi Kappa Sigma downed Triangle, 25-0.
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University Daily Kansan
Page 11
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
FOR SALE
Antique Trunks — beautifully decorated and lined— makes ideal chests. Must see to appreciate at these prices—$20.00 and $25.00. Call Crestwood 2-0311 Topeka, Kansas or write Louise Johnston, 5424 W. 19th, Topeka, Kansas for appointment.
A few nice Slames kittens—sure to please. Phone VI-013-488. 10-3
Handsome woven wool blanket for sale. Polish import. Vivid colors. 6'8" by 5'. Perfect as a knee rug for games. Call VI 3-8630. 10-3
1958 Edesl, new paint, rebuilt motor.
1960 Edesl, new paint, Call VI 2-9237 motor.
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1962 Buick Special convertible. Call VI 31-9806 after 5 p.m. 13-6 Stouffer. 10-4
1957 MG, good condition, very clean,
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—Phi Kappa Tau. 10-2
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Now's the time, set your Aquariums up. Lots of Beautiful plants. Nice variety of fish. All at reasonable prices. Marty's Fish Bank, 1416 Conn. 10-4
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Olds Special Cornet. Just like new. Call 9-21-286 after 6:00 p.m. 10-3
Small Wurlitzer console piano and bench.
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Austin Healey Sprite, 1963. red, rad. radio,
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New electroliux and a limited number of rebuilt, fully guaranteed. All parts available. Equipment picked up for service and delivered. Frank V. Cox. Local Manager-1904 Barker. Call VI 3-3277.
For Sale by owner—3 bedroom. 1½ story home. Full basement and garage. No assessments, near KU. $12,500. Call VI 3-2957. 10-2
Banio for sale, valued at $50.00 Nancy
present VI2-2420 Leave a message
10-2
1959 Opel—good condition. Call VI 2-3437. 10.1
1959 Jaguar XK-150. New transmission and recent engine overhaul. Car runs perfect and is in top condition. Call 845 Emeline Rd. at VI 3-7522 or see at 845 Emeline Rd.
1946 Plymouth, fair tires, good running condition. Cheap transportation for student. Must sell. $50.00 Call VI 3-8352 after 5:30 p.m. 10-1
Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 1-2901 for free delivery. tf
AUTO LIABILITY INSURANCE, also collision and comp. Most risks covered; under age drivers; scooters; motor bikes; motor cycles; rates avail. Brown Realty Co., Ph. VI 2-0179 — Realtors — $729^{1}$ tf
Typewriter, new and used portables.
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Largest stock in Lawrence at low discount prices. New GE FM RADIO cut to $200.00, GE FM 4 speed record to $269.7 - R-rockenbock cuts to $19.99.
Stereo record albums cut to $1.99 each, in set of 10 albums!
26 'Bicycles at low discount prices! New
28 'Royce Union lightweight cut to
29 'Ford Motor lightweight floor'
Schwinn lightweights—Ray Stoneback's.
299 Mass. St., basement floor. 10-7
To the sports minded and economy minded student—a beautiful maroon, 1962 Jawa motorcycle. Has only 1400 actual miles. Must sacrifice—BIG SAVINGS TO YOU. Call VI 3-4137 and leave name and number. tf
TYPING
Typing: Dissertations theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines; 35 special symbols, carbon ribbon—if desired. Prompt eft service. Cull Mrs. Stuart Glilott VI12-04 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI3-3057.
Typing: Desertations, theses, manuscripts,
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Mr. Dorothy Mary V. 351-357.
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Legal terms. Marsha Goff, VI 3-2577.
Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, B408 W 13th. VI2-1648.
Typing done for students in my home
Call VI 1 -2-2530 after 5 p.m. 10-4
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports, Electric Typewriter. Mrs. Eldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI. 3856-78f
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Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart, 1025 Mass. t
HELP WANTED
Evening. Switchboard and office help.
Weekends. Call V132-5920 for interview.
Good rock and roll vocalist. Contact Dennis, room 703 - Templin Hall. 10-3 ALLOWANCE PROBLEMS? Beat them by selling Custom-Impired Sweatshirts or suits. Custom-Impired Big profits on every sale. Every organization and group on campus is your prospect. Details from Eln Mfg. Co. Dept. (Templein Harbor, Indiana). Men 10-1 Women wanted.
Bookkeeper for Daily Kansan. Call or write Prof. Mel Adams, School of Journalism, Univ. of Kansas. UN 4-3738 or VI 2-0218 after 5:30 p.m. tf
FOR RENT
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Will do paper hanging evenings—reasonable rates. Call VI 3-2906. 10-10
Dressmaking-alterations, formats and
gowns. Ola Smith, 939½ Mastif
V 3-5263
BUSINESS SERVICES
Drip Dry Car Wash with Lubrication & Oil Change BRING THIS COUPON
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Phillips 66
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One bedroom apartment for couple. Private bath and entrance. First floor—clean—near KU. Call VI 3-0554 after 7 p.m. 10-3
One room efficiency apartment, very well furnished—modern and carpeted. First floor. Close to KU and downtown $38.00 per month. monthly calls. Call VI3-6169. 10-1
Looking for fraternal living close to the
mother of your child. Call Jerry after 6 p.m. VI 3-0681 10-1
Nicely furnished apartment, 2 rooms and bath—suitable for 1 or 2 male students. Reasonable rent. 900 block on Indiana. After 5 call VI 3-9027. 10-1
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Vacancies in contemporary home with outside swimming pool for young man. Private entrance, utilities paid, $45.00 per person, cooked dinner if desired. Call VI 3-9633. 10-15
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air-conditioner, near downtown, no pets!
2 bedroom room, boom apartment
for couple, new camper. Cars
IV 3-0545 before 9 m.a. or after 7 p.m. f.
Car pool or riders: Mission, Kansas to KU. My classes run 7:50 to 10:20 daily, would consider 7:30. Call RA 2-1727 after 6 p.m. 10-2
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Ride to and from downtown K C. Mon-
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HA 1-333 and ask for Dorna.
Riders or car pool leave Kansas City 6
Mon Call Joe KRAMS Ch 1-1822
Call Joe KRAMS Ch 1-1822
MISCELLANEOUS
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10-11
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Oct. 1, 1963
Around The World—
(Continued from page 1)
first rankings. Nebraska joined the elite with a tie for tenth, Missouri tied for 16th and KU made the list with three votes, the same as Notre Dame.
Polls Optimistic for Goldwater
NEW YORK—(UPI)—Time magazine published a poll yesterday indicating that "Republican Barry Goldwater could give Kennedy a breathlessly close contest" in the 1964 presidential election.
The Time survey showed 241 electoral votes for the Arizona Republican and 255 for President Kennedy. The pivotal state in such a contest, according to Time's calculations, would be Texas, with 25 electoral votes.
In Texas, the magazine said, the President "could easily beat any other GOP candidate—but against Barry Goldwater, he can only be rated even.
Thus, if Texas went Democratic, Kennedy would have 280 electoral votes.10 more than the 270 needed for a majority.If Texas went for Goldwater, Barry would have 266, with an excellent chance for picking up the necessary additional four from among the Kennedy-hating unpledged electors of Alabama and Mississippi.
In another poll, provided by Goldwater supporters and published yesterday by Newsweek magazine, it was alleged that the Arizonian had 500 of the 655 votes needed for the GOP presidential nomination.
Another 82 votes, according to Newsweek, are leaning toward Goldwater. Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York, the other prime contender for the GOP nomination, was credited with a maximum of 146 definite votes.
A total of 19 states were listed as committed to other GOP candidates or undecided. Newsweek also said that former Sen. William Knowland has promised Goldwater he will have all 86 California votes.
According to Newsweek, Goldwater advisors feel their man will get a majority of the Pennsylvania and Michigan votes, now committed to Govs. William Scranton and George Romney as favorite sons.
This, according to the magazine, would bring Goldwater past the 655 votes needed to capture the GOP presidential nomination.
Democrats to Push Key Bills
WASHINGTON—(UPI)President Kennedy and Democratic Congressional leaders today reaffirmed their determination for Congress to enact both tax cut and civil rights legislation this year.
Following the weekly White House conference between the President and House and Senate leaders, Speaker John W. McCormack told newsmen the President and the leaders agreed that this was a good time to restate their long-term agreement on these two must bills.
Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield told reporters the Democrats' high echelon was speaking out now because of stories that they would only take up the tax bill or the civil rights bill.
Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., had said last weekend that Kennedy would have to choose between a tax cut and a civil rights bill because it would be impossible for Congress to enact both before the end of the year.
(Continued from page 1) from the summer trip and told his wife of the incident in which she had waited for two days to hear news from him.
Quake Awakes KU Professor
"The army was on the spot and evacuated the people," Prof. Galton remarked."There was no need for me to help, so I went looking around."
"I was not particularly worried about him because I thought he had missed it." Mrs. Galton, who stayed in Lawrence, said. "He was supposed to be in Belgrade at the time."
ON JULY 29, a letter from the professor to Mrs. Galton arrived from Skopie, stating that he would be there sometime. It was dated July 22 — two days before the quake.
"Then I started worrying about him," Mrs. Galton said. "I had a feeling about it when I heard of the quake and told the children I wished Father would write."
The same day she sent a telegram to Yugoslavia to the professor to inquire about the disaster and his health. Prof. Galton never received the telegram.
The building in which the professor was staying was left standing after the earthquake. Wash basins were off the walls and ceilings were falling. The building in front and behind the hotel were destroyed.
"YOU COULD STILL see the different floors of the fallen building distinctly separated, all compressed into a small space," the professor said. "All the residents in both buildings perished."
Walking around the city was very dangerous after the quake. the professor explained. Electrical wires were down and pools of water and mounds of dirt were scattered about where a previous flood in November had struck the city.
"You could find no supplies in the city, there was no water, bread lines and much looting was reported." Prof. Galton said. "I heard that the army was shooting the thieves as they came out of the houses with the stolen goods."
EVERY Few HOURS there were still tremors hitting the city. Women were screaming and everything was in chaos. A railroad station collapsed, killing the waiting passengers.
The professor left the same afternoon of the quake. He did not buy a ticket because nobody was there to sell them. He took the first train to Bitola to finish his research.
Indians to Celebrate Gandhi's Birthday
The India Club will celebrate the 94th birthday of Mahatma Gandhi, an Indian leader who brought back India's independence. The celebration will be at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Big 8 Room of the Kansas Union.
Brief talks on Gandhi's life, his philosophy, and his achievements will be given by Indian students.
Election of officers for the fall semester will follow the talks and new members will be initiated.
STATEMENT AS REQUIRED BY ACE OF OCTOBER 23, 1962; SECTION 4369,
SHOWING THE OWNERSHIP MANAGEMENT AND CIRCULATION OF
THE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
September through May; and two week-
ly (Tuesday and Friday) June, July and
August at Lawrence, (Douglas County), Kansas
1. The names and addresses of the pub-
lic managing editor, and business
managers.
Publisher—The University of Kansas,
Publisher—The University of Kansas,
Managing Editor—Michael D. Miller, 1045
Emery Road, Lawrence, Kansas,
West 82nd St., Lawrence, Kansas, 632
25th St., Lawrence, Kansas
2. The owner is 18. The University of
Kansas is 15. Lawrence is 14.
(Daniel County) Kansas
3. Known bondholders, mortgages,
and other security holders owning or
holding *a* per cent or more of total
gamble; mortgages, or other
securities; none.
4. Location of known office of publication—William Allen White School of Law and University of Kansas Funf Hall, University of Kansas, Lawrence (Douglas County) Kansas - 60944
5. Average number of copies of each issue sold or distributed through the mail is 620,000 and subscriber dating the twelve months preceding the date shown above: 7510.
Mel Adams Business Adviser
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Algeria Revolt Gains Momentum
ALGIERS—(UPI)—Col. Mohand Ou El Hadj today called on troops of his 7th Military Region to join his rebel movement against President Ahmed Ben Bella.
From his headquarters at Michelet, one of three opposition strongholds in the Grand Kabylia Berber Region, the 65-year-old veteran of the war for independence issued the appeal at noon (5 a.m. CST).
His latest act of defiance indicated President Ben Bella may have to use force to quell insurgents headed by El Hadj and his ally, Hocine Ait Ahmed, chairman of the clandestine Socialist Forces Front.
The mounting tension between the loyalist and dissident camps caused worry among French authorities for the safety of the 100,000 French residents still living in Algeria.
French Ambassador Georges Gorse flew to Paris for consultations. French authorities said there was no question of halting the gradual repatriation of the remaining French forces.
Last night, Hocine Ait Ahmed told his followers in Michelet: "Resistance to the government will only end with the overthrow of the dictatorship and installation of the democratic regime for which our people fought for seven years.
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Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
61st Year, No. 14
Wednesday, Oct. 2, 1963
BUT HE TESTIFIED that Maranzano told him that the war had to be reexpended shortly before Maranzano — described as the "boss of all bosses" of the New York Syndicate — was murdered.
Valachi Testimony Gives New Leads in Old Cases
Valachi said his faction in the underworld power struggle lost only one "soldier" during the months of warfare that saw "from 40 to 60" of their opponents meet violent deaths.
WASHINGTON—(UPI) —Senate crime investigators were told today that New York authorities are busy checking new leads on gangland murders supplied by Cosa Nostra informer Joseph Valachi.
New York Police Sgt. Ralph Salerno testified that district attorneys in the metropolitan New York area said several cases marked unsolved are now under active investigation again.
VALACHI RESUMED his story of gangland warfare in the 1930's and told how his former underworld boss once placed the notorious Al Capone at the top of a list of marked men.
However, the 60-year-old confessed killer said his boss, Salvatore Maranzano, was slain in his Park Avenue office before the executions could be carried out.
Valachi also told about a mobster who "died of a broken heart" after disgracing himself by showing nervousness after the slaying of gangland boss Guisseppe Masseria.
"He gave me a list and said 'we got to get rid of these people,' " the talkative mobster said.
Names on the list included such notorious figures as Al Capone.
Frank Costello, Charles (Lucky) Luciano, Vito Genovese, Vincent Mangano, Dutch Schultz and Joey Adonis, Valachi said.
Valachi said he warned Maranzo not to keep a final truce talk appointment with Genovese and Luciano.
MARANZO REFUSED. He was shot in his office on the day of that meeting, the stocky witness added.
Earlier, he described how Maranzano called together 400 or 500 members of the crime syndicate, to establish New York's five "families" and name their bosses.
Sandy Koufax Keeps Yankee Bats Silent
RULLETIN
The Los Angeles Dodgers beat the New York Yankees, 5 to 2, in the opening game of the 1963 World Series. Sandy Koufax struck out 15 batters to set a World Series record. Koufax was the winner, and Whitey Ford was the losing pitcher.
NEW YORK — (UPI) — Southpaw Sandy Koufax pitched four perfect innings before yielding the New York Yankees' first hit and struck out 11 batters in the first five innings today as the Los Angeles Dodgers took a 5-0 lead in the opening game of the 1963 World Series.
John Roseboro hit a three-run homer during a four-run second-inning outburst against Whitey Ford to help the Dodgers gain a 4-0 lead.
The Dodgers erupted in their half of the second inning after Koufax had struck out Tony Kubek. Bobby Richardson and Tom Tresh in the first.
Kennedy Nears Decision On Wheat Sale to Soviets
WASHINGTON, (UPI) — President Kennedy, with support from Congressional leaders, appeared near a decision today to permit the sale of U.S. wheat to the Soviet Union.
Senate Democratic whip Hubert H. Humphrey, Minn., predicted the Presidential decision would come within the next two days. He said he favored the deal through private grain channels.
Agriculture Secretary Orville L. Freeman said in Harrisburg, Pa., yesterday that the United States had not been approached by Russia about a possible wheat sale. However, he said this country would be willing to listen to a Soviet proposition.
ALTHOUGH NO direct Soviet overtures have been made to the U.S. government, a Russian trade mission has discussed the possible purchase of U.S. wheat in Ottawa
Wescoe Participates In Education Meeting
James R. Surface, vice chancellor and dean of faculties, is also attending the meeting.
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe flew to Washington, D.C., this morning for a three-day meeting of the American Council of Education.
Chancellor Wescoe has been nominated for a three-year term on the board of directors of the council.
About 2,000 colleges and universities will be represented at the meeting.
"The council will discuss matters of federal legislation which will concern higher education in the future." he said.
ACE representatives testify in Congress on all proposed legislation affecting education, Chancellor Wescoe said.
Democratic Congressional leaders told Kennedy yesterday they would support sales of wheat to Russia and other Soviet bloc nations but not to Fed China.
with private American grain dealers.
Humphrey, one of those who conferred with Kennedy, said he urged the use of private grain grade channels to carry out the transaction instead of government-to-government dealings.
HE TOLD reporters there would be "inevitable political static" if the sales were allowed but that the "best way to handle it is through the private grain trade."
Humphrey said he felt a government-to-government deal would be "a mistake — politically undesirable and economically undesirable."
FORD, WHO HAD retired the Dodgers in the first inning on nine pitches, striking out Maury Wills and Willie Davis, ran into trouble after retiring the first batter in the second.
KENNEDY GAVE the Democratic leaders no indication of what he would do. Humphrey said. However, the Minnesota Democrat added, "It is my guess that the President will act to change the (export) regulations to permit some type of sale."
The initial proposed sale would involve about 115 million bushels, at a sale price of about $200 million, he said.
Big Frank Howard walloped one of Ford's pitches off the center field fence. 457 feet from home plate, for a double. Moose Skowron, a Yankee until this season, then singled to center to score Howard with the first run of the game.
SENATE REPUBLICAN leader Everett M. Dirksen said he had not made up his mind on the wheat sale. He said the plan was discussed at the weekly meeting of the GOP policy committee, but no agreement was reached.
Sentiment in Congress appeared to be building up in favor of the transaction, but some members were strongly opposed.
American Legion commander Daniel F. Foley sent Kennedy a telegram saying the Legion opposed the plan on the grounds that it was contrary to the best interest of he American people.
Young Dick Tracewski, in the Los Angeles lineup because Ken McMullen is injured, followed with a single to center that sent Skowron to second base.
ROSEBORO, A. .236 regular-season hitter, then hit Ford's second pitch into the right field stands, just inside the foul pole. The homer, Roseboro's first in series competition scored Skowron and Tracemski ahead of him.
Weather
It will be generally fair tonight and tomorrow with a slight drop in temperatures.
The five-day forecast calls for cooling tomorrow, warmer on Friday and cool again on Sunday or Monday when a cold front is expected to move in.
Temperatures will average three to six degrees warmer than normal during the next five days.
NAACP Speaker To Announce Plans
Samuel C. Jackson of Topeka, state vice-president of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, will announce the organization's plans for Lawrence and KU at a Civil Rights Council meeting Oct. 9.
The announcement was made by Dennis Bowers, Kansas City senior and CRC co-chairman. Bowers also said the CRC will meet to elect officers at 7:30 p.m., tonight in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
Last semester the CRC worked with Jackson and the NAACP in connection with the University's policy on housing discrimination.
THE NAACP had planned to file suit against KU for housing policies which it had found to be discriminatory. However, before the legal action was taken, the University stopped its policy of listing off-campus houses in which the owner practiced discrimination in renting.
Bowers did not say what action the NAACP was planning this year, but he did anticipate the CRC would investigate the discrimination practices of taverns in the Lawrence area. He said he also hoped through the CRC, the Negro student could gain a more direct communication with the ASC.
"We have found the Negro student at KU feels he is left out when it comes to being properly heard on matters that concern not only his race, but the campus as a whole."
Bowers said, in the future, the CRC plans to work with other civil rights groups in the area. These groups include the NAACP, the Human Rights Committee of the ASC and the Lawrence Human Relations Commission LHRC.
THE REV. MR. H. McMILLAN of the St. Luke African Methodist Episcopal church in Lawrence and head of the local NAACP, said,
"I hope that there will be a harmonious and progressive action taken by both the CRC and the NAACP. I'm sure that something can be worked out.
"Right now, we are moving in the same direction, and it would be nice if we could move forward together.
"Coordination is essential among all the groups that are trying to reach the same goals," said McMillan.
The Rev. McMillen said the executive committee of the Lawrence NAACP will meet soon to attempt strengthening relations with other civil rights groups such as the CRC.
He said in the past communications between the public and the LHRC have not been good.
LAST YEAR THE CRC reported there was definitely discrimination practiced by tavern owners in Lawrence. The LHRC appointed a committee to check the matter, but two months later the CRC said nothing had been done by the commission.
The CRC will again investigate possible discrimination in Lawrence taverns.
"It becomes quite a job," Bowers said. "One week we find that they are not discriminating, then we go in a week later, and they have changed their policy again."
Bowers said once all groups in the area get together, they will be able to pin-point areas where action should be taken.
BOWERS SAID he hoped the Human Rights Committee of the ASC will be able to take definite action since completion of its survey on discrimination at KU.
BARNES
FINALLY, A QUIET SPOT TO STUDY—Beth Reese, Kansas City junior, was not really taking advantage of the quiet by the traffic control station by the Chi Omega fountain, Jayhawk Boule-
Photo by Steve Mangold
Photo by Steve Mangold vard and Campus Road, last night. She had dropped her books coming back from the library and is checking papers she was carrying in her books.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday. Oct. 2. 1963
Wheat to Whom
The problem of surplus wheat in the U.S. has long been a thorn in the nation's side. For nearly 15 years government officials have tried everything reasonable to lessen the grain overflow. They have even tried the unreasonable, such as giving it away.
Now, in the last few days, the U.S. has been presented with the possibility of selling great quantities of surplus wheat besides that which goes to the regular customers, the under-developed countries. Russia, one of the world's largest producing powers, has been beset by crop failures in recent years and the rumor is out that the Soviets may be willing to buy American wheat.
This presents a new problem for U.S. wheat traders and government officials. Whether it is a problem of policy, ethics or loyalty, both interested groups know that a large consumer country like Russia could relieve the U.S. of much of its surplus grain.
AT THE PRESENT the U.S. has a little more than one billion bushels of surplus wheat, which is costing the taxpayers $300 million a year. To aggravate the situation, wheat production in this country averages more than a billion bushels each year. It is estimated that only 600 million bushels are needed for the national security. Then, there is the fact that total domestic and export sales of U.S. wheat in a year equal the same magic number—one billion bushels. In other words, it's similar to shoveling wheat against the wind. No matter what we try, we end up with a billion-bushel surplus.
The men with the shovels, the farmers, also
have been plagued by the surplus problem since around 1949. The trouble is, they don't seem to want to do anything about it—except plant more wheat. Many of the nation's wheat producers who voted in last May's wheat referendum went blindly about the task with only one thought in mind. They saw a chance to rid themselves of the government's shackles on wheat planting.
When the President's program was defeated, the administration said the farmers would be sorry. Remembering that their vote gave them the right of unlimited planting, but also lower prices for the wheat, many producers already have said they are sorry. They are still shoveling against the wind.
NATURALLY, unlimited wheat planting in the U.S. is a strong indication that possible sales to Russia or anyone else must be considered. In fact, the negotiations as such would have to be considered if they were to be with the Soviets.
If the U.S. would sell wheat to Russia on the same cut-rate terms that it does with other countries, then it would cost the taxpayers about $60 million for every 100 million bushels sold. This possibility seems ironic since the cut-rate price of U.S. surplus wheat was intended for countries supposedly on America's side.
In all probability, the U.S. would not make money by selling wheat to the Soviets, but this has not been the object in years of exporting surplus grain anyway. At least the government would be getting rid of quite a load of wheat. Of course, we can always hope that the wind will blow the surplus away.
—Terry Ostmeyer
Keep Teacher Around
It was announced this week that a study is in progress here, the ultimate aim of which is freshman English by correspondence.
English, granted, is an area in which tremendous improvement is needed. A flexible language. English is often the subject of long, drawn-out debates over such things as proper somma placement.
Besides, a working knowledge of English is a prerequisite for all classes, because most use the printed text extensively.
FOR THAT REASON, any attempt or endeavor to upgrade the English standards of college students is welcome.
However, it seems ironic that the promoters of such a program would direct it by taking the teacher out of the classroom.
The proposed system, dubbed the tutor-professor correspondence system, is comparable to graduate study. The tutor-professor would undoubtedly be assigned more than the present number of students. The program would feature correspondence English study during the regular school semester. The obvious advantage is that the professor is on campus for conference.
This is not to imply that a better system of teaching does not exist, and it is a credit to the University that the U.S. Office of Education chose KU in which to invest $32,000 for the experiment.
IN FACT, OTHER methods of teaching have been tried. One such method is educational television and another is called the teaching machine. But educational television and teaching machines have been highly criticized for one primary reason: the close relationship between student and teacher is lost. Such a relationship is essential to a learning atmosphere.
The extreme of the tutor-professor method might be pictured. During any one evening (which is when most students study), the tutor might receive an unanswerable number of phone calls. Then the phone-answering staff would have to be increased—an expensive addition.
The tutor system would, in effect, become comparable to dialing the KU operator and asking advice. Over a period of years, an automatic brain might be built to replace the tutor-professor and his entire staff.
ITWOULD SEEM better, then, to improve the English program by reducing the size of classes and adding more qualified teachers to the staff. A maximum of 10 students should be assigned to freshman English teachers, although that would require much more money for salaries.
The Office of Education may even go beyond the University. Why not begin at the high school level? Upgrade high school standards.
It might be beneficial to separate composition from literature at the high school level. Pressure the schools. Tell them their students must have full command of the language or be flunked out.
It will hurt freshmen badly to have to take a class by correspondence in his first semester here. He is actually trying to adjust to a new way of living. Imagine coming to the University, paying fees, and then doing a semester of research to find the tutor-professor.
Give the freshman a helping, not a hurting hand. Keep the teacher in the classroom.
Willis Henson
TAK CUT
CIVIL RIGHTS
COAULTION
CONGRESSMAN
© 1963 HERBLOCK
THE WASHINGTON POST
"You Mean Help Americans Twice In One Year?"
Liberal Editor's Views Dedicated to Papa
By Tom Coffman
Out of the blackness covering me . . . for the unconquerable soul—yours, college editorialist give thanks.
Frankly, mine is not so unconquerable. I more or less go along with the Kansas crowd, those unkempt farmers and the sons of farmers who have donned neckties.
Those Kansans, they send nothing but Republicans to Congress and nothing but hayseeds to the state legislature. You can find cow manure on the curbstones of Topeka and Methodist churches on every highway and byway.
THOSE KANSANS, they grub for money and each ask God to bless their greed.
It takes courage to be a heretic. No doubt. Papa probably lives in Smathers Junction and reads every line you get into the paper. He will pressure you. My Joe, he went to college and got too big for his pants. Last week he wrote an editorial favoring re-apportionment.
But from the wilderness a voice cries out—the liberal editorialists of the college campus.
The editorial material of the college heretic is without limit. You can slam the John Birch Society, tag the Midwest as a cultural desert, and smear the DAR.
Well, to hell with papa. He symbolizes the ignorant past.
NOW TRY SOMETHING really original. Write that we should allow Russians to speak on campus and protest that Kansas Indians are not treated as equals. Your courage is overwhelming. The justice you preach is without flaw.
As I see it, the catch to the enlightened campus editorial writer—the heretic—is that his main audience, his fellow students, are clustered around, nodding assent and trying to forget that they too are from Valley Brook or Smathers Junction. It is easy for him to rap Papa back home with bookish sureness, especially when he probably does not plan on returning to cope with the much talked-about provincial ills, to pick the hayseeds off his boyhood pals.
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SENTIMENTAL EDUCATION, by Gustave Flaubert (Everyman's Library).
In the eyes of many readers, "Sentimental Education" is a work even more important than the focal novel, "Madame Bovary." Without question it is a basically unflawed tale that merits an important literary position.
Flaubert's hero can be compared with either his heroine, Emma Bovary, or with Stendhal's youth from the provinces in "The Red and the Black." For Flaubert depicts here, in a satire of dilettantes, intellectuals and revolutionists in 1848, a young man and his romantic, and grasping at times, adventures. The title refers to the youth's essential unequipment for life, a failure based on the overromantic reading which had conditioned him.
THE POLITICOS, by Matthew Josephson (Harvest, $2.95).
Though historical sentiment seems to have shifted away from the kind of attack Matthew Josephson characteristically makes on men and morals of the Gilded Age, his books—this one and "The Robber Barons"—remain valid. This is an excellent history, one which will anger some readers, but chiefly just the uninformed and prejudiced.
There is a set of knaves depicted here as soundrelly as the buccaneers who were Josephson's hero-villians in the other work. These are the politicians, and Josephson hopes his book will instruct us in examining the politicians of our own day.
It is quite a set displayed here—Grant and the spoilsmen, the Republican radicals, Blaine, Cleveland, the bosses, the Populists and Bryan. This is a lively story of the age of the Great Barbecue.
Page 3
Rising Texas GOP's May Turn '64 Race
By Patrick Conway
DALLAS (UPI)—Once an unheeded minority, Texas Republicans could be the turning point vote in any 1964 presidential victory by Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz.
For years Texas conservatives have labeled themselves Democrats and controlled the state party. Democratic liberals have been out of power in Texas since the middle 1930's.
But the mere mention of Goldwater as the GOP presidential nominee in 1964 has sent thousands of conservatives into a booming Republican party in Texas.
The Texas Republican party was just getting started then. Today, under vigorous leadership, it is making big plans for strong campaigns at all levels.
EVEN WITH Lyndon B. Johnson on the Democratic ticket, Richard Nixon missed carrying Texas by a scant 40,000 votes in 1960.
GOV. JOHN CONNALLY. President Kennedy's first secretary of the navy and a close ally of Vice President Johnson, held a big secret political meeting Sunday at the governor's mansion in Austin.
Since 1961, the party has elected Sen. John Tower, Rep. Ed Foreman, and sent nine representatives to the almost traditionally Democratic state legislature.
Republican success has conservative Democrats worried, and Liberal Democrats disturbed.
But there can be little doubt that the way Republicans are sapping conservative strength from the Democratic party was a key topic.
A Connally aide said some 45 supporters attended, but refused to comment on what was discussed.
Goldwater may inadvertently help Texas liberals regain state party control. It all hinges on whether the GOP stages a presidential preference referendum during the party primary next spring.
TEXAS GOP CHAIRMAN Peter O'Donnell of Dallas heads the national "Draft Goldwater" movement, and top Republican sources say he has decreed there will be a referendum.
Thousands of Texas conservatives would flock to the GOP primary to endorse Goldwater. This could lead to a liberal victory in the Democratic primary.
Young Houston Attorney Don Yarborough, who was defeated by Connally in the last Democratic primary by 25,000 votes would stand a strong chance of winning the party's nomination for governor.
The Texas GOP would love this. Republicans believe that with Gold-water on the national ticket they can whip the Democrats almost down the line for state offices in the general election.
THE GOLDWATER BOOM In Texas is almost deafening, but it
Star Photo Editor To Talk Tomorrow
Ayers Blocher Jr., picture editor of the Kansas City Star, is the featured guest instructor of the 45th annual high school journalism conference tomorrow.
University Daily Kansan
Blocher will talk to both the newspaper and yearbook sections of the conference, which will meet in the Kansas Union.
The one-day conference is sponsored by the KU journalism school in co-operation with the Kansas State High School Activities Association.
ABOUT 350 HIGH school students are expected from northeast Kansas, said Burton W. Marvin, dean of the William Allen White school of journalism.
Dean Marvin will open the newspaper section of the conference with a discussion of the functions of the high school newspaper.
Pending before a federal court is a GOP suit demanding congressional redistricting. The court may decide to throw all 23 Texas congressional seats to election at large.
isn't the only thing that worries conservative Democrats.
Oscar M. Haugh, professor of the school of education, will begin the yearbook section of the meeting emphasizing the purposes of high school yearbooks.
At worst, the Republicans could lose only two places in an at-large election. Democrats would risk all of the 21 seats they now hold.
The idea of a Republican preferential vote strikes liberal Democrats as a mixed blessing.
But there is also the strong chance that they would lose the general election and the 25 presidential electoral votes Kennedy may vitally need for re-election.
THEY KNOW they have a strong chance of recapturing the state party from the conservative-moderate element long dominated by Johnson.
KU journalism professors and instructors will lead the sessions in their areas of specialization.
A lot depends upon how strong a new Democratic coalition becomes. It is composed of organized labor, independent liberals, loyalist Democrats, Negroes and Latin Americans.
Texas will vote Nov. 9 on whether to abolish the state poll tax of $1.50 as a voting requirement and substitute a 25-cent registration free.
IF THE REFERENDUM carries it could go a long way for a liberal Democratic victory in long-conservative Texas, because thousands of minority voters could afford the 25-cent fee, where in the past they have shied away from the $1.50 poll tax.
Democratic party leaders have endorsed repeal of the poll tax. Republicans were silent on the issue at a recent state committee meeting in Corpus Christi.
tion fee.
Surveys by national magazines show Goldwater the top contender for the presidential nomination.
"If Texas went democratic Kennedy would have 280 electoral votes, 10 more than the 270 needed for a majority." Time magazine said. "If Texas went for Goldwater, Barry would have 266 with an excellent chance for picking up more than the necessary additional four from among the Kennedy-hating unpledged electors of Alabama and Mississippi."
Freshman Organist Brings Own Equipment
Many college men bring equipment to school to further their hobby interests. Be it water skis or baseball and bat, guitar or hi fidelity phonograph, none of it is usually very unusual.
Russell Nesseth, Kansas City Mo., freshman and a pre-engineering student, is an exception to the rule.
The men of Joseph R. Pearson Residence Hall were pleasantly surprised recently when they heard the vibrant tones of Nesseth's organ emanating from the building's first floor lounge.
Nesseth, who at 18 years of age has been playing the organ since he was 8, said that "it's just a hobby."
With a $1,700 value, Nesseth's 350 pound organ provides a rather unusual hobby.
Tickets went on sale today for the "Emperor Jones," play of the University Theatre season.
'Emperor Jones' Tickets For Sale
The play, by Eugene O'Neill, stars Clayton Corbin in the title role of Brutus Jones. It will run from Oct. 9-12.
Student I.D. card exchanges and are being handled at the Murphy Hall box office. Tickets may also be purchased at the Kansas Union hostess desk and from the Bell Music Co., 925 Massachusetts. Tickets at the latter locations are for cash sales, not student exchange.
TICKET PRICES remain the same this year, at $2.40, $1.80 and $1.20.
Last year student seating consisted of only the last two rows of the main floor and of the balcony. To sit elsewhere students had to pay the difference between a $1.20 seat the seat they wanted. Now six additional main floor rows and half the mezzanine are available to I.D. card holders.
Student ID, exchange seating has been expanded this year to include more main floor seating, at no additional cost. These seats will be dispensed on a "first-come, first-served basis.
"THE EMPEROR JONES" will be followed on Oct, 17-19 by Steuen Vincent Benet's "John Brown's Body." The next major production will be Puccini's "Madame Butterfly" on Nov. 1, 2, 8 and 9.
NEW APARTMENTS
$75.00 and $85.00
One or Two Bedrooms
We are presently decorating these units. Tenants renting now may select wall colors..drapes...etc.
All Units Air Conditioned. Carpeted and Have Disposals. Provincial Furniture Available.
PARK PLAZA SOUTH
Ph. V12-3416 1912 W. 25th Day or Night
Human Rights Bills Combined
The human rights bill presented to the All Student Council last week was made an amendment to an earlier bill last night by the Committee of Committees and Legislation of the ASC.
Provisions of that former bill remain the same, with several stylistic changes.
Greg Turner, Seattle, Wash., senior and committee chairman, said the group voted to combine the proposed bill with the existing legislation because both concern human rights.
"The older bill is a short one,
which says merely that the ASC is opposed to any group which discriminates racially," Turner said. "We felt there was no need to have two bills in force which concern the same issue."
The bill—entitled "Declaration of Human Rights"—was submitted to the ASC by the Human Rights Committee as a statement of policy for KU. The bill was sent back to the Committee of Committees and Legislation for rewording to clarify the fact that most of the declaration is now being observed by the University.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, Oct. 2, 1963
Bookstore Sales Boom Even on Unlucky Days
By Charles Corcoran
Don't let anyone tell you that Friday the 13th is not an unlucky day-at least in regard to students' pocketbooks.
Seniors who missed the early distribution of the sweatshirts and buttons can get them Oct. 23.
Seniors To Receive Sweatshirts Oct.23
Geologist to Return to KU
Prof. Dort is now on leave to the Earth Science Curriculum Project in Boulder, Colo. The project involves developing educational material for earth science study in high schools.
Wakefield Dort Jr., associate professor of geology, will return to KU this spring to resume his teaching duties.
Jerry Pullins, senior class president, said an early shipment of 500 shirts came and were passed out this week. The bulk of the order will be given out at 9:30 a.m. Oct. 23 in the Student Union ballroom.
Prof. Dort is developing an annotated directory, evaluating earth science motion pictures and preparing teacher's guides and texts about the geological significance of aerial photographs.
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
OFFER GOOD THROUGH OCTOBER 12, 1963
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Men's or Ladies' 2-Piece SUITS
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When asked how much money is in the expansion fund, Stoner said there was "not enough to buy and I a cup of coffee. A cash register costs more than a low-priced automobile.
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MEMBERSHIP MEETING
PEOPLE-TO-PEOPLE Everyone Invited
7:30 p.m.- Thurs day Oct. 3rd
Student Union Ballroom
University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Radiation Estimates Disputed By AEC
Wednesday, Oct. 2, 1963
WASHINGTON - (UPI) - The Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) has disputed recent estimates by non-government scientists that thousands of children have been exposed to excessive doses of radiation as a result of atomic tests in Nevada.
THE AEC's statements were contained in an eight-page letter sent to the Joint Committee on Atomic Energy, last week. During the committee hearings in August, questions were raised about the rate of fallout from the Nevada tests and its effects on children over the last twelve years.
While the AEC said that these estimates were "too high," the commission did acknowledge that 'a few' children in Utah last year may have received radiation doses to the thyroid from fallout iodine.
Dr. Harold A. Knapp, formerly of the AEC's division of biology and medicine, led the controversy last year when he submitted a paper suggesting that some children in the testing area might have received doses in the hundreds of roentgens.
The AEC defended its position, saying, "No evidence has been produced at the recent hearings which would indicate that the AEC has been careless of the public welfare in carrying out its weapons development responsibilities or has in any but exceptional situations exceeded in any given year the best radiation standards available to it from the national and international scientific bodies.
THE AEC SAID that the estimates used by its critics were "either statistically unreliable or cannot be supported by sound experimental measurements."
However, the statement added that "it may be that a few Utah infants received as much as seven to 14 rads (a radiation unit) to the thyroid gland in the summer of 1962."
The Commission said that guides set by the Federal Radiation Council (FFC), for normal peacetime operations, were exceeded only "by a few per cent" in Utah (Salt Lake City) and Alaska (Palmer).
THE COMMISSION said that there was "wide technological disagreement on the interpretation of the data and the magnitude of the problem," but said that the following steps had been taken:
P-t-P Can Use U.S. Students
Twenty-three students are needed in the KU People-to-People "English In Action" program to help foreign students learn English.
Miss Evelyn Beightel, Holton junior and program chairman, said 58 foreign students are interested in the program, but only 35 students have volunteered to teach.
Miss Frances Ingemann, professor of English and linguistic, told volunteers at the program's first meeting Monday night that English In Action provides each foreign student with an American student instructor who can answer questions about the language that often go unanswered in the classroom.
On Oct. 14 a meeting will be held in the Kansas Union where volunteers can examine their problems and successes, and receive suggestions on how they might do better.
Miss Ingemann said volunteers should meet the foreign students assigned to them, set up a weekly schedule of one hour lessons, and start teaching as soon as possible.
Miss Beightel said volunteers automatically become members of People-to-People and they will be eligible for full benefits of the program.
Journalism Senior Receives AP Award
Rose Ellen Osborne, Wichita senior, who served as a summer reporter for the Wichita Eagle and Beacon, won the August monthly feature contest of the Associated Press today.
The winning feature by the journalism senior, was "Wichita — People lose the dardnest things." City lost and found departments take on a "pawn shop atmosphere" with items left behind by travelers and commuters, the story explained.
Miss Osborne is an assistant managing editor of the Kansas.
- The Public Health Service has been requested to undertake studies in Utah-Nevada on thyroid cancer cases along with the present studies of leukemia in these states;
- One of the "prime missions" of the biology division at the Lawrence Radiation Laboratory at Livermore, Calif., established last May was to investigate problems dealing directly or indirectly with radioiodine;
Monitoring surveillance programs in and around the Nevada test area have been expanded and during times of active operations will be increased still more.
Articles valued at more than $4.0 were taken from Memorial Stadium over the weekend.
Burglars Hit Stadium Police Investigating
.
Arthur C. (Dutch) Lonborg, KU athletic director, reported that burglar entered the stadium Saturday night or Sunday morning by removing a gate from its hinges. They removed a voice drive valued at $390 from a speaker atop the new stadium addition.
The burglars also took a KU flag, valued at $50, a concession stand canopy worth $120 and an undetermined number of soft drinks.
The crime was discovered Monday morning by a maintenance crew cleaning the stadium. The flag had been ripped from its pole and the speaker had been torn apart and the voice drive removed.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 2, 1963
SCHOLARSHIP
SUA QUEEN CANDIDATES are (front row)
Lorelei Richardson, Alpha Chi Omega; Sally Sanders, Alpha Omicron Pi; Barbara Colllister, Alpha Delta Pi; Sharon Rogers, Hashinger; Kristine Bergman, Delta Gamma; Mrylene Eklund, Miller Hall and Toppy Yould, Lewis; (center row) Deborah Galbraith, Delta Delta Delta; Julianel Schaberg, Gamma Phi Beta; Carolyn Power, Alpha Phi; Polly Williams, Lewis; Kaye Sponenberg, Corbin; Janet Betts, Chi Omega; Nan Harrington, Kappa Alpha Theta; Karen Wight, Gertrude Sellards Pearson; Becky Hill,
Lewis; Deborah Fowler, Grace Pearson, and Beverly Montgomery, Corbin; (back row) Nan Chalgren, Carruth-O'Leary; Barbara Cooke, Sellards; Joan Davis, Douthart; Virginia Wilds, Hashinger; Joan Johnson, Corbin; Constance Myers, Gertrude Sellards Pearson; Margo Van Antwerp, Hashinger; Susan Higbee, Sigma Kappa; Jill Newburg, Pi Beta Phi; Mimi Frink, Kappa Kappa Gamma, and Jerri Johnson, Gertrudе Sellards Pearson. Bushra Karaman, Miller, is not pictured. The queen will be chosen at the SUA Carnival Oct. 12.
THE RAGE! MAX MORATH
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Classical Series to Begin With 'Umberto D' Tonight
Beginning the Classical Film series tonight in the Kansas Union is a "neo-realist" work by Italian film artists, Cesare Zavattini and Vittorio de Sica, the director of "Two Women."
By Byron Leonard
Zavattini, who has "written" a considerable number of Italian films, has said that the true destiny of neo-realism is the creation of "a film with no script, but created immediately through our ears and eyes from direct contact with reality."
"Umberto D." the first of a film series sponsored by the Student Union activities, was made in 1952. It is one of a large number of films to come from Italy since the war which can be grouped in a movement called "neo-realism."
"Umberto D" which will be shown tonight in the Forum Room deals with the life of an old man, now retired, and the problems he faces in his lonesome existence, with only a terrier for companionship. Like DeSica's previous film, "The Bicycle Thief," the film is characterized by truth and sincerity of treatment and honesty of feeling.
IN KEEPING with his attempts to come into "direct contact with reality," De Sica chose only inexperienced and unknown actors. Carlo Battisti, who plays Umberto, is a professor of philosophy who had never acted before.
Artificiality was also avoided by using little or no make-up and shooting the picture in actual surroundings. These techniques help to create a striking sense of immediacy.
Since the completion of "Umberto D." Vittorio De Sica has made "The Roof" and "Two Women" for which Sophia Loren won an Academy Award for best actress. "The Condemned of Altona," De Sica's latest film represents a break with the "neo-realist" style of his previous pictures. Critics indicate that it was an unfortunate break.
THE ENTIRE Classical Film Series sponsored by the Student Union Activities has been selected from the whole history of the motion picture.
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U.S. Aid Rejected For Indian Steel Mill
NEW DELHI—(UPI)—What might have been the biggest American project in India is now merely a big problem.
India has withdrawn its request to the United States to help build its fourth government-run steel mill, at Bokaro in northeastern India.
The announcement followed 18 months of negotiations between India and the United States.
THE MULTI-MILLION dollar mill would have been Asia's largest.
Despite President Kennedy's best efforts to justify the massive aid, it failed to secure congressional backing.
U. S. assistance to India is not reduced. India is still the biggest single recipient of American foreign aid.
But to many political observers, America has dropped the chisel and thereby the chance of hewing out a perfect Indian image.
INDIA, ESPECIALLY following last autumn's Chinese offensive, desperately needs more steel. Even before, India's third five-year development plan sought to triple its steel ingot production to 9.2 million tons.
"Only Bokaro could have fulfilled our dreams," one Indian economist said.
Lucknow's influential, pro-government National Herald said: "The importance of Bokaro is not in question. It is an essential part of the third plan; and since a steel plant of this size—four million tons—takes at least seven years to complete, work on it should have started as early
as possible in the first year of the plan."
THE TIMES OF INDIA said: "Continuing dependence on others not merely for credits but design and technology implies the presence of a possibly friendly but none the less foreign foot on the Indian accelerator which must ultimately affect the pace of economic progress."
While the average Indian looks indifferently at India's determination to go ahead with the ambitious project, the press has unanimously endorsed the government's decision to withdraw its request to America for financing the mill.
The Indian Express said: "India's withdrawal of Bokaro from the list of projects for which American aid was sought should be viewed as a agacious decision which would avoid any further embarrassment to the Kennedy administration which has hailed India as the test case for economic growth in underdeveloped areas through democratic means.
... IT IS NOT in anger but in sympathetic understanding of the difficulties of the friendly Kennedy administration that India has decided to withdraw its request.
"It would have been helpful if President Kennedy had succeeded in carrying Congress with him in his desire to assist this (Bokaro) project so vital to our development. But a Democratic government cannot ignore the political climate in the country just as it happened in regard to the Voice of America deal in India."
The pro-Congress Hindustan Times hoped "several countries can be persuaded to form a consortium to take up assistance to Bokaro."
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Campu WEST
Official Bulletin
French Ph.D. exam; 9:30-11:30 a.m.
Oct. 5, 110 Fraser.
SNEA Membership Drive, Sept. 30-Oct
4. Pay dues on 1st floor Bailey, 8:30-3:30
Foreign Students: Any student knowi-
ng the whereabouts of Mr. Albert S. C.
Cheng of Taiwan please contact the Dean
of Student's office, 228 St.
El Ateneo se Reunira boy a las 4:30 en la sala 11 de Fraser. Se Presentara un recital de guitarra a cargo del Sr. Jasso. Todos están cordialmente invitados.
TODAY
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Catholic Chanel, 1910 Stratford.
University Daily Kansan
Timely Topics, 7 p.m. St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center, 1915 Stratford Rd. Religion Science. Where Ig-ten is Claim by Night—Rev Brendan Downey, Q.S.B.
Civil Rights Council, 7:30 p.m., Kansas Union.
Enicipial Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
TOMORROW
Student Peace Union, 3:30 p.m., Room
305 Union.
Catholic Masses, 6.45 a.m., 5 p.m. *L.* Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford. Open Forum, 3.45 p.m. *Browsing* Open Forum, 3.45 p.m. The guest of the National Collegiate Players.
Der Deutsche Stammtisch wird sich um 5 Uhr. Donnerstags den 3. Oktober treffen die Jugendliche und B werden am uns amüsieren. Essen Sie oder mir plaudern. Sie mit Studenten in Deutsch. Alle sind herzlich eingeladen. Quack Club tryouts, 7-8 p.m. Robinson
Christian Science Organization, 7:30 p.m. Danforth Chapel. Everyone welcome.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
Christian Family Movement, 8 p.m.
St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center,
1915 Stratford Rd. Married couples welcome.
PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS
Wednesday, Oct. 2, 1963
First Lady Arrives in Athens
ATHENS, Greece — (UPI)— Mrs.
Jaequeline Kennedy arrived here today for a two-week rest.
The Greek press generally was enthusiastic about the visit. The newspaper Athimaiki said, "We wish for Jackie to overcome her summer mishap and recover her unparalleled smile of the happy wife of the President of the United States." Messimzrini said it hoped the bright sky of Greece "will help take her sorrow away."
Her visit will include a stay at a rented seaside villa near Athens and
a private tour of the colorful Greek islands aboard one of the world's most luxurious yachts, owned by Greek shipping magnate Aristotle Onassis.
IT WAS THE FIRST outing for Mrs. Kennedy since the death of her third child, Patrick Bouvier Kennedy, Aug. 7, less than two days after birth.
She was to be surrounded by a few friends, including her sister, Princess Lee Radziwill, and her brother-in-law, Polish Prince Stanislas Radziwill.
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University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 2, 1963
Engagements
--are made for participation fees for Jayette women. Each woman student living off-campus pays a 50-cent, overall fee.
The following engagements have been announced recently:
Pamela Kaye Longhofer, Salina sophomore, to William Max Self, Wichita junior.
Leslie Anne Mehan, Junction City junior, Sigma Kappa, to William H Spencer, West Chicago junior.
Maureen Maloney, Hutchinson senior, Kappa Kappa Gamma, to Cliffford Roark, Scott City senior, Phi Kappa Psi.
Karin Kleinsang, New York, N.Y. senior, to Byron Klapper, New York, N.Y., senior.
Neva Jean Brockman, Shawnee Mission, to Larry Bailey, Atchison senior, Lambda Chi Alpha.
Nancy Litton, Beloit junior, to Lawrence B. Knapp, Kansas City, Mo., junior.
Bonnie Kay Bish, Wichita senior,
Alpha Chi Omega, to Timothy P.
Griest, Lancaster, Penn., senior, Phi
Kappa Psi.
Allergies Disturb About 18 Million
NEW YORK. (UPI) — About 18 million Americans suffer during their lives from an allergic disease, ranging from hay fever to severe, crippling asthma, reports the Allergy Foundation of America. The non-profit health agency said asthma and hay fever together rank fourth in prevalence among all chronic disease. The loss to the national economy from allergy victims add up to 25 million man-days annually.
THE UNIVERSITY WOMEN'S Club will have a tea tomorrow at 2:30 p.m. in the Watkins Room of the Kansas Union.
Patronize Your Kansan Advertiser
KU Women In Sports
By Delores Orman
The first event in the WRA intramurals program, tennis singles, got underway Monday, but not without some confusion.
Several freshman women who reported for play were shocked to find out that they were signed up for competitive tennis singles instead of instruction classes. Win or lose, the best way to learn or improve a game is by playing it.
Approximately 45 women, representing 13 living groups are entered in tennis singles competition. The badminton singles which began Tuesday has 60 entrants, representing 15 living groups.
THE BASKETBALL round robin tournament also began yesterday. Nineteen living groups are represented in the four divisions, each composed of seven teams, set up by drawings. However, since Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall has nine teams entered, their teams had to be spread among the four divisions.
The freshman living groups are prime examples of the amount of interest and enthusiasm that has been generated in WRA intramurals this year. GSP has teams from each floor of both wings and a cross bar team. Corbin Hall has entered two basketball teams.
GRADUATE AND UNDERgraduate women living off-campus also have opportunity to participate in the WRA intramurals program. A group named "Jayettes" has been organized just for that purpose. Off-campus women interested in the "Jayettes" may call UNiversity 4-3927 for further information.
Teams play within their own division and the winners of each division play each other.
Mary Mulvaney, assistant professor of physical education and WRA sponsor, explained that exceptions
Prof. Mulvaney explained that ordinarily each living group that entires pay a $15 flat fee which covers that group's participation in all the WRA events for the year. This differs from the men's intramural program which requires each entrant to pay 25 cents for each event in which he participates.
THE FEES ARE used to sponsor delegates to convention, purchase trophies, to prepare for high school play day and other projects. Equipment, such as badminton and tennis rackets, and baseball bats, are provided by the physical education department.
Also scheduled on the WRA calendar are; swimming, December 17; table tennis doubles, Jan. 8; volleyball, Feb. 5; table tennis singles, March 10; tennis doubles, April 13; and softball, April 14.
Magazine Guides Women Executives
A new women's magazine made its debut last month—a magazine designed to inform women about managing a business instead of a home and a husband.
The monthly periodical, called Realm, is aimed at the business and professional women. Especially those making more than $10,000 a year. Articles on such non-housewife topics as investments, insurance, and executive training are featured in the first issue as well as a major story on fashion.
The idea of a magazine for "women of accomplishment" stemmed from U. S. census figures showing 1.9 million American women in executive and management positions.
Twenty-six pledges of the Alpha Chi Omega took its annual walkout Sept. 21-22.
Pledges 'Walkout' to Kansas City
The pledges stayed overnight with Marty Knight, at the home of her parents, Dr. and Mrs. John Knight, Mission Hills.
The celebration of their pledge trainer's birthday at a Kansas City restaurant climaxed the weekend. They returned Sunday evening to a party given them by the active chapter members.
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Read and Use Kansan Classifieds
SUA Presents
TRAVELING HOOTENANNY
with
Modern Folk Quartet Lynn Gold
Bessie Griffin & the Gospel Pearls Knob Lick Upper 10,000
and ★ Dr. Louis Gottlieb of the Limeliters
Tickets on Sale at Information Booth and Union Lobby
Thurs. & Fri. — October 3rd & 4th — Starting at 7:00 a.m.
Absolutely no Bloc Tickets
Limited number of 6 per person
Tickets — $.75 — $1.00 — $1.25
Also at Kief's & Bell's starting Mon., Oct. 7
Hoch Auditorium
8:00 P.M.
For B I
Friday, October 11
Wednesday, Oct. 2, 1963 University Daily Kansam
66
Page 9
For Dean Taylor and Helpers
Business Bustles During Noon Hour
By Margaret Hughes
Social secretaries?
Employment bureau?
Accounting office?
Legislative chambers?
Committee headquarters?
Luncheonroom?
At times, life in 220 Strong Hall is quite hectic as the Dean of Women's Office perform all these functions and many more.
Lunchroom?
Look in on a typical afternoon. The Senate of the Associated Women Students (AWS) is conferring with Emily Taylor, dean of women.
THE SECRETARIES are eating a late lunch of chicken-and-rice soup and crackers. Over in the corner, a girl is going through the files of summer-job opportunities.
One of the assistants is advising a woman student on problems in her living group. The AWS Roles of Women committee has stacks of questionnaires spread out on the beige carpet, computing the results of a recent survey.
Over these and a myriad of other activities concerning KU women, Dean Emily Taylor presides. Her academic background includes an undergraduate degree in English from Ohio State University, and master's and doctoral degrees in education.
BEFORE COMING to KU in 1956, Dean Taylor was dean of women at Northern Montana College at Havre, Louisville University, and Miami University in Oxford, Ohio.
Besides co-ordinating and overseeing all the activities of the Dean of Women's Office, Dean Taylor represents the women students on vari-
Pinnings
1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000
Linda Graham, St. Louis junior, Delta Delta Delta, to Michael Clem, Lawrence, Phi Gamma Delta.
Trudy Graves, Amarillo, Texas sophomore, Alpha Omicron Pi, to Alan Rings, Leawood sophomore, Sigma Delta Phi.
Alice Cash, Abilene junior, Pi Beta Phi, to Bill Mills, Topeka senior, Phi Gamma Delta.
Helen Remington, Wichita junior,
Delta Delta Delta, to James Bolick,
Great Bend senior, Delta Upsilon.
Susan Henneberger, Lawrence senior, Alpha Omicron Pi, to Eliot Glad, Kansas State University, Sigma Delta Phi.
Jerrie Sue Trantum, Kansas City senior, Delta Delta Delta, to C. K. Baber, St. Louis, Mo., senior.
Beverly Igo, Wichita junior, Delta Delta Delta, to Bob Arms, Mission Hills junior, Beta Theta Pi.
Diane Underwood, Kansas City,
Mo., junior, Delta Delta Delta, to
Leroy Anderson. Western Illinois
University senior. Alpha Phi Omega.
Some members of the KU faculty club dropped academic pursuits last night to attend a square dance at the Faculty Club.
Square Dance Is Faculty Activity
Professor and Mrs. H. A. Ireland were hosts for the event.
The faculty club began its second week of activities Sunday with a reception for approximately 250 faculty members.
faculty members.
Tomorrow evening, Mr. and Mrs.
William Albrecht and Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Moore will be hosts for a club dinner. Bridge will follow the dinner at 7:30 p.m.
ous university committees. Among the most important of these are the Deans' Advisory Council, and the committees on Student Personnel, Kansas Union Operations, Watkins scholarships, and University Events.
Mrs. J. B. Stroup, assistant to the dean of women, has a bachelor's degree from KU, and is doing graduate work here. She is the advisor to the Social Committee of the All Student Council (ASC), Mortar Board, CWENS, and Panhellenic Council.
STOP
ANOTHER ASSISTANT to Dean Taylor, Miss Karlene Howell, advises the Senate, House of Representatives, and the many other committees of the AWS. A KU graduate student and former Hilltopper, Miss Howell is also the counselor for part-time employment.
STOP Read the CLASSIFIEDS
In charge of the personnel program in the freshman halls, Gertrude Sellars Pearson, Corbin, and Grace Pearson, is Mrs. Marcia Goldstein. She attended Mount Holveye College, graduated from Purdue University, and earned her master's degree at KU.
Working with Mrs. Goldstein are six KU graduate students who serve as assistant resident directors, and 21 freshman counselors.
DEAN TAYLOR'S fourth fulltime assistant is Miss Mary Frances Watson, head of the upperclass residence hall program. She also advises the Inter-Residence Council (IRC) and the Association of University Halls (AURH). She earned her bachelor's and master's degrees at Wichita University and is working on her Ph.D. at KU.
Also employed in the Dean of Women's Office are four secretaries: Sherry McCall, Genie Ruzicka, Betty Eaton, and Sydnie Kampschroeder.
Besides advising group activities of KU women, all members of the staff are available for individual counseling with any student.
Campa Righe Concilianza
to the Dean of Women. While plans were being made for a student-faculty coffee in Miss Howell's office, next door, Dean Taylor spends her lunch hour discussing other AWS projects with Pam Stone, Wichita junior and member of fashion board.
NOONTIME IS DISCUSSION TIME in the Dean of Women's office for Diane Hinderliter, Park Forest, Ill., junior, Patty Barnes, Osage City junior, and Jane Loyd, Newton junior, (members of the AWS student-faculty relations committee), and Miss Karlene Howell, Assistant
University Women Give Tea Thursday
The University Women's Club will hold a tea on Thursday at 2:30 p.m. in the Watkins Room of the Kansas Union. Throughout the school year, the club will hold regular meetings on the first Thursday of every month. Special guests and speakers will appear at many of the programs.
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 2, 1963
Campus Rights Coordinator Backs Fraternity Integration
(Last of a Three-Part Series)
By Fred Frailey
A Negro civil rights leader said last night Negroes want to see racial barriers dropped in fraternities.
"Discrimination such as this makes us feel that we are not free men," said Cordell Meeks Jr., Kansas City senior and KU civil right coordinator.
Meeks, past president of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity and a counselor this year at Joseph R. Pearson Hall, believes, nevertheless, the decision of white fraternities to pledge Negroes should be made by the fraternities themselves, and not by the University administration.
"FORCED pledging of Negroes would be unwise," he said, "because it would break down the fraternity system and would really not get us anyplace. We would rather have white fraternities accept us because they want to."
Meeks is the only Negro member of the All Student Council's Human Rights Committee. As civil rights coordinator for the ASC, he also tries to keep the assortment of civil rights groups in Lawrence working together.
One of the few signs of open discrimination Meeks said he has found in Lawrence is in fraternities.
"WE WANT TO see segregation in fraternities end, not necessarily because we want to be members of white fraternities, but because we want to see open signs of discriminatory practices eliminated. We would feel more like the human beings than we are."
Meeks is a member of the only integrated fraternity at KU.
"A white member of Alpha Phi Alpha was graduated here in 1954 as a Phi Beta Kappa. Several other white persons have been members of my fraternity since then and several attended our rush parties this summer."
MEEKS IS NOT a pessimist. He believes people are realizing "prejudice is ridiculous."
"The day will come when one of the larger fraternities braves the storm and takes a Negro. When this happens, the others will not be reluctant to do the same," he said.
Blocking such a move now are
Students Meet With New Dean
Joseph W. McGuire, new dean of the Business School, was officially presented to his students last night at a meeting of the Society for the Advancement of Management.
This was the first meeting between the dean and the students since his arrival at KU from the University of Washington. Dean McGuire is best known here for his book, "Business and Society," which was used last summer in one of the senior business courses.
An informal discussion at the business society was primarily devoted to the dean's concepts of the role of a dean, the value of education in a business school, and his objectives for the KU School of Business.
"The role of a dean is basically administrative. It is his job to bind together the loose ends of the school." Dean McGuire said.
He added that he was impressed with the caliber of the faculty in the Business School, and how conscious they were of the students' needs.
Evaluating a business degree, he explained, "We teach, business as a separate curriculum because business is there like Mt. Everest. It is a growing and changing part of our lives."
He went on to point out that a business school is better equipped to give the picture of business as it is and will be, rather than its development and ancient history.
"We are training the business student for the future. If we trained him for today, by the time he used his knowledge it would be obsolete," he said.
McGuire concluded that the prime goal of the Business School is to educate the student, not to provide vocational training.
prejudice and fears by fraternities of not being accepted, Meeks said.
"It would be easy for me to say that if fraternity men were better educated to the problem of prejudice, it would disappear. But it's not that simple.
"I cannot conceive of any educational program that would convince a person that he should not prejudice another person because of his race. I do not think a prejudiced person would want to listen," he said.
JUST AS BIG a hindrance to the
Brass Choir To Perform In Far East
The KU Brass Choir will leave this spring for a tour of the Far East. The tour will be sponsored by the U.S.State Department.
The 18-member choir will play concerts in nine nations, starting in Karachi, Pakistan, in February, 1964, and ending four months later in Wellington, New Zealand.
IN EACH COUNTRY it visits on the tour, the choir will have its temporary headquarters in a town with the U.S. embassy.
Gary Watson, Formoso senior who will play French horn with a group, said an interesting feature of the tour is going to be the presentation of clinics by the choir.
The members of the choir will demonstrate their instruments, and explain how each of them is played
The tentative schedule of the tour includes concerts in Colombia, Ceylon, Rangoon, Burma, Bangkok, Thailand, Phnom-Penh, Cambodia, Saigon, South Viet Nam, Canberra, Australia and Singapore, Malaysia
EACH MEMBER of the choir will receive a daily allowance for meals, hotels, transportation and other expenses.
The program for the concerts will be a variety of music arranged for brass instruments. Marches, contemporary tunes and selections from Broadway hits will be played.
There will be particular concentration on the more disciplined music of the 16th and 17th centuries.
Kenneth Bloomquist, director of the group and assistant professor of band, said, "We hope to play the national anthem of every country we visit."
FOR PRACTICE, several KU foreign students recently attended a rehearsal and served as critics on the band's treatment of the anthems.
Also traveling overseas for the State Department, but to different areas, are the Duke Ellington band, the Jose Limon dance group, and the Robert Shaw Chorale.
Other college instrumental and choral groups who will make the trip include the universities of Illinois, Maryland, Southern California and North Texas State, and George Peabody College.
All the KU students going on the tour hope to follow careers in music. Most of them are 19 to 22 years old. The 18 members of the choir have a total of 158 years of experience on the instruments they play.
**STUDENTS who will make the trip are Clarence Awaya, Honolulu, Hawaii senior; Mike Berger, Springfield. Mo., sophomore; William Booth, Sedalia, Mo., senior; David Boyd, Leavenworth sophomore; Richard Ellison, Springfield, Mo. sophomore; Robert M. Gifford, Green City, Mo., senior, and Roy James Guenther, Breckenridge, Okla. sophomore.
William Hartman, Ponca City, Okla., junior; Don Hodges, Winfield freshman; Jon Irish, Leavenworth senior; Bill Lane, Winter Park, Fla. sophomore; Alvin Lowery, Winfield junior, and Kent Riley, Columbus senior.
Roger Rundle, Clay Center junior; Gary Lee Watson, Formoso senior; Linda Converse, Lawrence senior; Lita Snodgrass, Lawrence sophomore, and Charles L. Snodgrass, Lawrence senior.
end of fraternity segregation, Meeks says, is the fear of a Greek house to admit a Negro that it will be looked down by other houses.
"There is also the fear among fraternity men who would like to pledge Negroes that they will no longer be accepted by their own fraternity brothers." Meeks said.
In the summer before his freshman year, Meeks received a letter from a white fraternity inviting him to a rush party.
"I told my friends that this fraternity had asked me to a swimming party. They told me it was a mistake and that I would be wasting my time. I might have gone though, if my job hadn't prevented it," he said.
"Would I have joined a white fraternity had I been asked? Yes, if I had liked the fraternity and the men in it. But I wasn't asked."
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Margaret Rutherford and Terry-Thomas a Walter Sherman production
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Varsity
THEATRE ... Telephone VI3-1065
Varsity THEATRE ... Telephone V13-1065
Resignations,retirements,and current leaves of absence in the School of Engineering and Architecture have been balanced by the return of former staff members on leave, visiting professors, and new staff members.
Robert Mitchum Elsa Martinelli Jack Hawkins RAMPAGE
New Staff Offsets Loss
Next At The GRANADA
FEDERICO
FELLINI'S
01/2
STARTS SUNDAY!
VARSITY ART Attractions
New staff members who have accepted regular appointments at KU are R. R. Gatts, the new chairman of the department of mechanical engineering, and Assistant Professors Lewis Linzell, mechanics and aerospace, Don Daugherty, electrical engineering, and Joshua Pelleg, metallurgy and materials.
W. B. DUNCAN and R. F. Guenter have been promoted to assistant professors of architecture, and Nicholas Willems has been promoted to associate professor of engineering.
Five former faculty members who have returned from sabbatical leaves are D. W. Appel from the University of Michigan; K. H.
Lenzen from Iraq; J. C. Morley from Scotland; C. J. Baer from various parts of Europe; and K. R. Jones from Colombia.
Visiting professors for this year are Hajime Akashi from Japan; Anatol Zagustin from Russia; and M. S. A. A. Hammam from Egypt.
THREE STAFF members begin sabbatical leaves this fall. G. W. Bradshaw will be in California, Hillel Unz in England, and G. W. Forman will be in Kansas State.
In all, 15 losses have been replaced by 16 new staff members, either by appointment, visiting professors, or members returning from leave.
According to the office of the Dean of the School of Engineering and Architecture, the number of leaves without sabbatical, and visiting professors are higher than usual. However, the many exchanges between different countries and our academic institutions as well as industries augment the continual flow of ideas.
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Granada
TNEATRE----Telephone VI-3-S788
1957 wheel new screer bus in
Shows at 7:00 & 9:00
Adults 90c
Children 50c
Antiq and 1 to ap $25.00 Kansi 19th.
Page 11
rley
rom
. R.
University Daily Kansan
ear
pan;
and
ypt.
the ring of and than ex-unituug-ugas.
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TRAVEL
Contact our travel agent for fast efficient information and reservations on all air lines.
First National Travel Agency 746 Mass. IV-31-052
General Psychology study notes. Excel-copy.
Call VI 2-9378. Copy.
FOR SALE
1957 MGA figgerlass hardtop, wired wheels, new tires, luggage rack, R&H, monitor, scanners, screens, 8.00 miles. Will consider VW bus in trade Jack Hibler. VI 2-120. 10-11
22 Magnum, 6x scope. Sling and case included, excellent condition. $40.00. typewriter-portable, 1682 model. Perfect condition. Contact Jim Mainer VI-21-9148.
1962 Olds F-85 Cutlass sport coupe, with
reversible rear-wheel drive. Call VI 3-7807 for information. 10-8
Antique Trunks — beautifully decorated and lined—makes ideal chests. Must see to appreciate at these prices—$20.00 and $25.00. Call Crestwood 2-0311 Topeka, Kansas or write Louse Johnston, 5422, 19th. Topeka, Kansas for appointment. 10-7
A few nice Siamese kittens—sure to please. Phone VI 3-0148. 10-3
Handsome hand-woven wool blanket for sale. Polish import. Vivid colors. 6'8" by 5". Perfect as a knee rug for games. Call IW-3-8630. 10-3
1958 Edel. new paint, rebuild motor,
1960 Call 8-12937 10-2
1827 W 24th, 10-2
Sealpoint Slamese kittens. Call VI2- 1695. 10-4
1962 Buick Special convertible. Call VI 3-4
1968 after 5 p.m. 13-6 Stouffer. IV 10-4
LAWRENCE FIREARMS CO. New and used guns and ammo. Military weapons and gunguns. Lugers. We also offer 1026 Ohio. VI-21-24 afternoon and evening. 10-4
1957 MG, good condition, very clean.
radio, heater, white malls. Must sell. $800
or best offer. Call VI 3-651 ask for Marv
—Phi Kappa Tau. 10-2
Must sell 1963 Volvo 4-dr. Steal at $1795. Zeiss 35 MM camera. Popular and classical film. Cheap price. Electronically printed. Also piano and Organ instrument. Coll. Y2-1610. 10-4
Now's the time, set your Aquariums up. Lots of Beautiful plants. Nice variety of fish. All at reasonable prices. Marty's Fish Bowl, 1416 Conn. 10-4
1959 Ford, 4 door sedan, 6 cylinder, clean,
low mileage, 945 Emery Rd. VI2-2000.
FORD
Student must sell pistol collection and
ammo. also, B24 Ark. VI-31-100. if
ammo. also, B24 Ark. VI-31-100. if
Olds Birth Coronet. Just like new. Call VI 2-2186 after 6:00 p.m. 10-3
Triumph TR-3, stage 3 right hand drive, competition roll bar and seat belt. Not the car for Mother but EXCELLENT street racing. Call VI-3-5366 or VI-3-5488.
Sure--Everything in the pet field at
$$$ have more cents. 1218 Conn V I-3921-29
Austin Healey Sprite, 1963. red, rad. radio,
bellis beets. See at 1128 pages.
CALL V12-5597. 10-2
ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLEANERS.
New electrolux and a limited number of rebuilds, fully guaranteed. All parts available. Equipment picked up for service and delivered. Frank V Cox Manager-1804 Barker. Call VI 3-2277
For Sale by owner--3 bedroom, 1½ story home. Full basement and garage. No assessments, near KU. $12,500. Call VI 3-2957. 10-2
Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, minimegraphed and bound for $4.25 per call. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
Banoi for sale, valued at $50.00. Nanoy
present. I2-2420. Leave a message.
10-2
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outlines; various research papers; classes. Formerly known as the Theta Notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50.
AUTO LIABILITY INSURANCE, also collision and comp. Most risks covered; under age drivers; scooters; motor bikes; motor cycles; rates avail. Brown Realty Co., Ph. VI 2-0179 — Realtors — $729_{1/2}$ Mass.
Typewriter, new and used portables,
standards, electrics, Olympia, Olivetti,
Royal and Smith Corona portables. Type-
writer and adding machine service and
rental. Lawrence Typewriter, 730 Mass.
Call VI 3-3644. tt
FM RADIOS! STEREO! STEREO FMS!
Largest stock in Lawrence at low discount prices - New GE FM RADIO cut to $25.00.
Low price from $97 - Rock Starboneck's 929 Mass.
Stereo record albums cut to $1.99 each.
in set of 10 albums!
50 Bicycles at low discount prices! New 26 "Royce Union lightweight cut to make it look like a Schwinn lightweights—R Stoneback's. 929 Mass. St., basement floor. 10-7
TYPING
To the sports minded and economy minded,
Jawa motorcycle. Has only 1400 actual
miles. Must sacrifice—BIG SAVINGS TO
juniper VI. 3-4137 and leave name and
number.
MILLIKENS SOS—always first quality typing on LB.M. Carbon ribbon machines. We also do tape transcriptions. Office phone: 514-3920, 102- pizhell1. Mail phone VI 3-5920.
Efficient and experienced typer would like to do work in home. Prompt and guaranteed work. Call at any time. V15-2651. 10-31
Typing: Dissertations theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines: 35 special symbols, carbon ribbon machines, carbon ribbon service. Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI 2-146 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI 3-3057. tf
Typing: Desertations, theses, manuscripts,
term papers typed. New Smith-Corona
machines; 35 special symbols, carbon
ribbon—if desired. Prompt, efficient
service. Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI2-1546
or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI3-3057.
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
In office for legal terms. Marsha Goff, VI 3-2577,
www.marshagoff.com
Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 408 W 13th. VI2-1648.
Typing done for students in my home.
Call VI 2-2530 after 5 p.m. 10-4
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will use type these, term paperers, resumes, letter writing rates. Electric Typewriter. Mrs McEldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568
New electric typewriter. Reasonable rates for themes, term papers, dissertations, and theses. Mrs. Barta, 1955 Miller Drive, VI 3-6994. tf
Prompt, neat and accurate work on wide carriage electric typewriter. Journalism, Business and Secretary experience. Charlotte Weber. VI 3-3495. tf
Thesis Typist. Electric wirewriter.
higher degree. Prairie Village, NI. ii 17-
8469.
WANTED
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart, 1025 Mass. tf
Anyone who has the rank of Rokkyu and above and is interested in starting a judo club contact Steve Roepke or Bob Clause at 707 Templin Hall. 10-8
A Shopping Adventure Awaits You... Lawrence's largest and finest selection of
Johnny's Super Oil - Bay Products—23rd and Ousdahl. All work guaranteed. Free pick-up and delivery. Call VI 3-9691. Oil-Lube-Wash and Polish. 10-14
tom's 4th Barber Shop—1/2 block off
children—8½ cut -81.50, except 10
6½
Save on food costs. Rent a frozen food locker. Meat for sale. Budget plan. Triplett Lockers, 6th and Miss. Call VI 3-6250. 10-11
BUSINESS SERVICES
Dressmaking-alterations, formals and
gowns. Ola Smith. 93912. Matter
V. 2, 82-83.
Will do paper hanging evenings—reasonable rates. Call VI 3-2906. 10-10
MISCELLANEOUS
unique & exciting gifts at:
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
Vickers Gift Shop
Why walk or drive a long way to class? Have a nice sleeping room for single man. Across street from stadium. Call VI 3-8066. 10-8
FOR RENT
"Across from the Granada"
Spacious 2 room apartment, private bath.
Directions: 103rd St. NW, 127th Ave.
Paid. Inquire at 1334 Ohio after 5: 10-8
FOR RENT OR SALE: 35×8' one bed
trailer Call VI-31-9453 after 5 p.m.
Vacancies in contemporary home with outside swimming pool for young man. Private entrance, utilities paid, $450 per person, cooked dinner if need. Call VI 3-9635. 10-15
Ridge House Apartments. Available and now renting, 1 and 2 bedroom apartments, air-conditioned carpeting and patio enclosed deck (with pillows in colors). New furniture packages available. 24th and Ridge Court. V1-131-168. "Let us move you for tree."
3 room furnished apartment. Modern,
shower, private entrance, accommodate 2
people—married couple, no children
VI
3-2402. Shown afternoons after 1:30. tf
Quiet large room for two boys, and large room for one boy. Linens furnished.
Near campus. 1701 Ohio. Call VI 2-3618. 19.5
Wednesday. Oct. 2, 1963
One bedroom apartment for couple. Private bath and entrance. First floor—clean—near KU. Call VI 3-0554 after 7 p.m. 10-3
1 bedroom house, completely furnished.
air-conditioner, near downtown, no pets!
Also one 3 bedroom furnished apartment
partition. No pets!
VI 3-0554 before 9 a.m., or after 7 p.m. tf
Semi-Basement apartment. 1649 Edgehill Rd. Call VI 3-2315. 10-3
Transportation wanted to KU M-F. Call VI 2-2310 after 5. 10-3
VI 3-5585
TRANSPORTATION
Car pool or riders: Mission, Kansas to KU. My classes run 7:50 to 10:20 daily. would consider 7:30. Call RA 2-1727 after 6 p.m. 10-2
Ride to and from downtown K.C. Mon-
10-2 HA-1339 and ask for Doma-
10-2
1023 Mass.
Glasses in black case lost Saturday after afternoon please call Larry Salmon, VI-21900 10-4
LOST
Set of seven or eight keys lost either in Summerfield or on intramural field on the property. Contact key, one key numbered 2, Contact Bill Manner, TKE house. VI 3-9100. 10-4
Young man wanted to work 1 week end day and one or 2 nights per week. Call Tom Dixon after 5 p.m. V31-7446. Dixon's Drive-In Restaurant - 2500 W 6th.
Evening. Switchboard and office help.
Weekends. Call V1-5320 for interview.
Good rock and roll vocalist. Contact Dennis, room 703 - Templin Hall. 10-3
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Milliken's SOS
- General typing service
- "the best professional service"
- Notary public
- 24 hr. answering service
- Mimeograph & photo-copying
1021 $ _{1/2} $ Mass., VI 3-5920, 7a.m.-11p.m.
HONN'S COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY
Across from the high school 19th & Louisiana VI 3-963
SPEED QUEEN WASHERS OPEN 24 HRS.
FRATERNITY JEWELRY
A complete line, including:
• Lavaliers • Guards
• Pins • Mugs
• Rings • Crests
Ray Christian
JEWELERS
IT'S OK TO OWE RAY
LEONARD'S
Standard Service
Standard Service
"the best in car care"
706 W. 9th
VI 3-9830
STUDENTS
BRAKE ADJUSTMENTS ... $.98
LUBRICATION ... $1.00
Motor tune-ups, wheel balancing
**FREE**—one quart of oil with each
oil and filter change
— all major brands —
1819 W 23rd VI 3-9694
See Us Before You Buy TYPEWRITERS
PAGE-CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE
NEW AND USED PORTABLES STANDARDS ELECTRICS
Sales — Rentals — Service
LAWRENCE
TYPEWRITER
735 Mass VL 3-3644
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HAVING A PARTY?
We are always happy to serve you with
Ice cold beverages
Ice cold beverages
Chips, nuts, cookies
Variety of grocery items
Crushed ice, candy
Ice cold 6 pacs all kind*
OPEN TO 10 P.M.EVERY EVENING
LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY
616 Vt. Ph.VI 3-0350
directed by Vittorio de Sica Italy 1952
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified
THE CLASSICAL FILM SERIES
presents:
UMBERTO D
Wednesday Oct. 2
Forum Room ---- 7:00 p.m.
Admission: $.60
Season Tickets are still on sale
Pay $5.00----Save $2.80
Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, Oct. 2, 1963
Algerian Troops Arm Against Tribesmen
ALGIERS — (UPI) — President Ahmed Ben Bella sent his troops and armor into the Kabylia mountains today to win back towns seized by Berber tribesmen who oppose his one-man rule.
In an apparent bid for public support in the gravest crisis of his yearold regime, Ben Bella also announced the nationalization of the remaining French-owned land here and charged again that neighboring Morocco was backing the insurgents.
There has been no bloodshed since the mountain tribesmen rallied behind dissident Col. Mohand Ou El Hadj and a former Ben Bella deputy, Hocine Ait Ahmed, in the Kabylia capital of Tizi-Ouzou Sunday.
Nevertheless, Algeria stood near civil war and a showdown seemed to be approaching as Ben Bella's soldiers, in camouflage uniforms and armed with submachine guns, headed toward Tizi-Ouzou in armored vehicles.
SINCE THEN they have forced government troops out of Tizi-Ouzou and two other mountain towns — in each case without an armed clash.
THE ALGERIAN press services, the official government news agency, reported that government troops already had moved into Tizi-Ouzou last night. But the report could not be confirmed.
Their immediate aim appeared to be to cut off communications between the mountain city and Algiers, 60 miles to the west.
Ben Bella, in a nationwide radio speech last night, charged that the entire mutiny was a foreign conspiracy aimed at blocking an Algerian-Soviet treaty of cooperation.
Ben Bella's nationalization move was bound to anger France and endanger the aid France has promised its former colony, estimated to total between $250 and $400 million.
ABOUT 2.5 million acres of land
Club Fund Requests Due to ASC by Oct. 14
Applications for All Student Council (ASC) appropriations have been mailed to 12 campus organizations, Charles Portwood, Shawnee Mission senior and ASC treasurer, said yesterday.
The groups receiving application forms are those presently receiving ASC funds. Portwood said other organizations can contact him at VI 3-6244 for additional applications.
Deadline for returning applications is Oct. 14.
WHAT'S NEW IN THE OCTOBER ATLANTIC?
"Speed and Women": While convalescing from his accident, Stirling Moss, legendary racing driver, spent many hours with Ken W. Purdy. In this video, he talks about some of the fears, problems and temptations that beset a racer.
ALSO
Vance Packard: Mr. Packard forresses a dramatic improvement in TV fare due to new cable TV, pay TV, tape TV to buy or rent, and other new techniques.
"Britain's Policy if Labour Wins":
Labor Party leader Harold Wilson tells what Britain's new foreign policy would be under a Labor Prime Minister.
Poetry: by Robert Graves, Theodore Roethike, Stanley Kunitz.
"Saying What One Means"; Freya language is the basis for language
Month in and month out The Atlantic's editors seek out exciting expressions of new and provocative ideas. And whether these expressions take the form of prose or poetry, fact or fiction, they always aim to high level of academic value and literary interest. Make room in your life for The Atlantic. Get a copy today.
were turned over to the state under the decree. Ben Bella said it would be distributed to peasants. He was applauded loudly by an audience of 100,000 who heard him speak in the Algiers forum when he said Algeria wants continued cooperation with France, "but on our terms."
Morocco yesterday denied complicity with the uprising, but Ber Bella repeated his accusations.
He charged the uprising was timed to prevent his top aide, Col. Houari Boumedienne, from flying to Moscow for the treaty talks.
"I TELL these people that this agreement shall be concluded in spite of their maneuvers," he said.
Ben Bella appealed to the insurgents "not to start blood flowing again—there has been enough of that in this country."
The whereabout of El Hadj and Ait Ahmed was not known today. It was believed that El Hadj, who was fired by Ben Bella as commander of the Kabylia military district, retained the loyalty of most of his 8,000 troops.
Atlantic
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Both insurgent leaders are Berbers, as are the majority of the inhabitants of the rugged Kabylia district.
Instructor To Play Guitar at Recital
An informal recital on the classical guitar will be presented by Arturo Jasso, instructor of Spanish, at 4:30 p.m. today.
The recital will acquaint persons interested in Spanish culture with the music of the classical guitar.
"The guitar is the most popular instrument in this country," Jasso said, "but nobody knows how to play it properly."
"In every large American city, you will find about 50 people who are considered to be artists on the piano, but you will find no one who is an artist on the guitar."
The recital will be at a meeting of El Ateneo, the KU Spanish club, but anyone interested in hearing Jasso play may attend.
"All the King's Men," a movie about politics in a Southern state, will be shown at 7 and 9:30 p.m. Friday, Oct. 4 in Fraser auditorium.
"All the King's Men To Be Shown Friday
"All the King's Men" is the second of the Friday Flicks series, sponsored by Student Union Activities.
Kennedy Signs Bill For Military Raise
The President said at a White House ceremony that he signed the measure with a good deal of pleasure. He described it as recognition of the "dedicated service of so many thousands of our fellow citizens" both at home and abroad.
WASHINGTON — (UPI)— President Kennedy today signed into law a bill providing a $1.2 billion pay raise for two million members of the armed forces and expressed hope it would encourage many to re-elist.
THE PAY BOOSTS average 14 per cent. Servicemen received their last raise in 1958. The new raise goes to all members of the armed forces except 742,000 draftees and enlistees in their first two years of service.
The pay increases, effective as of Tuesday when the bill cleared Congress, range from $5 a month for recruits with two years service to $110 a month for lieutenant colonels and navy commanders.
In addition, the measure provided a special $55 a month combat bonus for some 2,000 U.S. servicemen under Communist fire in South Viet Nam.
In a companion move, the President issued an executive order that revived extra pay for certain especially hazardous duty, sea duty, and quarters allowances for field grade officers.
IN SIGNING THE pay raise bill, the President voiced hope it would help improve the quality of the armed forces by encouraging men to remain in service. But most important of all, he said, the pav increases will "sustain families."
The President also pledged his administration's best efforts to see that future military pay increases keep pace with rises in civilian salary levels.
THE PRINT SALE IS COMING SOON!
LIVE IT UP!
wed.
Fri.
& Sat.
Furndoe
Adv. Co.
See a real
live band
TEE
PEE
Parties & Pinnings
VI 3-2942 AL HICKS,
Indian-keeper
0
0½
OUNCER
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THE Town Shop DOWNTOWN
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Shop
Morality Debate Packs Ballroom
By Leta Cathcart
and Linda Ellis
"Resolved that the Christian ethic should be adjusted to fit the current American transition in sexual morality."
About 600 students attended the English-style debate on sex and morality last night in the Ballroom of the Union.
Speaking for the affirmative were Charles Warriner, chairman of the sociology and anthropology department and Robert Squier, assistant professor of anthropology.
Speaking for the negative were Dean Emily Taylor, dean of women and the Rev. Paul Davis of the Plymouth Congregational Church.
THE MODERATOR of the debate was E. C. Buehler, director of the forsensice program and the speech I program.
Dean Taylor, first speaker for the negative, said that in order to continue discussion, three basic assumptions were necessary: agreement concerning the interpretation of the term "Christian ethic," American consensus on the state of sexual morality and agreement that there is a way to change Christian ethic.
She said these assumptions are false. She said there is no possible way to change the Christian ethic. People may interpret it, but the individual's interpretation depends on the group with which he associates.
DEAN TAYLOR ALSO emphasized that it is debatable that there is a sexual revolution in our country. She also said that sexuality should be thought of in terms of the whole gamut of sexual relationship.
She said the trends in sexual morality may be classed under four categories—chastity before marriage, the "double standard," permissiveness with affection, and permissiveness without affection. Dean Taylor maintained that the choice of the category is up to the individual.
Rev. Davis began his speech by assuring the members of the affirmative side that all men were "sinners in a very real way."
He emphasized that sex is not a possession, but rather a God-given gift. With that gift also comes responsibility and man must make proper use of it, he said.
REV. DAVIS gave two other reasons why sexual relations before marriage were inadvisable.
The first of these reasons is that an honest sexual relationship cannot be maintained outside of marriage. He said the sexual relationship is the most honest relationship anyone can have, but outside of marriage dishonesty has to develop.
The second reason is that sex is a radical kind of learning, and it is important with whom we discover this knowledge.
Prof. Squier made the initial statement in the debate. He began by questioning the use of the term "Christian ethics" used in the resolution. He used three reasons in his argument concerning the developments in our sexual patterns in recent years.
HE USED the "three C's" to illustrate his argument. They are change, conform, and consume.
By change Squier was referring to the experimentation that takes place in the lives of today's teenagers. The changes are often for change itself and not really for added knowledge, he said.
The conforming aspect in today's trends is portrayed in the patterns formed in high school by many young people. According to Squier, any young person who deviates from the norm of "Thou shall date" is left out.
Consume was the third part of his argument. He cited examples from TV commercials where sex is the dominant theme. He said sex is so much a part of our daily lives that it is almost deified. "Sex is a goddess," he said.
ALSO TAKING the affirmative side, Prof. Warriner said he thought the subject was not very serious, but a lot of fun.
Questions followed his opening words. Is pre-marital sex a violation of Christian ethics? Is it physically harmful? Should there be a set of rules determining what is good and what is bad?
Answering his own questions, Warriner said the pre-marital act was in no way a violation of the Christian ethic.
To a laughing audience he disputed the fact that it is physically harmful. "There is no doctor alive who could say it has bad effects on a person," he said.
The "codes governing sex are set up to give jobs to ministers and deans of women." A roar of applause and cheers from the affirmative group followed that statement.
WARRINER TALKED about women as fragile creatures in past years. Today, he said, she has every right to be as independent and free as men. The nature of the sexual code has changed to provide her with that freedom.
After the ten-minute talks by the four speakers the debate was opened to questions from the floor.
Some of the comments from the affirmative side were in disagreement with Dean Taylor's assumptions. One woman graduate likened getting married without experience to "ordering from a mail-order house before seeing the catalogue." She said to break the code of the past all the young person needed was "courage."
Thursday, Oct. 3, 1963
After about thirty minutes of debate, an old gentleman, standing on the negative side, said in a soft voice, "Doesn't second-hand come pretty cheap?"
Buehler rebutted his remark by saying "The King of England gave up his throne for a piece of third-hand goods."
Dailu hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Military Leaders Take Over Honduran Government Falls;
61st Year, No. 15
THE ARMED forces guaranteed full respect for the "lives and rights" of all citizens. They called on the people for frank and sincere moral
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras — (UPI)—The armed forces today deposed President Ramon Villeda Morales and seized power. Heavy fighting followed and there were reports of many dead and wounded.
The army said the coup responded to the popular clamor and was a gesture of authentic patriotism. The military decided to act, the communique said, to rescue the country and restore tranquility in the Honduran family.
Sharp clashes were reported between revolting troops and civil guardmen defending Villaeda Morales. Shooting was frequent in the streets many hours after the 1:30 a.m. coup.
Military leaders ordered a 7 p.m. to 6 a.m. curfew and instructed residents to remain in their homes. The civil guard and all armed civilian groups were placed under military control. Civilians with arms and munitions in their possession were ordered to turn them in immediately to the nearest army post.
All military zones in the country were reported backing the coup with exception of one sector of the fourth and fifth military zones. There was no elaboration.
The Los Angeles Dodgers won the second game of the 1963 World Series today by defeating the World Champion New York Yankees 4-1 behind the pitching of lefthander Johnny Podres and reliefer Ron Perranoski.
AN ARMY communique from the third military zone said Villeda Morales was overthrown to put a halt to restlessness and anarchy in the country and end flagrant violations of the constitution and obvious communist infiltration.
Right fielder Roger Maris of the Yankees suffered a muscular bruise of the left arm that forced him from the game in the third inning today, but Yankee physician Dr. Sidney Gaynor said Maris would be ready to play again Saturday.
Villeda Morales was deposed just 10 days short of completing a six-year mandate. General elections for his successor were scheduled for a week from next Sunday.
Elston Howard greeted the Dodger reliever with a single to right field which scored Lopez for the Yankees' only run. Joe Pepi-tone then forced Howard at second and Cletis Boyer struck out.
The Dodgers scored 4 runs on 10 hits and one error; the Yankees had one run on 7 hits and no errors.
Maris was hurt when he lunged into the wire fence along the right field foul line while chasing Tommy Davis' third inning triple.
LA Stops Yanks In 2nd Game
Gaynor said the injury was not serious. Maris was replaced in right field by Hector Lopez.
The Yankees threatened in the ninth inning when they scored their only run. After Mickey Mantle flied out to Tommy Davis, Hector Lopez hit a ground-rule double. His drive down the left field foul line bounced into the seats.
The Dodgers won the first game of the series yesterday 5-2, when Sandy Koufax set a World Series record by striking out 15 Yankee batters.
The winning pitcher was Podres. The loser was rookie Al Downing, the Yankee starter.
Dodger manager Walt Alston replaced Podres with Perranoski.
cooperation in these crucial moments when we are trying to preserve the internal and international prestige of our beloved Honduras.
In addition to the shooting in Tequigalpa, "various disorders" were reported in the north coast port towns of San Pedro Sula, Cortes, Tela and Progreso.
Weather
Continued fair autumn weather is forecast for the Lawrence area tonight and tomorrow. Slightly cooler temperatures are expected, with the low tonight of 50-55 and a high Friday of 85.
CRC Studies Job Practices
The fair employment practices of Lawrence employers will be a major target of the Civil Rights Council this year.
The CRC decided that local employers should be checked to find out whether they hire Negroes. Although the CRC did not name any specific store as discriminating in employment, they thought it to be a major problem.
THE GROUP also felt that the discrimination problem in local taverns should be checked.
Bowers said, "The tavern discrimination problem is still wide open. According to the HRC survey, 81 per cent of the KU students feel that taverns should not discriminate." It was pointed out that the HRC is rather limited in action, but the CRC will be able to act where the HRC cannot.
"There is a definite procedure to be followed in acting on an issue of this type," said Miss Nicks. "We had the same problem this summer in Detroit, and we had to find out which employers were definitely discriminating."
Charles Menghini, Pittsburg graduate and past co-chairman, said in Kansas any employer having eight or more employees must follow the state fair employment practices.
ARTHUR SPEARS, Kansas City junior, speaking on fraternity and sorority rush, said, a Negro girl interested in going through rush between semesters should sign up by next Wednesday.
It was not known at the time if Alpha Kappa Alpha, Negro sorority, would be participating in rush this year. The sorority does not have a house and therefore is not a member of Panhellenic.
"The Negroes are closer to the Greek system than they might think," said Spears. "There was a case in the past where a Negro boy was seriously being considered by a white fraternity, but before they had voted on him he pledged the colored fraternity."
IT WAS CONCLUDED that the matter was more of an individual thing and that there was nothing the CRC could do as a group except urge girls to participate.
"I can definitely say that there will be some Negro girls going through rush this year," said Spears. "I have talked to a number of freshmen and they have indicated that they will go through."
George Ragsdale, Kansas City senior, was elected chairman of the council.
Dennis Bowers, Kansas City senior, was elected vice chairman and Beverly Nicks, Detreit, Mich., junior, was elected secretary.
The CRC discussed plans for the coming semester and the survey recently conducted by the Human Rights Committee of the All Student Council.
Army troops were visibly in control in Tegucigalpa at mid-day. They held the public utilities and surrounded the presidential palace. Army regulars were all over the city, armed with tommyguns.
U. S. officials said that if it became clear that the coup had been accomplished, the normal procedure would be for Washington to announce suspension of all aid programs and official relations with Honduras. This would be because the government the United States recognizes there would have ceased to exist.
THE SAME procedure was followed Sept. 26 in the Dominican Republic when the armed forces overthrew President Juan Bosch's government. U.S. officials had feared the Dominican coup would encourage other military takeover attempts in Latin America. They said today the Tequigalpa development appeared to bear out these fears.
Officials said Washington was aware many weeks ago that a Hon-duran coup was being planned. About two weeks ago, they said, military preparations became more overt.
Ambassador Burrows was then instructed by Washington to make clear to Honduran military leaders in the strongest terms they would receive no support, and in fact opposition and disapproval, from Washington.
Only yesterday, officials reported to newsmen that it was succeeding. They said the danger of a coup appeared to be receding.
Both U.S. and Honduran officials sought to avert a coup in a series of consultations that were in progress until last night.
The captain, a member of the U.S. Army special forces, was the 83rd U.S. military man to be killed in combat in South Viet Nam since the American assistance buildup began in January, 1961. The total U.S. death toll, including the 27 non-combat fatalities, is 110.
SAIGON, SOUTH VIET NAM,
(UPI) — Communist guerrillas killed a U.S. Army captain and eight Vietnamese soldiers today in a highway ambush of a supply convoy near the Cambodian border.
U.S. Captain Killed in Saigon
AN AMERICAN military spokesman said one of the Vietnamese dead in the ambush attack was an officer. Communist casualties were not known.
The spokesman said Viet Cong Communist guerrillas sprang the ambush about 85 miles north of Saigon just as the first vehicle of a two-truck supply convoy passed a mine they had planted in the road.
THE MINE EXPLODED, blowing the first truck off the road and setting it afire. The guerrillas then fired on the other truck and detonated a second mine. Soldiers riding in the second truck scrambled for cover and opened fire on the guerrillas. The Communists retreated under the fire.
THE SOURCES said the attack occurred early Monday and that preliminary surveys indicated an estimated 70 weapons were missing and may have been captured by the Communists.
The Communists drove the hamlet's estimated 2,000 inhabitants back in the mountains from which they had come only four months ago. American sources said the inhabitants, mountaineers of the Behnar tribe, had fought until they ran out of ammunition.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Oct. 3, 1963
Frosh--Go Home!
Go home, freshman.
We don't want you because we don't want the world changed and, even if we did, realize the futility of it all.
We don't want you because we don't want to serve humanity. We haven't the time nor means. We are concerned with problems of immediate circumstance—our own.
We don't want you because you pervert the word "social." You apply it to Man; we apply it to men—us. We are not apathetic. We just cannot afford involvement.
We don't want you because causes and crusades are products of idle dreamers. What good are peace marches, sit-ins, political rallies? We are concerned with working toward a financially comfortable future, not a peaceful present.
We don't want you because you might puncture the ego-inflated balloon of petty righteousness we call our campus mood.
We are happy in our situation. We are concerned with May poles rather than atomic bombs; picnics rather than civil rights movements; personal gratification rather than Berlin walls. We quibble about dining hall quality while half the world's people go hungry. We adjust our behavior to our peers while our Gods go forgotten on the shelf. We see brother hungry and we feed him not, naked and we offer no clothing, unsheltered and we do not open the door.
But this is our way. This is what college has conditioned us to. We don't want it to change. Go home and take your causes and social concerns with you. We don't want you.
Or perhaps you might remain and deliver us from ourselves.
In the Lebanon Valley College La Vie Collegienne
If Mt. Apathy Crumbles
Sept. 22, 1963, may go down in the annals of KU history as the first day the student voice was heard in University, city and state administration, or as the day that another partisan political attempt was made to dominate the student body.
On that day the Student Liaison Committee (SLC) of the All Student Council was presented to the public for the first time at a special breakfast meeting. Attending were KU officials and a representative of the Lawrence city government, along with members of the SLC and ASC.
The purpose of the SLC is to convey student opinion on matters affecting KU to such groups as the Lawrence City Council, State Board of Regents, Kansas Legislature, the governor and KU administration.
According to the committee's chairman, Jim Thompson, the committee will be free of partisan campus politics. The investigations by the SLC will arise from suggestions given the committee by the students. During the past week, the committee announced that it would begin investigation of KU's medical service and traffic control booths and a proposal for installment payment of tuition fees.
INVESTIGATIONS WILL be conducted to find out if there actually is a grievance, by talking to students and faculty alike. If there is justification, the committee will take the "gripe" to the proper authorities for their consideration. The university already has pledged its support of the student opinion group.
The support of the students is another consideration. The apathy of many students on this
campus toward student politics is a mountain, and the first echoes usually heard from it are, "the power hungry politicians will put the committee in their pocket," or "the committee won't be able to do anything."
This mountain must break down, or the mountain itself will cause the failure of the SLC. The committee is going to have to be a cooperative venture between the SLC and the students. If the group doesn't have suggestions and support, they will certainly fail.
Although the committee is an arm of the ASC, and is therefore within striking distance of the slings and arrows of outrageous politics, Chairman Thompson has guaranteed an objective and responsible committee, free of partisan politics.
THE SLC MAY NOT always swing authorities to the students viewpoint, but the student voice at least will be heard. Many times in the past, important matters concerning the university have been pushed through without consulting students, and this not only has made the student think he was living in a totalitarian state, but it has also let the chance of a cooperative venture which might benefit all go unheard.
If "Mt. Apathy" will crumble and students will take an interest in the work of the SLC and give it reasonable suggestions, if the SLC will work with the students in mind, forgetting politics and personal whims, and if the authorities will listen and give the student voice consideration, university communications will be a success and a benefit for all concerned.
—Phil Magers
The People Say. . .
What Difference?
Editor:
I was very surprised that a committee called a Human Rights Committee was permitted by students of an institution of higher learning to ask such a loaded question in a so-called attempt to secure student opinion on sorority and fraternity secregation.
In the first place how could the UDK call a random sampling of 500 OF WHICH only 304 responded a majority of the opinions of 10,000 students on the campus of Kansas University?
Secondly, with a question which set up a hypothetical situation there was only one logical answer — the affirmative one the HRC claims to have received from half or more of the campus on this subject.
As a Negro student I would like an answer as to what interests and attitudes I hold that are so different from other students whether red, orange, yellow, or brown? I would honestly like for some of the students with affirmative answers to explain to me about these differences. How many of these students have talked to a Negro student about conservatism, the common market, socialized medicine, the nuclear test ban or birth control? Maybe I just don't know what attitudes are being referred to.
What is so different about my interests? No where in a sorority house on the University of Kansas campus can there be found a girl who enjoys Starlight Theater productions as I do. My ambitions and achievemets, I am sure, are not so different. I hope to go to Europe to do graduate work. I plan to teach Home Economics, I enjoy designing my own clothes. I worked on the college board at a department store this summer, and I even hope to get married someday. Judging from the HRC question the student who holds any of these attitudes does not live in a sorority house on this campus. These are interests of a Negro girl only.
All I am asking is that someone tell me of my special interests or attitudes. I have lived 20 years without being aware that because of my brown skin my attitudes are different simply, because of my brown skin. Maybe it is simply because I live in Kansas and attend the University of Kansas. Negro students are members of Delta Gamma, Tau Kappa Epsilon, Phi Kappa Fsi and Alpha Tau Omega on other campuses across the nation, but here at Kansas University our attitudes are too different to permit this. Is this a racial question or simply a Kansas University-Human Rights Committee inspired difference?
Jo Anne Holbert Kansas City senior
The brain women never interest us like the heart women; white roses please less than red. —Oliver Wendell Holmes
Worth Repeating...
Dailu Hansan
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1880, became biweekly 1904,
published weekly 1926.
111 Flint Hall
UUniversity 4-2646, newsroom
UNiversity 4-2198, business office
University of Kansas student newsnauer
Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service and Associated Press. My News service; United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the week, except Saturdays and Sundays, at Lawrence University and amination periods. Second class postage paid, Lawrence, Kansas
Mike Miller Managing Editor
Terry Ostmeyer, Tryard Deserve,
Jackie Stern, Rose Osborne, Assistant
Managing Editors; Kary Javis, City
Society Editor; Society Editor;
Ray Miller, Sports Editor; Dennis
Bowers, Picture Editor.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Blaine King Editorial Editor
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Bob Brooks Business Manager
Carolynik, Ruechuk, Mgr.
Alice Rueschhof, Circulation Mgr.
Brooks Harrison, Classified Adv. Mgr.
Donald Sizer, Mgr.
Donald Sizer, Production Mgr.
Donald Schreepfer, Merchandising Mgr.
Jerry
VALACHI
MOBSTER TESTIMONY
©1963 HERBLOCK
"It's An Entirely Different World— Like Birmingham"
BOOK REVIEWS
REBELS AND ANCESTORS: THE AMERICAN NOVEL 1890- 1915, by Maxwell Geismar (American Century, $1.95).
Here is a big book, and an excellent one, first published a decade ago, which gives us lengthy, detailed and discerning examinations of five major writers. They are Frank Norris, Stephen Crane, Jack London, Theodore Dreiser and Ellen Glasgow.
Geismar uses Frank Norris both as an introduction and a focus. Norris was a kind of bridge between the past and the present, in his novels which contain strong indictments of society but also a bit of fussiness characteristic of Howells or James. Norris wrote three important novels in the "naturalistic mode" (Geismar says many tend to misuse the term naturalism)—"McTeague," "The Octopus," and "The Pit"—and was doing in fiction what several magazine writers were doing in non-fiction, namely the "muckrakers."
Stephen Crane, despite excellent short stories and two important novels—"The Red Badge of Courage" and "Maggie"—was a writer unfulfilled. He splashed briefly but sensationally on the literary sky, and like several other writers had his spectacular successes as a newspaper correspondent. Crane paved the way for many, both in theme and in style, and it is as a stylist that he perhaps survives most today.
Jack London, says Geismar, is a relatively forgotten writer, and this is unfortunate, for in his time he was both important and influential. No longer is he regarded as a writer of children's stories of the North, for there are deeper meanings in "The Call of the Wild" than can be grasped by the young. London was exciting and flamboyant and though a lesser talent remains one of the unforgettable figures in our fiction.
There is only one woman in this book, but she is an important one. In her way Ellen Glasgow was as important in depicting the changing South as was the somewhat later Faulkner. Virginia, chiefly Richmond, was her arena, and in several penetrating novels Miss Glasgow gave us people as torn in their world as the Mississippiians of Faulkner.
Of the five writers discussed here, Dreiser extended his influence most into the period beyond Geismar's consideration, and his greatest book "An American Tragedy," did not appear until the twenties. But Dreiser was transitional, and his "Sister Carrie" was as shocking and as controversial in its time as Crane's "Maggie." Geismar observes that Dreiser's career was a series of suppressions. For he, like the other people in this book, embarked on literary voyages shocking to a somewhat conventional age—CMP
* * *
THE BIG SEA, by Langston Hughes (American Century, $1.95; cloth-bound, $4.50).
This is the first volume of Langston Hughes' autobiography, first published in 1940 and detailing the days of the twenties, when "the Negro was in vogue" and this young Midwesterner was breaking into writing and going through his formative years.
Hughes was born in Joplin, Mo., but raised in Lawrence, and his experiences are those of a northern Negro. He was a cook and a waiter in Paris night clubs, and he saw the life being led by expatriates of all countries in the roaring twenties. Like Richard Wright he knew musicians and artists.
He became an interesting young poet in Harlem, and established a reputation that he still holds today. And there were many other adventures. Hughes is an old-fashioned Negro in the eyes of James Baldwin, but he and others like him paved the way for the militant youths heading the protest movements of the 1960s.
Thursday, Oct. 3, 1963
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Barry Denies Speech Attacking Radical Right
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — Sen. Barry Goldwater, R-Ariz., says a speech attributed to him by the Congressional Record—in part, attacking the "radical right"—was not made by him after all, although he agrees with the remarks.
Goldwater had the speech inserted in the record but the issue in which it appeared said it was made by Goldwater at Montclair, N.J., on Aug. 24.
Some of the statements caused raised eyebrows around Washington—particularly because of some strong statements about the "radical right" and such groups as the John Birch Society.
HE SAID THE speech actually was given by Gerald J. Skibbins, a Princeton, N.J., research executive, at Montclair. "Although I am in agreement with the remarks of Mr. Skibbins, I want to make it clear that I am not the author of them," Goldwater said.
The record made a mistake in attributing it to him, said the GOP presidential front-runner.
Goldwater's office explained further that the Senator, upon receiving permission to have the speech published in the record, handed it to a Senate aide. He said it was properly labeled as having been delivered by Skibbins, but somehow Skibbins' name was dropped between the Senate floor and the government printing office.
SKIBBINS' speech was a long dissertation on "marks of Conservative political thought in America," dealing with the "far right reactionaries" as well as other groups.
These are some of the statements that created something of a political stir:
"Many Americans squirm when they hear the label 'Conservative' because they think of pre-World War II isolationism, John Birch Society members, America Firsters, Segregationists, Ku Klux Klanmen, and many other little groups who feel that freedom means an extralegal hunting or hating license rather than a responsible privilege held under the law.
ORDER YOUR RING NOW!
"LET US LOOK honestly at the so-called radical right. First, it is
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA
Δ Δ Δ
1863
the university shop
BROY'S APPAREL
1420 Crescent Road — On the Hill
YOUR GRADUATION RING
the most respected symbol of your educational achievement.
Street barons in the 1930's, screamed Communist at those who sought new ideas; and today it hates the U.N., Big Business, the federal government, and all taxes. These attacks are actually psychotic projections of people who fear that their world is slipping away forever.
STOP Read the CLASSIFIEDS
STOP
escapegoat, and rather than see themselves in the mirror for what they are, these people exonerate themselves by finding something or someone to hate.
not radical at all. Most of its elements either believe in the ancient rule of force outside the law, or else they merely reflect an ignorant unawareness of their world.
"As our society grows more complex and changes before our eyes each day, many citizens—especially those who cannot easily change with the times, or who possess little breadth of human understanding—lose their living courage and succumb to fear. Fear always seeks a
"This understandable but unforgivable human error is called reactionaryism and it exists on the far right just as much as it does on the far left."
"IN THE PAST, this element of fear in our American society has burned witches in Puritan times, held African natives in contempt as slaves and sold them as farm animals, shot American presidents, hated all foreigners, attacked Wall
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Oct. 3, 1963
--arm and took her down to the Capital office. The staff was so excited that they stopped the press and tore up the edition. A photographer set up a picture of Carrie holding a hatchet in one hand and the Bible in the other which later became famous.
THE PRINT SALE IS COMING SOON!
--arm and took her down to the Capital office. The staff was so excited that they stopped the press and tore up the edition. A photographer set up a picture of Carrie holding a hatchet in one hand and the Bible in the other which later became famous.
Read and Use Kansan Classifieds
"Have you had your Pit Stop yet this week?"
Make a "Pit Stop" Friday afternoon and T.G.I.F. in the newly remodeled
Southern Pit
VI 3-9481
1834 Mass.
'97 Grad Recalls Carrie Nation, Campus
Bv Don Black
A KU alumnus of 1897 who was a friend of Carrie Nation returned yesterday to visit the campus for the first time in 35 years.
Will Thomas Reed, 88, of Seattle, Wash., was elected assistant manager of the football team of 1897 and manager in 1898 for two weeks. He had to quit working on his master's degree program and returned to work as a reporter on the Topeka Journal-Capital.
Reed met Carrie coming down the street in Topeka and she asked him where she could find a reporter. He told her she was in luck — "you are talking to one," Reed said.
IT WAS as a reporter that he met Carrie Nation, hatchet-wielding temperance reformer of the late 1800's. He told the story vividly, recalling names of streets and minute details.
She told him she was Carrie Nation and Reed grabbed her by the
"There were only five buildings when I was here on campus." Reed said. He could only remember three buildings, old Spooner library, Fraser Hall, and a building located where Corbin Hall now stands.
**REED IS** enroute to visit relatives in Topeka for a few weeks and stopped to see Lawrence friends and the Phi Delta Theta fraternity. He looked over the campus yesterday and had dinner with the men.
writes.
REED SAID that he showed Carrie around the town and pointed out all the "joints" that she asked to see. He restrained her from doing any damage that evening but he said, with a twinkle in his eye, "she hit all the joints the next day."
Reed added that Kansas Citians put up a sign shortly after the Topeka incident that read: "All nations welcome except Carrie."
Reed, who resembles slightly the late poet Robert Frost, is now doing some independent writing after 20 years of periodical newspaper work all over the nation. One of his books, "Do You Know God," gave an indication of the material he
One of the fraternity men asked Reed what he thought of the modern college women. Reed replied, "Well, short skirts don't leave much to the imagination."
Reed moved about the dinner table and received visitors with a strong grip and a vigorous manner. He used no artificial aids but frequently asked for questions to be repeated louder. Proudly Reed pointed out that he had been sick but one day of his life.
WHEN THE CAR IS PACKED
KILLE
BRING 'EM OUT TO DIXON'S
FOR THE BEST...THE VERY BEST IN SANDWICHES AND SOFT DRINKS. GREAT FRIED CHICKEN, TOO.
2500 W. SIXTH
VI 3-7446
Thursday, Oct. 3, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
For a weekend you won't soon forget go to the
TRAVELING HOOTENANNY
Friday, Oct.11
8:00 p.m. Hoch Auditorium
Tickets $.75 - $1.00 - $1.25 on sale Oct. 3 & 4 at information booth
and then go to the
SUA CARNIVAL
Saturday, Oct. 12 7-11 p.m. Student Union
Admission 85c
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified
PEOPLE-TO-PEOPLE MEMBERSHIP MEETING
TONIGHT..7:30 Student Union Ballroom
All interested persons urged to attend!
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Thursday. Oct. 3, 1963
Ancient 'Twist' Helps Student Recover Spirit
By Rick Mabbutt
A slight figure, oblivious to staring students, glides slowly through a strange dance on the lawn in front of Watson Library. The dancer is Tung-Bu Lee, a graduate student in civil engineering from Formosan. The dance Tung-Bu Lee calls a spiritual and physical exercise.
The history of the exercise, has no English name, goes back several thousand years, Lee said.
AN ANCIENT PRIEST lived on the top of a mountain. One day, while taking a walk, he saw a snake and a bird fighting, the legend says.
The bird would attack, swooping down at the snake. The snake would sway back and forth, evading each swoop of the bird. The priest watched the struggle in fascination and after contemplating what he had seen realized his people could learn something from the movements of the snake.
The priest adapted the controlled gliding, swaying and retreating movements of the snake into a self-defense to be used in war.
THE PRIEST who originated the exercise practiced it for twenty years, but a strange thing happened; he never seemed to age.
A CHINESE DOCTOR of the time attributed the priest's youthfulness to the effects of the exercise and thus it became regarded as a "fountain of youth."
American medical reports of four years ago indicate the exercise is beneficial to the general health of its practitioners. Lee said.
While practicing the exercise, Lee said, there are the stars, the trees, the ground, and you; everything all together."
"Everything you love very much is in this place. You can not think about anything. You 'must be natural." Lee said earnestly.
For devotees of the exercise it is also a spiritual life—a resting and recharging of the mental processes.
"After studying in the library am tired and I come to this place and
exercise and recover my spirit," he said. smiling shily .
Lee was graduated from the National Taiwan University and upon the recommendation of the chairman of the engineering department, who had studied in the United States, he came to KU.
Senior Party October 12
The first senior party will be after the Senior Day game with Iowa State. Oct. 12.
The senior committee scheduled the party at their meeting last night.
Jerry Pullins, senior class president, said that other announcements concerning senior activities for the year will be made at the senior coffee, Oct. 23. The coffee will be held in the Student Union Ballroom at 9:30 p.m. A 25-cent admission will be required of all seniors who have not paid their fees. He added that seniors can still pay their fees in the Alumni Office in Strong Hall.
The committee discussed Senior Day activities, a Christmas party, a concert and a trip.
Mimeographed copies of senior cheers will be distributed and practiced at the senior coffee.
Pullins said that by the end of next week, a senior representative will have visited each organized house and living group on the hill. These representatives will contact seniors regarding class activities.
Pullins said that all seniors should have their sweatshirts and buttons by the day of the senior coffee.
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Jack Beal, professor of pharmacognosy at Iowa State University, will speak on "Mister. What's in That Tree," at the pharmacy lecture this afternoon.
ture this afternoon.
The lecture, which will be given in 324 Malott, will be about medicines derived from plants.
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Thursday, Oct. 3, 1963
University Daily Kansan
Page 7
American Living Surprises French Tourists
PARIS—(UPI) — Unfenced yards . . houses with curtains pulled back so passersby can look in . . free matches . . backyard barbecues . . air-conditioned churches.
These are some of the many surprises of the United States to the increasing number of French tourists going across the Atlantic to take a look.
The U.S. Travel Service office in Paris reports that 18 per cent more French tourists, or 15,629, visited the United States during the first half of 1963 than during the same period of 1962.
Recently several recorded their impressions of how they viewed the United States, such as author Maurice Laurent, who wrote a popular book, "The Sea Is Beautiful" that informed the French "My voyage was astonishing, the country is astonishing, the citizens are astonishing."
LAURENT WAS stunned to discover he could rent a car without showing many documents, and then leave it it any city. He discovered free matches and road maps, an air-conditioned Methodist Church in Tifton, Ga., and mink-trimmed pencils.
"Niceness flows. (he noted) the gentleness of individuals in a country noted for feverishness . . . Americans love money, and an American not only says so, he proclaims it . . ."
Laurent advised his readers that
the most important word to know in the United States is "aie" or "haillle." ("hi"), which he described as "the universal salutation applied to all individuals, sexes, ages, status." Also, he said, it is wise for the foreigner to steel himself when someone says "hi"—for he will likely receive a friendly whack on the back.
THE AMERICAN greeting ritual includes an exchange of addresses, a confession of how much money you make and a round of drinks, he said.
Laurent liked American superhighways but was puzzled because "at an intersection, even if the other driver has the right of way, he amiably lets you pass . . . Americans lack that aggression that to us is so cherished."
He also noted sadly that the American pedestrian is not fair game as in Paris, but "sacred."
HE HAD SOME complaints:
Americans waste electricity on animated neon signs. And "America is provincial . . . we vote in France and the Chicago and New Orleans newspapers devote two lines to it. But they take four columns to detail a reception offered by Mrs. Smith on the occasion of her taking over the Dallas Post Office."
As with all tourists, the natives proved the most fascinating to Laurent.
"It is necessary to destroy legends about Americans," he wrote. "Americans are not only British exiles embarked on the Mayflower. They are no more the immigrants of Poland or Denmark."
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"GRAND CANYON: Takes your breath away. Indian souvenirs are curious and interesting I saw cow-boys with big hats.
"Chicago: Contrary to legend, Chicago is a beautiful and interesting city. The slum quarter is being razed. Much commercial activity. The loop cuts the view but the natives like it.
"They are all of that, with the discipline of Germans, the glibness of Italians, the courage of Norwegians, the stubbornness of the Irish . . . The people are so different and yet so similar.
"Lafayette, Ind.: Houses have no fences. Many drive-in restaurants and banks. The normal American home has a refrigerator and freezer. "New York: Like a fairyland at night. Porters want 25 cents for carrying a bag. The lobby of a New York hotel is like a railway station, everyone coming and going. Enormous buildings with thousands of windows, a stream of people. The Bowery quarter is lamentable.
AS FRENCH THINK first, or at least second, of eating. He concluded foreign tourists should go to a cafeteria or charcoal-broil steak house. He was amused by "French dressing" and "French fried onions," neither of which exists in France, but noted he ate better pizzas in Los Angeles than in Italy.
AS FRENCH THINK first, or at least second, of eating.
"The American type does not exist yet, but one can recognize the average American. He is relaxed. Except in big cities, the tempo of life is slow. One waits in line, but without haste or nervousness. Curious!"
"Santa Barbara: Many aged persons and expensive antique shops. Barbecue cuisine. Americans love picnics and outdoor life. Maids make $3.20 an hour and come to work in sumptuous automobiles. A rodeo just like the Westerns on French television.
Another recent tourist, schoolteacher Germaine Goulard, said in an interview that "contrary to what one thinks, one eats well in the United States—if you leave the sauces and colored condiments to one side."
MRS. GOULARD toured the United States with her son and his wife, who now live in Lafayette, Ind. Some of her impressions:
"Los Angeles: Every home is airconditioned, with swimming pools.
"San Francisco: The most beautiful city in America, a city of elegance, beauty of site and serenity of people who live there.
"One can eat at any hour of the day or night, and well. Beef is good. Cola, fruit juice, beer and milk are the American drinks.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Oct. 3, 1963
Ellsworth Dedication Scheduled for Sunday
Dedication ceremonies will be Sunday afternoon at Ellsworth Hall.
Several hundred guests are expected to be present for the dedication and open house. Ceremonies will begin at 2:30 p.m. with an introduction by J. J. Wilson, director of dormitories.
William J. Moore, dean of the school of religion, will give the invocation, and Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe will introduce Fred Ellsworth, for whom the hall is named.
With Ellsworth will be his wife, Lucile, his two sons, Robert, a 1945 KU graduate who is the U.S. Representative from Kansas' Third District, and Stephen, a 1949 KU graduate, and his sister, Miss Maud Ellsworth, a retired professor of art education at KU.
Ellsworth retired June 30 as executive secretary of the KU Alumni Association after 38 years of service in that office. He took the office of counsel for the 1966 KU centennial celebration upon his retirement.
Ellsworth began teaching at the age of 17 in a country school in the Brooklyn Ridge District in Lynn County, Kansas. After three years of teaching he entered KU in the fall of 1916.
ELLLSWORTH'S KU CAREER was interrupted by two years of service in the Army during World War I. He served on the front lines at Argonne.
In 1919 he returned to KU and completed an AB in journalism in 1922.
For two years prior to his service as executive secretary, he was advertising manager for the Pratt Daily Tribune in Pratt, Kansas.
Construction on the 10-story structure began March, 1962, and was completed September, 1963. The total cost was $2.3 million, and the facilities were designed to house 670 men.
The KU School of Engineering received a $6,000 grant to be used in a project to measure stresses on pressure tanks and automobile frames. The information will improve the accuracy of industrial electronic computer analysis of stress.
Engineers Receive $8.500 for Research
The money was given to KU by the A.O. Smith Corp, Milwaukee, Wis.
The project will be administered by the Center for Research in Engineering.
A grant of $2,500 from the Bendix Corp. of Kansas City, has also been given to KU. The money will be used to develop a simple damper (a device for reducing vibrations).
UP Vice-Chairman Says Student Politics No Farce
The vice-chairman of the University Party told a meeting of the party's general assembly last night that critics of campus politics are mistaken in calling it a "farce."
"There is a place on this campus for politics," Clay Blair, Joplin Mo., sophomore said. "With the efforts of each of us, UP can play an important part in political activities here."
Approval of a revised party constitution was postponed until the next general assembly meeting, tentatively scheduled for Oct. 16.
tation for living groups will be two. Marvin said the new provision for adding extra delegates mainly will affect independent houses.
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Thursday, Oct. 3, 1963
University Daily Kansan
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Page 9
R
10
Language Is Key to Understanding in Russia
By Jim Langford
Twelve students found that their knowledge of the Russian language was a passport to getting to know the Russian people this summer.
After eight weeks in Jarvenpaa, Finland, as participants in the Kansas-Colorado Summer Russian Language School, the KU students took a two-week tour of Russia.
THEY DISCOVERED that their ability to speak Russian often passed them off as either natives of the city they were in or as Russian or European tourists.
"One Russian," Roger Findlay Prairie Village senior, said, "found out I was American and could speak Russian. Soon I had a crowd of about 20 people around me, asking me questions. They seem to be highly interested in material goods, since they themselves have such a lack of goods in both quality and quantity."
The students found that it was easy to trade on the black market while in Russia, Harold Baker, Osborne senior, said.
"They're not afraid of approaching you. One man walked right up to me and tried to buy my raincoat." Baker said.
"THERE WASNT a day that I wasn't approached by somebody wanting to buy something," Findlay said. "They wanted to buy clothes mostly, but would buy anything I wanted to sell. The Russians are
KU People-to-People will have its general membership meeting tonight at 7:30 p.m. in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union. Patricia Koos, Mission junior and P-t-P membership chairman, said all students interested in joining are invited to attend.
P-t-P Schedules Genesal Session
poorly dressed. They wear paper thin sandals. The men wear cheap suits with shabby sport shirts underneath. The whole time I was there I saw maybe three or four white shirts. They were probably government officials."
The students began their Russian study in the Finnish school in June.
The students began their Russian study in the Finnish school in June. "We started our Russian courses after being there one week and taking Russian tests," Findlay explained. "We took the same tests after the course was over to find out if we improved."
"WHILE WE WERE in Finland we toured Tampere and on July 4 we were in Turku, their second largest city." Findlay said.
Jarvenpaa, the site of the language school, is just outside Helsinki.
"I had a fairly accurate idea of what Finland would be like," Donna Hannemane, Junction City sophomore, said, "with the people working in rolled-up sleeves. They were friendly and hospitable."
The students arrived in the Soviet Union August 4. They toured such cities as Leningrad, Novgord, Kalinin, and Moscow. They made the trip in an old bus.
"I DON'T THINK I'll forget for a long while the first time I saw a Russian soldier other than a border guard," Miss Hanneman said. "He was carrying a brief case and I couldn't help feeling that he was carrying things anti-U.S."
Karl vonLoewe, Lawrence graduate student, had been in Russia before. "The program being new, it was a little different for all of us, a new experience," he said.
"When I was there three years ago, I was working on a project for the Student Promotion of Amity Among Nations (SPAN). We were there about six weeks and got to travel quite a bit. I was doing research on the "Young Pioneer" organization, something like the Boy Scouts in America," he added.
"I found that overall Russia had
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changed for the better," vonLoewe said. "Their living conditions are better, with more private apartments for the individual. Before, living was more communal, with families sharing a common kitchen."
"I felt the program was very successful in comprehension," Findlay said. "We were forced to use the language, and for me it seemed to come alive. It was amazing the difference and enthusiasm I felt in changing from classroom to actual conversational Russian."
dized. When he came out he seemed a little embarrassed, as if he realized it had been a little too hard to believe," von Loewe explained
WHILE IN MOSCOW, vonLoewe obtained an appointment to tour Radio Moscow.
"While I was there, I watched one Russian taping a program about 'What is Communism. It was a little too heavy.' highly propagan-
"However, they were very easy to talk to, and just jabbed away until I mentioned the Chinese. Then they clammed up. They wouldn't say anything."
The other eight students from KU
After two weeks in Russia all the students seemed to be relieved to be back in Finland.
Sam Anderson, assistant professor of Slavic language, joined the tour in Finland and guided the tour of Russia. It was Prof. Anderson's fourth trip to Russia. He had been there previously in 1956, 1959, and 1960.
"WHEN WE crossed the border," vonLoewe said, "we all let out a big cheer and when we stopped we all bought chocolate."
Baker said "Finland was the closest thing to Heaven I had ever seen. Even fields and forests looked different."
who participated in the program were: Barbara Backus, Lawrence graduate student; Joy Bullis, Davenport, Iowa junior; Joseph Cerniglia, Lawrence graduate student; John Finger, Lawrence graduate student; Stephen Klemp, Lawrence sophomore; Annalay Nickum, Lawrence graduate; David Seal, Independence, Mo. senior; and Irene Zaluski, Ontario, Canada. senior.
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Oct. 3, 1963
40
DOUBLE TROUBLE—These two Wyoming players are expected to give KU the most trouble when it travels to Laramie, Wyo., Saturday to play the Cowboys. Wayne Linton( left) is the Cowboys' hard-running fullback, Jeff Hartman, a quarterback, is rated as a good passer.
KU-Cowboys Game Brought Tie in 1961
KU hasn't been beaten by a football team from mountain states since 1942, excluding the University of Colorado since 1948 when it joined the Big Eight Conference.
The Jayhawks hope they'll still be able to point to that fact after they play Wyoming Saturday at Laramie.
In games dating back to 1896, KU has a 18-3-5 record against a combination of Wyoming, Utah, Arizona Denver and Colorado State teams.
DENVER, WHICH no longer competes in football, was the last mountain team to defeat the Jayhawks (17-0 in 1942).
Wyoming nearly pulled an upset here two years ago when the two teams tied at 6-all. Both touchdowns were scored in the first half of that game and the Cowboys had the ball most of the last half.
Ken Coleman, one of KU's two returns from the game, scored on a three-yard run. Wyoming immediately drove 84 yards for the tying score.
Wyoming returns three persons from the 1961 game—ends Mack Balls and Tom Delaney and backfull Wayne Linton. Pete Quatrochi, KU's starting center, was a third-stringer then.
JACK MITCHELL, KU coach, is concerned about Wyoming's passing this Saturday. The Cowboys did all right in that respect in 1961.
Even without Chuck Lamson, their
Runners Open Against Salukis
The KU cross country team will be trying for its 18th consecutive dual meet victory Saturday when it opens the season against Southern Illinois at 10:30 a.m. at the Lawrence Country Club golf course.
The Salukis' top runners are two Englishmen, Bill Cornell and Brian Turner. Cornell placed second in the 880 in the NCAA meet last year and Turner was second in the NCAA three-mile-run in 1962.
George Cabrera, who was KU's No. 1 distance man all last year, beat both Southern Illinois runners last year. Cabrera is one of the team's three returning seniors.
The other seniors are Paul Acevedo, current No. 1 man, and Chick Fero. Other members are junior Herald Hadley and sophomores Ken Holm, John Donner and Lowell Paul.
KU-Wyoming Game On Area Stations
The KU-Wyoming football game Saturday at Laramie will be broadcast by the KU Sports Network on KANU. KLWN and KMBC radio stations in this area.
Tom Hedrick will give play-by- play descriptions and Dick Harp will provide color.
Another area station carrying the game will be WREN, Topeka.
ace who was injured, the Cowboys completed 10 of 16 passing attempts for 164 yards. Quarterback Andy Melosky hit seven of 11 trys for 124 yards.
"I wish Lamson hadn't gotten hurt," Mitchell said after the game.
The Cowboys' top passer this season is Tom Wilkinson, who paced the 227 yards in passing gained in the Cowboys' 21-14 upset of Utah State Saturday.
"WYOMING COULD be as good as Syracuse." Coach Mitchell said after practice this week. "We've got to win against Wyoming to prove to ourselves the victory over Syracuse wasn't a mirage."
Wyoming opened the season with a 35-0 victory over Montana State, the same day Utah State was beating Arizona, 45-0.
In the game here two years ago, Coleman was KU's leading rusher on 28 yards. The Wichita senior has moved past John Hadi into 11th place on KU's all-time career rushing list with 1,074 yards.
Mitchell took time out yesterday after practice to blast the new substitution rule again.
"It's injurious to players," he said, citing the example of Wally Mahle, Syracuse quarterback, who had to stay in the KU-Syracuse game for two plays with a sprained wrist because of the rule.
"It's not the officials' fault." Mitchell emphasized. "If they weren't helping us, it'd be twice as bad."
Mitchell said the rule is so confusing a coach has to spend 90 per cent of his time on the sideline worrying about substitutions.
"I want to be more concerned about football than I do calculus," he said.
MORE FOR YOU TODAY!
MORE...of the better seats
...student ID. exchange
...can get them...
Yes, the University Theatre has revised its student ticket policy. Expanded student I.D. exchange seating is now available on the main floor and the mezzanine. These choice tickets will be dispensed on a first-come, first-served basis, and today is the first day for I.D. exchange. Don't miss these fine shows this year:
The Emperor Jones by Eugene O'Neill Oct. 9-12
The Corn is Green by Emlyn Williams Feb.5,6,7,8
Period of Adjustment by Tennessee Williams Apr. 22, 23, 24, 25
Madame Butterfly
by Giacomo Puccini
Nov. 1, 2, 8, 9
Shakespearean Production Mar.18,19,20,21,22
Box Office Hours:
10-12, 1-5 daily
10-12, Saturdays
GET YOUR EMPEROR JONES TICKETS NOW AT THE BOX OFFICE, MURPHY HALL
for cash sales, phone UN 4-3982 for 24 hr. telephone reservation service.
TICKETS ARE ALSO ON SALE AT THE FOLLOWING
LOCATIONS:
Bell Music Co.
Kansas Union
- Maupintour Associates
- Raney Drug Stores Hillcrest, Plaza, Downtown
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified
SENIORS A to H, STUDENT TEACHERS AND FALL SEMESTER GRADUATES! October is the month that YOU are scheduled to have your SENIOR PICTURES taken. Call Estes Studio, VI 3-1171 for your appointment.
One o
Kane
88
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 Hail by 2 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not re-
FOR SALE
New shipment of Pink typing paper, 500
room-team -858 Lawrence Outdoor,
1005 Mass
GOOD USED FM RADIO $20.00—guaranteed perfect! Used Radio-Phono combi equipment. Woofer=$50.00. Stoneback's, 929 Park (Open Tues. and Thurs. evenings.) 10-7
Volkswagen owners attention; New 3 year premium nylon, tubeless tires on sale at $16.50 exg. plus tax. Retreats $11.00 exg. Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center, 929 Mass. Fast free installation. 10-7
Bike clearance One shopworn men's 28" $29.97 - Ray Stoneback's 929. Mass. 10-7
General Psychology study notes. Excel-
torial sections $4.00 per copy. Call VI 9-2378.
Over 30 modern pistols. rifles and shotguns left. Hundreds of rounds of ammo far below wholesale. Thousands of dollars invested in this collection. All must go! See now at 824 Ark. or call VI3-1110. tf
1957 MGA fightergard hardtop, wind wheels, new tires, luggage rack, R&H, side screens, 8,000 miles. Will consider bus in trade. Jack Hibler VI-21-100. 10-11
22 Magnum, 6x scope. Sling and case included. excellent condition. $40.00.
typewriter-portable. 1962 modern perfect contact. Contact Jim Kiennai VI: 92-1494. Man-10.4
1963 Olds F-85 Cutlass coupe, with
front-wheel drive. Call SI 7-307 for information.
10-8
Antique Trunks — beautifully decorated and lined—makes ideal chests. Must see to appreciate at these prices—$20.00 and $25.00. Call Crestwood 2-0311 Topeka, Kansas or write Louise Johnston, 5424 W. 19th, Topeka, Kansas for appointment.
A a few nice Siamese kittens—sure to please. Phone VI 3-0148. 10-3
Handsome hand-woven wool blanket for sale. Polish import. Vivid colors. 6'8" by 5'. Perfect as a knee rug for games. Call VI3-6830. 10-3
Sealpoint Slames kittens. Call VI-2-
1695. 10-4
1962 Buck Special convertible. Call VI 3082 after 5 p.m. 13-6 Stouffer. I 10-4
LAWRENCE FIREARMS CO. New and used guns and ammo. Military weapons and handguns. Lugers. We also rebuil-
d Ohio VI, II-1214 afternoons and nings.
Must sell 1963 1950 4-dr. Steal at $1795. Zeiss 35 MM camera. Popular and affordable price. Electron-them. Also piano and Organ instrument. Call VI 2-1610. 10-4
Now's the time, set your Aquariums up.
Lots of Beautiful plants. Nice variety of fish. All at reasonable prices. Marty's Fish Bank, 1416 Conn. 10-4
Old Special Coronet. Just like new. Call VI 2-2186 at 6:00 p.m. 10-3
Sure—Everything in the field at pet field has
$ have more cents. 1218 Conn. VT3-2921
ELECTROLUX VACUUM · CLEANERS.
New electroliux and a limited number of rebuilt, fully guaranteed. All parts available. Equipment picked up for service and delivered. Frank V. Cox Local Manager-1904 Barker. CCall V13-3807.
Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outlines of lecture classes. Formerly known as the Theta notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50.
AUTO LIABILITY INSURANCE, also collision and comp. Most risks covered; under age drivers; scooters; motor bikes; motor cycles; rates avail. Brown Realty Co. Ph. VI 2-0179 — Realtors — $729^{1}$ Mass. tf
Typewriters, new and used portables,
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Royal and Smith Corona portables. Typewriter and adding machine service and rental. Lawrence Typewriter, 730 Mass.
Call VI 3-3644. tf
FM RADIOS! STEREOS! STEREO FMS!
Largest stock in Lawrence at low discount prices—New GE FM RADIO cut to $25.00. AM-FM 28.8G. GE 4 speed record. Player's stonebuckle s. 929 MHz. In set of record album to $1.99 each. in set of 10 albums!
50 Bicycles at low discount prices! New 26' Royce Union lightweight cut to 19' Schwinn. Schwartz lightweight—Rock Stoneback's 929 Mass. St., basement floor. 10-7
To the sports minded and economy minded,
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PARTY TIME: School house available for private parties, dances, meetings, refreshment with piano, chairs, tables, freshment room and coolers. V13-7453--431 orrest.
Save on food costs. Rent a frozen food locker. Meat for sale. Budget plan. Triplett Lockers, 6th and Miss. Call VI 3-6250 10-11
WANTED
Anyone who has the rank of Rokkyu and above and is interested in starting a judo club contact Steve Roepke or Bob Clause at 707 Templin Hall. 10-8
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart. 1025 Mass. tf
FOR RENT
Very nice partially furnished 2 bedroom apartment in new fourplex. Carpeted living room, automatic laundry facilities. Located on West 25th St. $85.00 per month. Call VI 3-0280 or VI 3-9038 for appointment to see. 10-7
Why walk or drive a long way to class?
Have a nice sleeping room for single man. Across street from stadium. Call VI 3-8066. 10-8
Spacious 2 room apartment, private bath,
2 blocks from campus, $65.00 utilities
paid. Inquire at 1334 Ohio after 5. 10-8
Page 11
FOR RENT OR SALE: 35x8' one bedroom trailer. Call VI3-9453 after 5 p.m.
Semi-Basement apartment. 1649 Edgehill Rd. Call VI 3-2315. 10-3
Ridge House Apartments. Available and now renting. 1 and 2 bedroom apartments with carpieres, fully equipped kitchens (appliances in colors). New furniture packages available. 24th and Ridge Court, V3-11-16. "Let us move you for free."
Quiet large room for two boys, and large room for one boy. Linens furnished. Near campus. 1701 Ohio. Call VI 2-3618. 10.4
One bedroom apartment for couple. Private bath and entrance. First floor—clean—near KU. Call VI 3-0554 after 7 p.m. 10-3
Vacancies in contemporary home with outside swimming pool for young man. Private entrance, utilities paid, $450 per week. Cooked dinner if desired. Call VI 3-9635. 10-15
1 bedroom house, completely furnished,
air-conditioner, near downtown, no pets!
for adult, be near the apartment for
eagle, near Campus. Campus IV
VI 3-0554 before 9 a.m. or after 7 p.m. tf
LOST
Since Sat—black 1’s Siamese cat 6 mo.
From Sat—black 2’s Siamese cat 9 mo.
U 4-304-1 8 to 5 or return to 1121 Ohio.
Glasses in black case lost Saturday after
careful search. Please call Larry Salmon. VI 2-9100, 865-734-1018.
Set of seven or eight keys lost either in Summerfield or on intramural field on Sunday afternoon to be numbered 147. Contact Bill Mantzus, TKE house VI 3-910-10-4.
TRANSPORTATION
Car pool or riders: Mission, Kansas to KU. My classes run 7:50 to 10:20 daily, would consider 7:30. Call RA 2-1727 after 6 p.m.
10-2
Transportation wanted to KU M-F. Call VI 2-2310 after 5. 10-3
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TYPING
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Efficient and experienced typer would like to do work in home. Prompt and guaranteed work. Call at any time. VI 3-2651. 10-31
Typing: Dissertations theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines: 35 special symbols, battery if possible. Prompt off of service cable to Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI2-1546 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI3-305t
Typing; Desertations, theses, manuscripts,
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ribbon—if desired. Prompt, efficient service.
Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI2-1546
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Experienced typist. 6 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typewriter, fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barger, Blow 40, W 13th. VI 1-2648.
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
legal terms. Marsha Goff, VI 3-2577, Ivy
Typing done for students in my home
Call VI 2-2530 after 5 p.m.
10-4
University Daily Kansan
New electric typewriter. Reasonable rates for themes, term papers, dissertations, and theses. Mrs. Barta, 1955 Miller Drive, VI 3-6944. tf
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, reports, Electric Typewriter. Responsible for Ms. Eldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 38586 ftl
Thesis Typist, Electric typewriter,
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BUSINESS SERVICES
Do you need a tutor for Chinese? If
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Children's Cut—c$1.50, except
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Will do paper hanging evenings—reasonable rates. Call VI3-2906. 10-10
Prompt, neat and accurate work on wide carriage electric typewriter. Journalism, Business and Secretary experience. Charlotte Weber. Wei 3-13495. tf
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Good rock and rock vocalist. Contact Dennis, room 703-Templin Hall. 10-3
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Thursday. Oct. 3. 1963
Jackie To Rest During Greek Vacation
ATHENS, Greece —(UPI)— The Greek press greeted Mrs. Jacqueline Kennedy with warm enthusiasm today and the public respected her wish for a restful vacation in privacy.
There were some reports she might leave her rented seaside villa today to meet King Paul at the royal palace
One Greek newspaper, reporting the arrival of the President's wife yesterday for a two-week vacation, planned to include a cruise aboard a luxurious yacht, called her "more beautiful than on her first visit here two years ago."
All of Athens' morning newspapers carried front-page photos of Mrs. Kennedy smiling at Chrysanthemis Papacotis, the 12-year-old Greek girl who had a heart operation in the United States because of the First Lady's intercession.
TWO GREEK women reporters praised Mrs. Kennedy's black suit and simple long, straight hairstair.
The President's wife went straight to the villa overlooking the Aegean Sea 15 miles from Athens. She spent the evening resting from the long jet flight from New York, during which she requested oxygen because she was tired, according to a spokesman.
MRS. KENNEDY was met at the airport by her sister, Princess Lee Radziwill, who spent part of the evening with her at the villa and then met with Greek shipping magnate Aristotle Onassis to plan the cruise aboard his yacht Christina.
As Mrs. Kennedy sails the waters off Greece in the Yahtb Christina, she will have under her feet one of the finest and most lavishly outfitted private ships in the world.
Owner Aristotle Onassis, a Greek shipping magnate, spared nothing in
making the 300-foot Christina a true princess of the seas. Her makers in Kiel, Germany, claim there is no more luxurious yacht afloat.
The Christina's carpeting and silken wall coverings are handmade. Her walls are graced by paintings, some of them priceless, including an El Greco, and some murals by Matisse. The furniture is chippendale.
Some of the ship's fittings are gold.
ONCE THE white-hulled Christina was a fighting ship. As the Canadian Navy Corvette Stormont, she engaged in the anti-submarine warfare of World War II. Onassis bought her from Canada in 1955 and had her overhauled and refitted at the government-owned Howaldt Ship- vards in Kiel.
AT KIEL, THEY still speak of the Christina with awe but will not discuss her price. To questions of the yacht's cost they respond with an anecdote about the late J. P. Morgan. A friend asked him the cost of the lavish Morgan yacht. Morgan, flicking the ash off his cigar, replied: "If you have to ask, you can't afford it."
Civil Rights and Tax Cut Bills Could Both Pass, Mansfield Says
WASHINGTON. (UPI) — Democratic leader Mike Mansfield said today it would be first come, first served in the Senate for civil rights and tax cut legislation.
The Montana Democrat said that neither bill had priority on the legislative calendar, and he predicted that both could pass before the end of the session.
MANSFIELD SAID the Senate would begin debate on the bill reaching the floor first.
Civil rights will get the nod if the House passes a bill before the Senate Finance Committee completes action on the House-passed $11 billion tax cut measure, he said.
IF, HOWEVER, Sen. Harry Byrd, D-Va., chairman of the Finance Committee, reports a tax bill to the floor before the House acts on civil rights the tax bill will go first, Mansfield added.
Mansfield's timetable differed from that of Democratic whip Hubert H. Humphrey, Minn., who said earlier this week that legislative priority belonged to the civil rights measure. He indicated that the tax bill may have to wait until early 1964.
AT THE SAME time Mansfield rejected the possibility that the Senate might jump the gun and plunge into the civil rights debate before the House completes work on a bill.
"There is nothing to be gained," he said, by bringing on an expected Southern filibuster before the House has finished its work.
MAGNUSON'S COMMITTEE plans to approve next week a public accommodations section — the controversial key to President Kennedy's sweeping civil rights program.
Magnuson said it was possible the Senate could use this as a vehicle to begin work on civil rights legislation.
A HOUSE JUDICIARY subcommittee yesterday gave formal approval to a bill which went far beyond what President Kennedy had requested but delighted civil rights leaders.
The bill was sent to the parent judiciary committee. Chairman Emanuel Celler, D-N.Y., said the committee would spend about two weeks on the measure.
However, most legislative leaders have predicted that final House action cannot come before mid-November.
Official Bulletin
SNEA Membership Drive, Sept. 30-Oct.
4. First floor Bailey, Pay Dues.
International Students: If you are interested in attending a United Nations banquet at Chanute, Kansas on Saturday, October 26, please see Dr. Coan.
Foreign Students: Any students knowing the whereabouts of Mr. Albert S. C. Cheng of Taiwan please contact the Dean of Student's office, 228 Strong Hall.
TODAY
Der Deutsche Stammitts wird sich
um 5 Uhr. Donnerstag den 3 Oktober
treffen. Im Kansas Union Cateferia Alcoves
A und BP werden vier am usam
Cateferia Alcoves ber mit plaunden
Mit Studenten in Deutsch. Alle sind
herzlich eingeladen.
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford.
Quack Club tryouts, 7-9 p.m., Robinson Pool.
Christian Science Organization. 7:30 pm.
Danforth Chapel. Everyone Welcome.
Christian Family Movement, 8. p.m.
St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center,
1915 Stratford Rd. Married couples welcome.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
BUSINESS MACHINES CO.
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SERVICE SALES RENTALS
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Supper: 5 p.m. till 6:30 p.m.
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Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
61st Year. No. 16
Friday, Oct. 4, 1963
Dispute Arises on Scope Of Liaison Committee
By Fred Frailey
The Student Liaison Committee of the All Student Council has functioned less than two weeks, but already its chairman and the student body president have differed over the duties of the group.
The committee chairman, Jim Thompson, Hugoton senior, says the committee will attempt to solve problems brought to it by students if other ASC committees do not take action.
But, Reuben McCornark. Abilene senior and student body president, says the Student Liaison Committee would be acting beyond its jurisdiction if it were to investigate problems.
Canine Battle Upsets Studies
Six snarling, snapping hounds routed students from their seats in the education room of Watson Library last night. When it was over the casualty list read, one student hitten, two dogs wounded.
The pack, consisting of a Saint Bernard, a German Shepherd, two terriers, a Pekinese and one mutt, wandered into the crowded study room and began nosing around under the tables.
THEY BEGAN growling at each other. Then they growled at students, who prompt moved in preference to returning the challenge.
Suddenly the German Shepherd and Saint Bernard lunged at each other in full view of students and the other dogs. Women scattered to a far side of the room. Other students remained quietly in their chairs.
Three unidentified students broke into the fight and began dragging the dogs out of the library. It was 15 minutes before the last dog was out and order was restored.
ONE STUDENT was bitten but the bite was not believed serious.
The Saint Bernard and the German Shepherd suffered gashes on their heads. None of the dogs were recognized as those belonging to organized houses.
THE COMMITTEE announced last week it would investigate KU's medical service, accessibility to the campus during the class hours and a proposal for installment payment of tuition fees.
The conflicting opinions were disclosed following a meeting Wednesday night between McCornack, Thompson, several other members of his committee and several ASC leaders. The purpose of the meeting was not clear.
McCornack called it a discussion of the work of ASC committees and of the ASC itself. Thompson said it concerned specifically the "scope and function" of the liaison committee.
Both Thompson and McCornack interpret differently the first paragraph of Section 2 of ASC Bill 22, which outlines the duties of the Student Liaison Committee. The bill states:
"THAT THE COMMITTEE shall endeavor to meet with the Lawrence City Council, the State Board of Regents, the State Legislature, (the University administration) and the Governor of Kansas, upon the direction of the chairman of the committee, for the purpose of advising them on matters concerning students at the University of Kansas."
McCornack said last night the bill empowers the committee to interpret to these groups the views of students "as recognized by the ASC."
"They are also in a good position to become aware of the problems facing students which have not yet been called to the attention of the ASC." McCormack said. "It is their responsibility then to inform the proper ASC committee of such problems."
He said the liaison committee is not empowered by the bill to investigate and try to solve problems on its own.
Fair skies will prevail this weekend. The low tonight will be in the 50's, the high Saturday will be 90-95, with southwesterly winds 10-20 miles per hour, the weather bureau said.
Weather
"NEITHER IS it allowed to express views of students unless the All Student Council has taken a stand on the issue," McCornack said.
"The ASC is an open forum where representatives from all living districts of the campus meet to discuss problems facing students.
"If the committees don't do their jobs, then its time to replace members of the committees, not to put the Student Liaison Committee to work on the problems," McCornack said.
The two agree that the liaison committee should inform ASC committees of the problems it encounters. That was the main point brought out at Wednesday night's meeting. There, however, the agreement ends.
Thompson says it is the duty of his committee to investigate problems if other ASC committees do not.
"I PROMISED Reuben that I would call the chairmen of the Health Committee and the Traffic and Safety Committee and ask what they are doing in the areas we had planned to investigate," Thompson said. "If the chairmen are willing to work on these problems, that's fine."
"But if nothing is done by these committees after a matter of time, we are going ahead and doing the investigating ourselves and, if necessary, make recommendations to the ASC."
Thompson said he does not want the Student Liaison Committee to be a "do-nothing" committee.
"I AM NOT going to restrain my committee" he said.
Thompson said that a need exists for an intermediary group to work with both students and the University administration in solving difficulties.
Thompson said recommendations in the form of legislation could either be introduced to the ASC by the committee or by its individual members, four of whom serve on the ASC.
McCormack declared the liaison committee would be "out of order" if it sought to introduce legislation. "That would not be a legitimate
"That would not be a legitimate function of the committee," he said.
MARRY'S CHAPEL
FUTURE HOME—This 100-year-old stone barn located in northwest Lawrence will be remodeled into a retreat for playwright William Inge. Inge purchased the barn and land in July from Kenneth Deemer, professor of mechanical and aeronautical engineering. Inge approved the remodeling plans after making three different trips to Lawrence. The playwright is scheduled to come to Lawrence sometime this month according to Joseph Stroup, Lawrence realtor.
Inge Purchases Land For Lawrence Home
leen Thompson. Second row: Julianne Bocell, Margy Brown, Carolyn Brewster, Linda Elliott, and Carole Cour. Third row: Cecille Pitts, Kathy Mize, Karen Kreider, Sharon Robertson, and Kay Orth. Not pictured is Pam Bayless.
William Inge, Pulitzer prize winning playwright who has used Kansas as the setting for most of his plays, has purchased land and a stone barn in northwest Lawrence to be remodeled into living quarters for himself.
According to Joseph Stroup, Lawrence realtor, Inge has purchased a lot and a stone barn located at 803 Avalon Road in the hilly section of northwest Lawrence. He bought the barn from Kenneth Deemer, professor of mechanical and aeronautical engineering, on July 15.
(See page 8 for story.)
VIE FOR POSITIONS—Sixteen freshman women will compete for positions in the AWS Senate and House elections Oct. 16. They are: (First row, left to right) Jill Kleinberg, Susan Langston, Gail Stanley, Carol Baker, and Kath-
THE BARN, located near the home of Emily Taylor, Dean of Women, is 100 years old.
Plans for changes in the barn were approved last summer when Inge was here for a visit. He has been here on three separate occasions making plans for the home.
By Linda Ellis
THE FAMILY TEACHING GROUP
Stroup recently received a letter from Inge saying he was making plans to be in Lawrence in October. He did not say when in October or where he would stay when he arrived.
He had formerly written friends in the Lawrence area saying that he wanted to come here to live but this is the first time any definite plans have been made.
PROFESSOR LEWIN GOFF, director of the University Theatre and a personal friend of Inge, says in recent letters Inge has expressed interest in coming back to this vicinity to live but has said nothing about definite plans.
According to Prof. Goff, Inge likes to make his visits to Lawrence on the spur of the moment. "He may get here tonight, tomorrow, next week or next month. I never know until he gets here," he said.
On occasion Inge has appeared unexpectedly at Goff's home and at the Sigma Nu fraternity with which he was affiliated as a student at KU.
Some of his more famous works which have Kansas as their setting are:"Bus Stop," "Picnic," "Splendor in the Grass" and "Come Back Little Sheba."
INGE WAS BORN on May 3, 1913, in Independence, Kan. He attended Montgomery County High School in Independence, where he participated in many theater productions as an actor.
While at KU he majored in drama and acted in such productions as "Androcles and the Lion" and "Juno and the Paycock." He was a member of the National Collegiate Players. He was a student of Allen Crafton, professor emeritus of speech and drama.
In 1935 he graduated with a B.A. degree. He immediately went to New York City to act but began to write instead.
He then received a scholarship from George Peabody College for Teachers, Nashville, Tenn., and received a Master of Arts degree in 1938.
Inge turned teacher from 1938 until 1943. He taught English in Columbus, Kan., at Stephens College in Columbia, Mo., and at Washington University in St. Louis, Mo.
In 1943 he became drama editor of the St. Louis Star Times.
In 1934 he beckon his first play after this time was "Come Back, Little Sheba." Shirley Booth won an Academy Award for her performance in the movie and Inge received a Pulitzer Prize for the play.
According to friends, Inge plans to rest and "get away from it all" while in Lawrence. ...
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Oct. 4, 1963
Our Own Slum Area
Across Memorial Drive from the Campanile are some of the classroom buildings at the University of Kansas.
Collectively, they look like a slum area, but they're the only answer to a space problem that has challenged the University since World War II.
Along with Summerfield, Murphy, Snow, and other campus buildings, they serve the students and faculty the best they can.
There are six of these buildings. They're white outside, drab inside, and shaky-looking all over. The window shades, partly pulled, are dark green.
The rooms are hot in the fall and spring and even hotter in the winter, creating an atmosphere reminiscent of a brooder house. Ventilation is difficult. Some of the windows are painted shut.
IF THEY LOOK as if they don't belong in their present location, it's because they don't. If they look temporary, it's because they are.
In fact, they're "twice temporary." Originally, the six annexes to Strong Hall were war-time buildings on a military installation. They were moved here after World War II to take care of the GI bulge in education, when soldiers were beginning or resuming their college studies. Enrollments mushroomed around 1945 and 1947.
A, B, C, D, E, and F have been in constant use ever since. They're still considered temporary, although they've been here 16 years.
It's hard to say who deplores their presence most—the administration, the students, or the personnel of the departments located in the annexes.
Keith Lawton, vice chancellor in charge of
operations, is no happier than anyone else about the annexes. He says that under the present building schedule, there is no possibility of replacing them until the late 60's. That would be the earliest possible opportunity.
"THEY'RE DIFFICULT to maintain and expensive to heat," he says. "We're constantly torn between maintenance and money."
Expenditures to improve the heating or lighting systems in the annexes would in reality be pushing replacement day still farther into the future. The situation is downright frustrating.
At least the annexes are hidden by dense trees and shrubbery and Strong Hall.
And anyway, it's kind of refreshing to attend classes in rather primitive surroundings. You aren't distracted by modernistic furniture and bright light.
Your mind is free really to concentrate on what the instructor is saying. You are closer and more in tune with your lecture topic. You are just about as close to nature as you can be inside four walls.
It's good for the soul to get a taste of rugged living once in a while. Beautiful classrooms could make you soft, make you enroll in some courses only because the classroom had air-conditioning or a scenic view.
But you would only be cheating yourself. Enroll in political science, Western Civilization, or sociology next semester. Give yourself a chance to really get engrossed in your subject matter.
You've got to in those surroundings.
— Joanne Prim Shade
Intolerable Plan
In "The Rise of Universities," C. H. Haskins describes how early-day students banded together to protect themselves from vicious price-gouging on the part of the townspeople. Victorious in their collective action, the students used the threat of economic sanctions to control the teaching of their professors, insuring that they would get their money's worth of education.
Ah, for the simplicity of those by-gone days. How simple it would be to take direct action to remedy a hateful situation. Now, of course, we have opinion polls and various committees to readily convert student desires and demands into sufficient red tape to prevent them from ever being realized.
Take, for example, the present football seating plan. It is the intolerable offspring of an intolerable predecessor.
FOR THOSE not familiar with the former method of admitting students to the stadium, let me describe the mess that led to today's horror. Basically it was a first-come, first-served method that impatient wise-guys (myself included) found a way to beat. You either sent several goons from your living group over to the stadium early to save places in line for the rest of the house or dorm, or you walked along the seemingly endless line until you found someone you knew to let you in ahead of him. Simple. People who had been waiting in line for a couple of hours only to be crowded out by several hundred late-comers got very hacked-off indeed.
Opponents of the current plan suggested the University hire more personnel so more than one gate could be opened to facilitate the everincreasing studen crowds. Their suggestions
were—lamentably—ignored; the current plan was
railroaded into existence.
In theory, this seems to be a practical way to deal with the increasing number of students who want to see football at KU. In theory, each student will go to the stadium and sit in his assigned seat. In theory, no one will be crowded out of the seat he paid for. In theory, apparently no student will bring a friend or date from out of town to sit with him at the game. This theory is worthless.
Enrollment continues to increase. Attendance continues to increase. Pinkertons continue to refuse to aid students whose seats are grabbed by thoughtless idiots. The seating plan continues to be intolerable, and students continue to get very hacked-off indeed.
THE SEATING PROBLEM for alumni has been remedied by the stadium expansion. The seating problem for students has not been remedied. Perhaps the answer for the difference lies in mathematics: students pay $1.50 for season tickets; alumni, $20.
It is time for the campus Rip Van Winkle, the All Student Council, to heed student complaints. The present seating plan has had adequate time to prove itself. It proves to be as undesirable as its forerunner.
It is too late for polls and committees. It is time for the ASC and the administration to formulate a satisfactory seating arrangement which can accommodate present student demand and remain workable through the period of increased enrollment expected in the near future.
Oh, for those by-gone days when we could have straightened this mess out by refusing to pay fees and attend class.
BOOK REVIEWS
THE COUNT OF MONTE CRISTO, by Alexandre Dumas (Everyman's Library, 2 vols.)
Literature probably has given us no book more famous than this one. It is long and involved but never complex, and this twovolume hardback edition is much better than the abridgments also available in paperback.
There probably are few who actually have read this long book, but most readers—or filmooers—know the plot, that of Edmond Dantes and his love for Mercedes, his exile to the Chateau d'If, his escape, his finding buried treasure, and his long revenge on those who sent him to prison.
Daily Hansan
111 Flint Hall
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, become biweekly 1904,
trieweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom
University 4-2108, business office
Member Inland Daily Press Association. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service and the University of Texas at M. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence. Kan., every afternoon during the University's spring and fall holidays. University's holdout examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas
Mf Namara
and Taylor,
S. Viet-Nam
The White House
Royall
and Blaik,
Birmingham
Alabama
The White
D1963 HERBLOCK
THE WASHINGTON POST
"Latest Reports On The Non-Free Areas"
with best wishes
Hootenanny Hoot Hoot Is A-Coming—Hoot
Hot damn, troops, here comes the Hootenanny. Let's all usn's hot-foot on down the road to Hoch come Friday next and hear us some real fine pickin' and a-singin'.
Well, if n you-all don't mind, I'll stay home.
All I need after a week at this fine obstacle course called KU is to hear some highly paid hillbilly howl "Abilene" through his nasal cavity.
Nothing against nasal cavities, you understand. Nasal cavities are recognized by speech experts as valuable resonance chambers, and human speech would sound strange indeed if it were not modulated by echoing around in the nasal cavity. But when the nasal cavity extends all the way...
OF COURSE, it might be that I am hyper-sensitive. After all, hillbilly singers are respectable, responsible people. One—Jimmie Davis—was even elected governor of the great state of Louisiana, although I'm not sure if that is a comment on hillbilly singers or on the people of Louisiana.
But it might be that Jimmie was swept into office by his own kind. One of the groups coming to KU is the Knob Lick Upper 10,000.
I had no idea there were that many hillbillies in Knob Lick, but if there are, there could easily be a huge number of hillbillies (or do I mean "red-necks") in Louisiana. Enough to swing an election, anyway.
What is unfathomable is that Louisiana was one of the states where the Blues were born, and I always thought the Blues could be classed as music.
AND HOW ABOUT the atmosphere in Hoch? Out in southwest Kansas, where I come from, the only time hillbilly caterwauling went over big was on Sattiday night, when all the folks came to town for a blow-out. Out there, though, the people have had experience with these things, and scrape off their boots for the dance.
At a university, where the emphasis is on authenticity, the fans might not realize what concentrated cow can do to the air in a closed place.
The advance publicity is all wrong, too. It takes at least two weeks to get a good batch of white lightning brewed up, and there is only a week left before the Big Day.
One good thing could come from this hillbilly hoe-down, though. The people who are coming are professionals, or at least some masochistic person pays them for their efforts.
Perhaps, then, the grass-root hootenanniers might pick up a few pointers.
Grass-root hootenanniers? Them are the people what taught themselves a few chords on a gittar about three months ago and figger they got a duty to spread the message of country and western every time they can corral an audience, willing or not.
I know I'm wrong on all this. These people are not hillbillies. They are folk singers. Just like garbage collectors are sanitary engineers.
Blaine King
University Daily Kansan
Corbin Talks About Rise to Fame
Page 3
While students and faculty members sat on the floor of the Music and Browsing room of the Kansas Union last night, Clayton Corbin, here to star in "Emperor Jones," told of his experiences in the theatre and his ultimate rise to fame.
After being introduced by William R. Reardon, assistant professor of speech and drama, Corbin answered questions about all facets of his career.
CORBIN DISCUSSED "The Karamu" in Cleveland, Ohio, formed 48 years ago so that through the arts, people of all races may work together.
"The Karamu is integrated," he said. "People are cast according to talent, not race. It is self-supporting and actors do not receive salaries. Each person pays $2 to belong."
Corbin worked in a steel mill to make a living while working at the "The Karamu."
MRA Affiliation Rejected by Hall
Ellsworth Hall residents have turned down a proposal to join the Men's Residence Association by a vote of 185 to 27.
Kent Smith, president of the MRA, attributed the defeat to two reasons.
- The MRA failed to adequately inform Ellsworth men.
Reasons.
· The large number of freshmen in Ellsworth, (450,) did not know enough about the MRA.
TEMPLIN AND Joseph R. Pearson Halls compose the MRA now. Dues for the 670 residents of Ellsworth would have been 15 cents per man after the $100 affiliation fee was paid.
The individual residents had the choice of joining, Smith said, but many did not know enough about the organization. He pointed out that "a number chose not to turn in a vote."
"Those who did felt they did not know enought about it.. but we are not going to pass it by." He said the issue will come up again.
Smith said that he and Jim Tschechtelin, Prairie Village junior and chairman of the Association of University Residence Halls, would meet with Elsworth men again to educate them about the MRA.
Smith feels that the MRA has much to offer Ellsworth. He said a common pool of knowledge helps the halls operate more effectively.
SMITH SAID, for example, the "Jayhawker issue" is being ironed out. He said a member of the Jawhawker staff is in the AURH. His presence is expected to reduce the annual controversy over size of pictures and length of copy.
Smith said the booklet is published to let incoming freshmen know that there is a program of organized living in residence halls.
Smith said the greatest bulk of MRA funds goes toward visitation week-end and a residence hall booklet.
Since all member halls of the MRA are independent, Smith said, Ellsworth men will not lose their independence. They will merely join other independent halls, he said.
CWENS Sponsor Box-lunch Picnic
A box-lunch picnic will reunite sophomore women on Wednesday, Oct.16.
The picnic will be a chance for sophomores, now in many different living groups, to get together with "old pals" from their freshman floors. Sponsored by CWENS, sophomore women's honorary society, the picnic will be held from 5:30 to 7 pm. at Potter's Lake.
Each floor from Gertrude Sellards Pearson and Corbin halls will have a special meeting place, marked by a large sign. Sophomore transfers and women from scholarship halls will join the various floors.
One of the purposes of CWENS is "to promote fellowship among the sophomore women."
Dieticians from each women's living group will provide box lunches for the picnic. In case of rain, the get-together will be held in Hoch Auditorium.
Corbin said he had starred several times in shows with an entire Negro cast that were not written that way.
"An entire Negro cast is wrong. It adds a whole new element to the theme of the script," he said.
In the future, Corbin said he hoped to do Shakespeare's "Othello." He has turned down several offers for to role in the past because, "I don't feel prepared vet."
CORBIN SAID his most challenging role is "the one I haven't done vet."
Friday, Oct. 4, 1963
thinking. "I do not know how I feel about the man yet, and I won't play the role until I do."
Corbin's favorite type of role is one that is highly emotional. He said he does not like comedies or musicals unless "they have a highly human quality."
Corbin explained that he could not quite comprehend Othello's
"I FEEL WASTED if I am not in a highly emotional role," he said.
a highly emotional role," he said. Corbin's appearance was sponsored by the KU chapter of the National Collegiate Players, a group formed last week through the merger of the University Players and the National Collegiate Players.
No Realism for Tea
LONDON, Oct. 2 (UPI) — Sydney Newman, television drama chief chief the British Broadcasting Corp., said today some television dramas should include profanity to be realistic, but said he would try to keep "bad language" off the air at tea time.
Frogs Bog Highway
RIEGO, CALIF., Oct. 2 (UPI)—A mass migration of small frogs caused a temporary closure of highway 24 yesterday near the California community of Riego in Sutter County.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Friday. Oct. 4, 1963
KU Philosopher Says State Power Unlimited
Errol E. Harris, professor of philosophy, said last night the sovereign power of a state cannot be limited.
Prof. Harris spoke at the third lecture in a series on the philosophy of war and peace. The lectures are given every Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in Dyche Museum.
"THE REASONS why the authority of the state must be supreme are, on the whole obvious, and from this supremacy the absolute character of its power within the society wover which it governs follows naturally." Prof. Harris said.
He said that if law is to be enforced, there must be one central authority which has the sole power to act over the citizens. Confusion would result if citizens were not secure from arbitrary attack and spoilation by other individuals.
Just as the power of a state is illimitable by any internal force neither can it be limited from an outside force, he added.
"Any effective limitation from the outside is strictly not limitation but suppression," Prof. Harris said. "The outside force is thus the sovereign."
The solution to the problem, Prof. Harris said, is to prevent this power from being arbitrarily exercised. The answer is for the sovereign power to be democratic.
Prof. Harris' next lecture will be on "Sovereignty and Authority."
Angel Flight Pledges 24
Twenty-four KU women have pledged Angel Flight.
Angel Flight is the women's auxiliary of the Arnold Air Society, the honorary Air Force society for men.
THE PLEDGES ARE: Pamela
Carol Allen, Salina junior; Cathy
Chemistry Lectures To Begin Next Week
The KU Department of Chemistry will begin the sixth annual Henry Werner series Monday.
Dr. Leo Brewer, professor of chemistry and head of the Research Division of the Lawrence Radiation Laboratory, University of California at Berkeley, Calif., will give four different lectures on "Astrochemistry."
The lectures will be held at 4 p.m. each day, Oct. 7-10 in room 124 at Malott hall.
Bergstrom, Kansas City, Mo., junior; Alice Cash, Abilene junior; Patsy Cram, Larned sophomore; Janet Duncan, Ottawa junior; Vicki Gillespie, Indianola, Iowa, sophomore; Linda Graham, Glendale, Mo., junior; Kathleen Harrow, Prairie Village sophomore.
Barbara Heimrod, Omaha, Nebr.
sophomore; Connie Kosfeld, East
St. Louis, Ill., junior; Sharon Law,
Kansas City, Mo., junior; Kathy
McKee, Topeka sophomore; Bessie
Frances Meador, Kansas City junior;
Karen Miller, Omaha, Neb.,
sophomore; Bennie Norris, Horton
sophomore; Linda Paradise, Kansas
City sophomore.
JUDY PHIPPS, Wichita junior; Claudia Reeder, Overland Park sophomore; Margie Steele, Salina sophomore; Helen Thiele, Marysville junior; Diane Underwood, Overland park junior; Tina Barnes, Hugon sophomore; Mimi Frank, Lawrence sophomore; and Linda Joy Phillips, Centerville, Iowa, sophomore.
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KANU To Carry Special Concerts
KANU, University FM station, will begin broadcasting the entire 39-concert season of the Philadelphia Orchestra, conducted by Eugene Ormandy, from 7 to 9 p.m. Sunday.
R. Edwin Browne, station director said the broadcasts would be made from stereophonic tape.
He believes the KU station will be the only educational station on the special national tape-network for the Philadelphia Orchestra.
"We are pleased and proud to offer this fine new feature to our listeners," Browne said.
"It will complement our live broadcasts of the Saturday afternoon Metropolitan Opera which we began last year and will resume this December."
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Friday, Oct. 4, 1963
University Daily Kansan Page 5
Married Deacon Plan Rapped by Cardinal
VATICAN CITY—(UPI)—Francis Cardinal Spellman of New York today led a strong attack by conservative fathers at the Ecumenical Council on a proposal to authorize a new ordained order of married deacons in the Catholic church.
In his first speech at this session of the Council, Spellman objected vigorously to a section of the draft document on the church now under debate which would restore the new testament order of deacons as a permanent rank in the hierarchy, below priests.
The text of the document as it now stands would leave it up to regional church authorities to permit deacons to be married rather than observe the celibacy required by priests.
PROPONENTS have contended that this change would help the church overcome its acuate clergy shortage in Latin America and in mission areas of Asia and Africa.
Spellman warned that many "practical difficulties" would be created by such a move. Ee expressed fear that the ultimate result would be to reduce the number of priests because some men would settle for deacon status and a wife rather than celibate priesthood.
Spellman also asserted that the "growing number of dedicated laymen" in the Catholic church left no need for such an order as a perpetual deaconate.
The New York archbishop acknowledged that the order of deacons existed in the early church and is mentioned in the new testament, but he said that before reviving the order Council fathers should make a careful study of the reason why it was abolished centuries ago.
"NOT EVERYTHING old is good," said Spellman.
Two conservative Italian cardinals—Ernesto Ruffini of Palermo, Sicily, and Antonio Bacci of the Roman curia—vigorously endorsed Spellman's position.
Ruffini said that the proposal to allow married deacons be completely removed from the document carries grave dangers to the whole principle of celibacy in priesthood. Bacci asked that the section on deacons be completely removed from the document.
None of the speakers today supported the proposal, which is in
chapter two of the project "De Ecclesia" (About the church) which the fathers have been debating since the Council's second session began work on Monday. Debate on chapter two continues next Monday and it is probable that some liberal fathers will spring to the defense of the married deacon proposal, which is dear to the heart of missionary bishops.
Vox Interviews For Candidates To Start Oct.13
Interviews for potential Vox Populi candidates will begin Oct. 13, Tom Bornholdt, Topea senior and Vox president, announced last night at the party's general assembly meeting.
Bornholdt said interviews also will be conducted Tuesday, Oct. 15.
SIX PERSONS were elected to the executive committee. Independents elected were Jon Waller, Overland Park senior; Lew Ann Ogle, Kansas City sophomore; and Linda Ritter, Excelsior Springs, Mo., junior.
Elected as Greek representatives were Mike Waller, Cambridge, Md., sophomore; John Sapp, Havana, Ill., sophomore, and James Cook, St. Louis, Mo., senior.
John Turner, Dallas, Tex., sophomore, was accepted as general assembly representative from the unmarried and unorganized district.
AT VOX'S FIRST meeting last week, Jim Frazier, Topeka senior, was elected executive vice president. Other new officers selected were Jon Alexiou, Shawnee Mission junior, Greek vice president; Harry Bretschneider, Kansas City, Mo., senior, independent vice president; Susan Mustand, Wichita senior, secretary, and Marshall Brier, Overland Park junior, treasurer.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Oct. 4, 1963
KU's Football Team Worries Oklahoma's Joe Don Looney
NORMAN, Okla. — (UPI) — Joe Don Looney, Oklahoma's cut-and-shoot left halfback who was too light to play much high school football, is up to 224 pounds now and running better than ever.
That's a tall order for the Fort Worth senior whose heroics earned him wide acclaim last year, his first in Sooner togs. Before that, he sparked Cameron Junior College to victory in the Little Rose Bowl with his devastating power running.
Looney added 17 pounds of muscle during the summer and lost none of his speed. After playing only briefly and carrying the ball just once in the Clemson opener because of a cramping leg muscle, Looney returned to form and led Oklahoma to a 17-12 upset of Southern California last Saturday to push the Sooners atop the first United Press International poll of the season.
"I HAD A LITTLE trouble with my leg last week," he said. "But I think I'll be able to go full speed against Texas."
The Sooners play third-ranked Texas a week from Saturday. Oklahoma is idle this Saturday.
"I don't know how we'll do the rest of the season—I just don't know," Looney said. "The way Kansas and everybody are going, they're going to give their all to beat us."
KU Expands Sports Slate
KU will have varsity teams in wrestling and gymnastics this year, A.C. (Dutch) Lonborg, director of athletics, said yesterday.
Dwayne Hall, director of the Kansas Union Food Service has been named wrestling coach.
KU has not had wrestling as a varsity sport for about 30 years. Lonborg said competition would be on a limited basis, meaning there would be four or five dual meets and competition in the Big Eight wrestling meet.
Bob Lockwood, a KU graduate, has been re-appointed as gymnastics coach. Gymnastics has been on a club basis for several years. The gymnastics team will participate in several dual meets and compete in the conference meet.
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ADS
One day, $1.00; three days, $1.56; five days, $1.75. Terms cash. All ads must be called or brought to the University Daily Kansas Business Office in Flint Hall by 1 p.m. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not re-
FOR SALE
1957 "98" Oldsmobile convertible; white;
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voiskwagen owners attention; New & new premium nylon, tubeless tires on sale at $16.50 exg, plus tax. Retreaks $11.00 exg. Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center, 929 Mass. Fast free installation. 10-7
Bike clearance One shopworn men's '26"
$29.97 - Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 10-7
Over 30 modern pistols, rifles and shotguns lie below wholesale. Thousands of dollars invested in this collection. All must be seen now at 824 Ark. or call VIF. 110.
General Psychology study notes. Excel-
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1957 MGA flierglass hardtop, wire wheels, new tires, luggage rack, R&H, screen screens, 48,000 miles. Will consider VW bus in traffic. Jack Hibler. VI 2-1200. 10-11
22 Magnum, 6x scope. Sling and case included, excellent condition. $40.00. Royalite, typewriter-portable, 1362 model. Condition. Contact Jim MinaV12-9149.
1963 Olds F-85 Cultus sports coupe, with
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Antique Trunks — beautifully decorated and lined—makes ideal chests. Must see to appreciate at these prices—$20.00 and $25.00. Call Crestwood 2-0311 Topeka, Kansas or write Louise Johnston, 54241 19th, Topeka, Kansas for appointment. 10-7
1962 Buick Special convertible. Cell VI 3086 after 5 p.m. 13-6 Stouffer. 10-4
Sealpoint Slamese kittens. Call VI2- 1695. 10-4
LAWRENCE FIREARMS CO. New and used guns and ammunition. Military weapons and gangbuns. Lugers. We also reinhab 1026 Ohio, VI 2-1214 afternoons and 10-4
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Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outlines for all class calls. Formally known as the Theta notes. Call VI 2-3761. Free delivery. $4.50.
AUTO LIABILITY INSURANCE also under age drivers; scooters; motor bikes; motor cycles; rates avail. Brown Realty Plc. Ph. 2-0179 - Realtors - 729 id
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26" Bicycles at low discount prices New 26" Boyce Union lightweight cut to 19"
Boyce Union lightweight cut to 19"
Schwinn lightweights—Ray Stonebacks's 929 Mass. St., basement floor. 10-7
To the sports minded and economy minded student—a beautiful maroon, 1962 Jawa motorcycle. Has only 1400 actual miles. Must sacrifice—BIG SAVINGS TO YOU. Call VI 3-4137 and leave name and number. tf
Two bedroom unfurnished duplex, wall to wall carpeting, dining area, fenced yard, heated garage, separate utility room, large storage area. No pets—one year lease available Oct. 16. Vicinity of KU. $95 per month. Car I-2 10288
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Furnished apartment for 1 with kitchenette. Private bath and entrance. All utilities paid, close to campus and state-funded. Inquire at Miss. Call III 3-4349. 10-10
Very nice partially furnished 2 bedroom apartment in new fourplex. Carpeted living room, automatic laundry facilities. Located on West 25th St. St. 855.00 per month. Call VI3-0280 or VI3-93038 evening for appointment to see. 10-7
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TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, reports, articles. Electric Typwriter. Mrs McEidowney. 2521 Ala. PH. VI 38-568f. ttf
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University Daily Kansan
WANTED
Third man needed to fill vacancy in two bedroom apartment at 2350 Ridge Court. About $50 per month including utilities. Car required. Call VI 2-9143. 10-8
Want one student to share furnished
apartment. Tom Prelock VI 3-0044. 10-10
Anyone who has the rank of Rokkyu and above and is interested in starting a judo club contact Steve Reepe or Bob Clause at 707 Templin Hall. 10-8
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart, 1025 Mass. **tf**
LOST
Since Sat.-black 1/2 Siamese cat. 6 mo.
old, in vicinity of 11th & Ohio. Call
UN 4-3041 8 to 5 or return to 1121 Ohio.
10.7
Glasses in black case lost Saturday afternoon
to office of Larry Salmon. VI 2-106-104
www.larrysalmon.com
Set of seven or eight keys lost either in Summerfield or on intramural field or on kiosk. One key numbered "44." Capital Bill Manthes, TKE house, V3-1900. 10-
HELP WANTED
Young man wanted to work 1 week end day and one or 2 nights per week. Call Tom Dixon after 5 p.m. V13-7446. Dixon's Drive-In Restaurant - 2500 W 0th
Evening Switchboard and office help Must be mature. Hours 5 to 10 p.m. and weekends.Call VI 3-5820 for interview. 10.7
Save on food costs. Rent a frozen food locker. Meat for sale. Budget plan. Triplett Lockers, 6th and Miss. Call VI 3-6251 10-11
If you would like to sing Barbershop harmony, call VI 3-8389. 10-10
Patronize Your
Kansas Advertiser
BUSINESS SERVICES
- Notary public
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
PARTY TIME: School house available for private parties, dances, meetings—equipped with piano, tables, chairs, re-mentation bar and cookers. TV 7-5435-44 Forrest.
Kansan Advertisers
Milliken's SOS
MISCELLANEOUS
"the best professional service"
- General typing service
Johnny's Super Oil-Bay Products - 23rd and Ousdaud. All work guaranteed. Free pick-up and delivery. Call VI 3-9691. Oil-Lube-Wash and Polish. 10-14
Will do paper hanging evenings—reasonable rates. Call VI 3-2906. 10-10
Dressmaking-alterations, forms and
gowns. Ola Smith. 939$^1$ Masti
VI 3-162$^2$
Tom's 14 Barber Shop—'15 block off
Children's $12.50, except 10.
13-15 blocks
- 24 hr. answering service
- Mimeograph & photo-copying
1021 $ \frac {1}{2} $ Mass., VI 3-5920, 7a.m.-11p.m.
Tutoring by English graduate students—will help with themes, grammar, punctuation or any other special requests. Call VI3-8175. if
Do you need a tutor for Chinese? If
not in leave name and number.
10-18
Across from the high school
HONN'S COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY
SPEED QUEEN WASHERS OPEN 24 HRS.
19th & Louisiana VI 3-9631
Standard Service "the best in car care"
LEONARD'S
- Rings
706 W. 9th VI 3-9830
JEWELRY
FRATERNITY
- all major brands -
LUBRICATION ... $1.00
LUBRICATION $1.00
Motor tune-ups, wheel balancing
A complete line, including,
● Lavaliers ● Guards
● Pins ● Mugs
● Rings ● Crests
FREE-one quart of oil with each oil and filter change
BRAKE ADJUSTMENTS ... $.98
PAGE-CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE
STUDENTS
Ray Christian
JEWELERS
IT'S OK TO OWE RAY
809 Mass.
1819 W 23rd VI 3-9694
TYPEWRITERS
NEW AND USED
PORTABLES STANDARDS
ELECTRICS
Sales — Rentals — Service
See Us Before You Buy
DX Servicenter
6th & Michigan VI 2-9410
LAWRENCE
TYPEWRITER
735 Mass. VI 3-3644
DX
Fast Car Wash Minor Tune up Broke Work Mufflers & Tail Pipes
FREE PICK-UP & DELIVERY
Fraternity Jewelry
Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals
Balfour
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER
HAVING A PARTY?
We are always happy to serve you with
Ice cold beverages
Ice cold beverages
Chips, nuts, cookies
Chips, nuts, cookies
Variety of grocery items
Crushed ice, candy
Ice cold 6 pacs all kinds
OPEN TO 10 P.M.EVERY EVENING
LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY
616 Vt. Ph.VI 3-0350
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Oct. 4, 1963
Ferguson Cites Change In US Supreme Court
William F. Ferguson, Kansas attorney general, said last night that U.S. Supreme Court has undergone some "fundamental changes" in liberalizing attitudes toward individual rights.
Ferguson spoke at a pledge dinner of Phi Delta Phi, honorary law fraternity.
HE OUTLINED five acres in which the "liberalized" attitudes of the court are most apparent:
- The Supreme Court ruling that evidence violating the fourth amendment to the Constitution (the right of the people against unreasonable searches) is not admissible into courts as evidence.
- Recent decision in the New York praver cases.
- Legislative reapportionment made "justiciable" or liable to a trial in a court of justice by the court.
- Court modification of the definition of pornography and interpretation of statues in obscenity censorship legislation.
- Indegents not only being able to receive counsel in defense trials but also in latter appeal cases.
ATTY. GENERAL Ferguson said
Kai Winding Group To Play Homecoming
Trombonist Kai Winding and his band will play for the KU Homecoming Dance Nov. 2.
Winding is well known in modern jazz circles. His recording of "More" was a best selling record this summer.
C. K. Baker, Webster Grove, Mo,
senior and SUA homecoming dance
committee chairman, said Winding's appearance will continue an SUA policy of having "big names" play homecoming dances.
that the Supreme court has taken an increasingly liberal attitude toward individual rights, but not in the economic field.
In economic matters, he added, the court feels it should not substitute its judgment for that of the legislatures unless individual rights are involved.
Officers Select AWS Candidates
Sixteen freshmen women have been selected to run for the Senate and House of Representatives of the Associated Women (AWS).
Elections will be Wednesday, Oct. 16, when all freshmen women will select two members of the Senate, and each freshman hall will elect a representative. Polls will be in Corbin, Gertrude Sellards Pearson, and Grace Pearson halls from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.
The 16 candidates passed an elimination test and interviews. They were judged on high school activities, knowledge of AWS, leadership, and character.
Following is the slate for Senate positions: Carol Baker, Kansas City; Pam Bayless, Shawnee Mission; Margy Brown, Prairie Village; Linda Elliot, Greensburg; Susan Langston, Springfield, Mo.; Kathryn Mize, Salina; and Kay Orth, El Dorado.
Candidates for the House of Representatives: Grace Pearson; Jill Kleinberg, Lawrence, and Kathleen Thompson, Iola; Corbin; Julianne Bocell, Kansas City; Cecille Pitts, Shawnee Mission; and Sharon Roberts, Silver City, N.M.; Gertrude Sellards Pearson; Carolyn Brewster, Prairie Village; Carole Course, El Dorado; Karen Kreider, Chanute; and Gail Stanley, Dighton.
International Students: If you are interested in attending a United Nations banquet at Chanute, Kansas on Saturday, Oct. 26, please see Dr. Coan.
SNEA Membership Dr., ends today, 8:30-3:30, p.1st floor Bailey.
Official Bulletin
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence
College, 10 Stratford Rd Rd First
Observation Day
TODAY
Russian Club, 6:15 p.m. Pam. Sam Anderson's farm. Meet at Zone O east of Allen Field House. Staff, students of Russian and their guests cordially invited.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30
p.m. Sunday; Jesus of Nazareth — Mr. Sammerville
Jewish Community Center Services,
7:30 p.m. 917 Highland
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Dunfoorth
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m. - 5 p.m. Con-
tinence Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
SUNDAY
Catholic Masses, 8 a.m. St. Lawrence
Circumference, 9:30 & 11
cm. Fraser, Frost, Theater.
Faith & Life Seminar; 9:15 a.m. Westminster Center, "The Gospel of Luke."
Morning Worship, 10:45 a.m. . West-
ern Center, "Concerning Eating
Habits."
Newman Club, 2-5 p.m. St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center, 1915 Stratford Rd. Card party for members and friends.
Newman Picnic, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center, 1915 Stratford Rd.
Foreign Students: All foreign students and foreign faculty are invited to the LIFE picnic Sunday, 5 p.m., Potter Lake Picnic Area.
Sunday Evening Fellowship, 5:15 p.m.
Western Center, "Your Community with God,"
Activities Planned For Senior Day
Senior Day activities will be held Oct. 26, the day of the Oklahoma State game here.
Jerry Pullins, Council Grove senior and class president, also said seniors who have paid their class dues may pick up their senior sweatshirts at the Alumni Relations office in Strong Hail Saturday and next week.
It was reported earlier that the Senior Day activities would be Oct. 12.
FRIDAY FLICKS
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ALL THE
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JOHN DEREK · MERCEDES McCAMBRIDGE
FRIDAY — OCT. 4
ACADEMY AWARD WINNER!
The Story of a
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THE HARRIS COUNTY PUBLIC LIBRARY
MR. KU HONORED—Fred Ellsworth, emeritus alumni secretary of KU who retired last June after 39 years of service, and Mrs. Ellsworth stand before the $2.6 million Fred Ellsworth Hall which was dedicated Sunday.
By Greg Swartz
Ex-Alumni Secretary Urges Men to Excel
Fred Ellsworth, former executive-secretary of the KU Alumni Association, yesterday challenged the men of the residence hall named after him to become the most outstanding living group on campus.
Ellsworth's remarks followed the dedication of Fred Ellsworth Hall, KU's newest and largest residence hall, by Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe on Ellsworth's 68th birthday.
"We're looking forward to you men becoming the most outstanding living group on campus," Ellsworth said. He especially called upon the students to be at the top of the scholastic rolls of the University.
ELLSWORTH, who served the Alumni Association 38 years, said he hoped his name would only be a symbol of what the alumni has done for the university.
Chancellor Wescoe said no one has represented the energy, dedication, and loyalty that characterizes the KU family as has Fred Ellsworth. The chancellor said Ellsworth had selflessly established the KU Alumni Association.
WESCOE SAID he was proud of the residence halls for their efficiency and economy of operation. He said housing was a limiting factor in the University's growth.
Ellsworth singled Mrs. Gertrude Sellards Pearson out of the crowd of about 700, who, with her husband, has made many gifts to KU.
The crowd was then invited into the $2.3 million structure by J. J. Wilson, director of dormitories, to view its facilities.
The guests were shown through the building by its 350-400 residents.
LARRY DEMAREA, Kansas City, Mo., senior and Ellsworth Hall president, presented Ellsworth with a bound letter signed by all the 670 residents stating the ideals and future plans of the residents. Mrs. Ellsworth was presented with a large bouquet of red roses.
With the Ellsworths were their two sons, Robert and Stephen who are KU graduates, and Ellsworth's sister, Miss Maud Ellsworth, a retired professor of art education at KU.
Monday, Oct. 7, 1963
Wescoe Elected to Board
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe has been elected to the board of directors of the American Council of Education (ACE).
The chancellor returned from Washington, D.C., Friday from the ACE's three-day meeting there. The 18-man board plans the council's official policy and is in charge of administration and business activities. Chancellor Wescoe said.
THE RECENT ACE MEETING, which was attended by representatives of 2,000 colleges and universities, made two resolutions:
- Favoring equality of opportunity of education.
- Favoring federal aid for facilities for higher education.
The chancellor flies to New York City this afternoon for a meeting of the board of higher education of the Lutheran Church, of which he is a member.
Both are re-affirmations of policy.
He said he considers private colleges very important in the educational system of America.
The meeting will last one and a half days. The chancellor is expected to return to KU Wednesday.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Daily hansan
61st Year, No. 17
KU Child Research Bureau Receives $2 Million in Funds
By Tom Coffman
The largest research grant ever received by KU totalling nearly $2 million over a seven-year period, has been made to the KU Bureau of Child Research by the National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH).
Dr. R. L. Schiefelbusch, head of the bureau, will direct the research, which he described as a study of the social communication behavior of mentally retarded children.
SCHIEFELBUSCH explained that the grant came through the program projects branch of NIMH, which handles long-range, large-scale projects. The program projects branch has awarded only five other grants since it began five years ago.
The allocation for this year is $281,745. Schiefellbusch expects a $19,800 grant to be awarded soon for the renovation of Varsity House, 11 Indiana, as a research center.
Research will be done at three locations: Parsons State Hospital and Training Center, Kansas University Medical Center (KUMC) at Kansas City, and the Bureau of Child Research here.
PARSONS, WHICH has a large number of retarded children, is considered by Schiefelbusch to be the outstanding behavioral research center in the country. Existing facilities there will continue to be used for research and demonstration purposes. Clinicians and teachers in mental retardation will be granted stipends by Schiefelbusch to attend short, intensive study demonstrations at Parsons.
A research building in an underprivileged area in Kansas City is planned in connection with the KUMC branch. "Children will begin very young—right after infancy
—at the research center," Schiefelbusch explained. "By training and education we hope to make up for the short-comings of their homes and communities, and reduce the incidents of mental retardation."
Children not attending the day school will be studied, and a comparison of the two groups is hoped to reveal the affects of community problems on children, Schiefelbusch said.
THREE LABORATORIES will be set up in the Varsity House at KU. A speech science laboratory will enable the study of responses to sound and speech. The other two will facilitate the study of infant and preschool children and group behavior among children.
IRELAND'S BEST AUTHOR
Dr. R.L. Schiefelbusch
In those laboratories sound can be controlled, and they will be equipped with observation mirrors and sound pick-up for observers outside the laboratory.
"A laboratory is nothing more than a carefully controlled environment in which the children can be studied." Schiefelbusch said.
The project is so broad in scope that it would be fruitless without team cooperation. The research team will include sociologists, speech pathologists, and five types of psychologists-comparative, social, experimental, developmental, and educational, he said.
"THE FINDINGS of any one of these areas are almost meaningless unless related to the work of the other man." Schiefbusch said.
Twelve researchers, called senior investigators, will be spread over the three areas, with five at Parsons, three at KUMC, and four at KU. "They are a young group," Schiefelbusch said, "but have four years of research experience on the average."
"Communication and social behavior can cover anything from a gesture to a tantrum," Schiefelbusch said. "We are interested mainly in knowing how these children relate to other people."
"THIS RESEARCH is not limited solely to mentally retarded children," he said. "Normal children will be studied for standards of comparison to the varying degrees of mental retardation." Most of the work at KU will involve study of normal groups.
"Part of the program will train other expert researchers," Schiefel-busch explained. "There is a great need for more men, and this may be the most important thing we do."
Study of the learning processes and language developments of both normal and retarded children is a major goal of the project, he said.
"PROBABLY most important, we want to understand the interacting (Continued on page 7)
Weather
Continued warm weather will prevail today and tomorrow. Slightly cooler temperatures are expected, with the low tonight in the 50s and a high Tuesday in the 80s.
"We have hot dogs, baked beans, German potato salad, sliced tomatoes, apples, cupcakes, coffee, and about 500 bottles of pop," he said.
The Most 'American' Americans Entertain 350 Foreign Students At Sunday Picnic
By Charles Corcoran
About 350 KU foreign students attended a picnic at Potter Lake Sunday afternoon sponsored by the Lawrence International Friendship Enterprise (Lawrence LIFE) and KU People-to-People. They expected to meet Americans, but few imagined they would meet the most "American" Americans.
Brightly costumed, wrist and ankle bells jangling, a group of students from the Haskell Institute exhibited war and social dances of various American Indian tribes. The Indians asked the KU foreign and American students to join them in the "49," a dance they said is popular among Indian teenagers.
THE LAWRENCE HIGH SCHOOL baton twirlers also presented a demonstration of their football half-time routines.
Joseph Travlor, acting chairman of Lawrence LIFE, said that the organization is composed of Lawrence residents who want to present a friendly town to foreign visitors.
He said that the organization is supported by money from the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce's United Fund.
Frank Burge, chairman of the picnic, said that Lawrence LIFE wanted the picnic to present "a typical U.S. Sunday afternoon get-to-gether."
"We hope the food is good and that the picnic promotes fun and fellowship."
BIRGITTA SLADEK. Austrian graduate student, said that she thought the picnic was a success. "I particularly enjoyed the Indian dancers," she said. "Having everyone join in the dancing brought all of us closer together."
Wei-pang Kao, Republic of China graduate student, said that the dances were similar to the ones
Walter Bgoya, Tanganyika junior, said that he would have liked a smaller gathering. "I would much prefer to be able to picnic with one or two Lawrence families or a small group of students. These large parties are a fine way to meet people, but not to get to know them," he said.
done by tribes on Formosa. "They appeal to me because they are so much like what is done at home," he said.
THE FARMERS' CLUB. A BARGAIN BENEFIT FOR THE WOMAN'S HOME. THIS EVENT IS AN INVESTMENT IN WORKER EDUCATION AND WOODLAND REFORM. IT IS PROGRAMMED BY THE TOLSTA GROWN CENTER OF NEW YORK, AND IS PROVIDED BY THE WORKING LADIES' CLUB. THE FARMERS' CLUB AT NORTH VILLAGE IS A SUPPORTIVE AND CONFERENCEAL SOCIETY FOR WOMEN'S HOME, WORKER EDUCATION, AND WOODLAND REFORM. IT IS PROGRAMMED BY THE TOLSTA GROWN CENTER OF NEW YORK, AND IS PROVIDED BY THE WORKING LADIES' CLUB.
INTERNATIONAL CONVERSATION—(from left to right) Milan Loupal, Czechoslovakia graduate, Milly Yumang, Philippines sophomore, Kant Ajmera, India graduate, and Bertrand Fau, France graduate, enjoy candid conversation at LIFE picnic.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Oct. 7, 1963
The Times for a Dime
Students and faculty at the University of Minnesota can now buy the New York Times and the Christian Monitor in their student union at surprisingly low prices.
The Times will cost a dime, and the Monitor will cost eight cents. A one-year subscription to the Times, excluding Sunday papers, costs $28 a year. A dime for the Times each day during the school year totals less than $19. (A dime every weekday for a year totals $31.20.)
This gift to University of Minnesota inhabitants was arranged by student union officials and Minnesota's version of the ASC. How they arranged it I haven't the faintest idea.
BUT IT WOULD be nice to have such a service at KU. Although both papers are available at Watson Library or the Flint Hall Reading Room, students and faculty don't always have time to go to the library and read these papers the way they should be read. Having a copy to take home to peruse at leisure would be pleasant for everyone.
For those who aren't familiar with these two newspapers, the Times and the Monitor are
ranked, by polls of newspaper editors across the country, as two of the greatest newspapers in the world. The Times carries verbatim texts of important speeches, be they U.N. bombasts or Presidential tax-cut pleas, and has the finest stable of reporters, correspondents and columnists working today.
The Monitor is a national newspaper, and carries no local news of any kind, but the background and wrap-up stories it carries instead are excellent. The Monitor has, on occasion, ignored the sensation of a breaking story until all the facts were in, and then comes in as much as a week late with an excellent, thorough story putting everything in perspective.
Both papers would be important reading material for people who like to know what is happening in their world.
Perhaps the ASC Current Events Committee, if perchance it is looking for something to do this semester, could arrange the same service for KU as Minnesota's student governing body made available for Minnesota students and faculty.
Blaine King
'I Talk English Good'
The poor KU student, forced to "sprech" or "parle" 16 hours worth, sweats and strains through the language ordeal.
And thus the soap opera begins.
"Why do I have to have all that language? I'll never use it. Everybody I know speaks English."
AFTER ALL, the good old "mother tongue" presents problems enough to the American student. English grammar isn't exactly the easiest subject, you know.
And who needs another language? I mean, nobody speaks German in the Hawk's Nest anyway. And never have I heard one Latin verb parced at the Tee Pee.
So what's the use of the language requirement? French films have subtitles and everybody knows "War and Peace" can be bought in the English translation.
Let's leave French to Parisians and Russian to the Slavs. And of course they'll speak my language if I go over there.
"Gimme good ol' American any ol' day!
'H'lo Jo, h'reya? Wotsnew th' you?'
I talk English good, who needs 'parley-voo?'
Foreign students speak English as good as I can.
I had trouble enough with the English Pro Exam."
WE TAKE ENGLISH Lit and English Comp. And after all that language, they hit us with "16
hours of French, German, Russian, Spanish, Chinese, Greek or Lower-Slobovian, pleuz."
And our poor KU student sulks through another conjugation in a strange tongue from a far corner of the earth. Such is the fate of the post-Sputnik college group.
Gone are the days when it took three months to cross an ocean. No longer are we an isolated nation with no need to communicate with our neighbors in another language. Europe is just across the way and Asia is just off to our left.
The point is that those four corners of the earth have moved closer together and it's turning out to be a small world after all.
International relations call for a better understanding of other peoples and their ways. And what better way to begin than to study their language? They all study ours, and begin at an early age besides.
SOUND EDUCATION calls for the self-discipline that the mastery of another language can give.
But the student goans and moans with the French nasal or the German guttural, and hopes for the day when his requirement will be fulfilled.
He takes the required minimum and no more, and then, stuffed full of language, he breathes a sigh of relief.
And when somebody passes out the diplomas, our well-rounded graduate says;
"Oh no! Mine's in Latin." — Patti Behen
FROM THE U.S.A.
DOMINICAN DEMOCRACY
©1965 HERBLOCK
FROM THE U.S.A.
DOMINICAN DEMOCRACY
Latin-American Showcase
Dailij Fransan
111 Flint Hall University of Kansas student newspaper UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office
Founded 1889, 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 Lawrence, Kansas.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Managing Editor
Mike Miller Managing Editor
Terry Ostmeyer, Trudy Meserve, Jackie Stern, Rose Osborne, Assistant
Managing Editors; Kay Jarvis, City Editor; Linda Machin, Society Editor;
Roy Miller, Sports Editor; Dennis Bowers, Picture Editor.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Blaine King Editorial Editor
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Business Manager
Bob Brooks Business Manager
Joanne Zabornik, Advertising Mgr.; Alice Rueschhoff, Circulation Mgr.; Brooks Harrison, Classified Adv. Mgr.; Jim Evilsizer, National Adv. Mgr.; Donald Dugan, Promotion Mgr.; Jerry Schroepfer, Merchandising Mgr.
The People Say...
As we think about the enrollment surge we expect in freshman English in the years immediately ahead, we cannot help wondering if we shall be able to find one such instructor for every (say) ten students; and, supposing there are that many intelligent instructors around, if we could find sufficient money to attract and keep them. Since both these propositions are highly doubtful, we must explore other possibilities for maintaining and enhancing the quality of our English teaching.
Editor:
English Experiment
The Department of English agrees emphatically with two points made in your editorial, "Keep Teachers Around": that English instruction in both college and high school is crucially important, and that every possible means should always be taken to improve the quality of that instruction. We agree, too, that keeping classes small is one good way to make English teaching effective and meaningful, particularly if that teaching is done by knowledgeable, intelligent and inspiring instructors.
One such possibility is that we might combine, as in the experimental course English 1 c-t, the peculiar virtues of outstanding classroom instruction by a proven, skillful teacher and individual effort by a student who is not bound to appear in class a set number of hours a week. We think this will work; we may be wrong, of course, and in that event we are not committed to this program beyond the period of the experiment.
George J. Worth
Acting chairman,
Department of English
Let me stress that it is an experiment. Your statement that our "ultimate aim . . . is freshman English by correspondence" is incorrect. This is an experiment—very carefully thought out and very carefully controlled, as it had to be to get the support of the University administration and of the U.S. Office of Education. If, contrary to our expectations, the experiment fails, we shall have learned something and shall investigate other ways to keep up and enhance standards in the critical years just ahead.
Another Buddhist burned himself to death in Saigon last week. Mr. Kennedy was deeply moved . . probably beyond description, although he does a magnificent job of concealing whatever emotion he may feel.
Ends Arms Aid
Editor:
The men who kill and imprison Buddhist monks and students wear American uniforms, use American weapons and are trained by Americans. Mr. Kennedy can withhold military aid while it is used to oppress men to the point of self-annihilation. He has voiced loud imprecations of displeasure at the Vietnamese government. His words reek with the loathsome stench of their emptiness. He sends his emissaries—Lodge, McNamara, and Taylor. He seeks to shake the unbelieving with the might of his mail-clad diplomats.
We call upon President Kennedy to withdraw American military aid to Viet Nam. No cause is so objectly wrong that we must compromise our ideals to fight it.
Mr. Kennedy is blinded. He struggles against the Communist menace. Many will fall. What a pity! His failure to help any oppressed people makes a lie of the ideals of his inaugural address. He defaces and vilifies the promises this land has made to downtrodden around the globe.
Paul Lerner
Missoula, Mont.,
graduate student
John Garlinghouse
By supporting the nefarious government of Viet Nam, he links us to them. Their tyranny must be our tyrannv; their victims, our victims. And their reward will be our reward. Can we doubt what the nature of this reward will be?
N
S
K
Discourse on Beauty
Editor:
The beauty of beauty is that it can be many things depending on personal taste of the individual.
For example, an anthropologist, upon observing a feminine type species, might marvel at the bone structure of the chin or the lack of development of the buttock as a beautiful example of advancing evolution. He might even go so far as to stop and ask the specimen under observation if it has any wisdom teeth or not.
As for this humble student, my tastes are not quite as basic. I too, might marvel at certain feminine species, but usually my interest lies with the end result of a highly developed species. I have always liked to consider myself a realistic type individual, so who am I to reason how or why? I like to take things as they stand.
Webster, in his New World, college edition, defines beauty as "the quality attributed to whatever pleases or satisfies as by . . . form . . . proportion . . . rhythmic motion. Example: a very good-looking woman." (It is gratifying to know that such a learned man was also of a realistic nature!) I myself, can think of nothing more pleasing or satisfying than that of observing the God-given talents of beautiful women. That's what I call quality as Webster puts it!
Looking at "things" from this perspective, my tastes are such that the ultimate of beauty is that of a beautiful woman (more often than not a highly developed one, although this need not be the case!)
Although I, too, might stop and question a certain "feminine species" like our curious anthropologist. I can assure you that any questions I might raise would be of an entirely different nature!
I think perhaps I would be more concerned with such vital statistics as name, phone number, and availability. (Being a student of statistics, I am well aware of the reverse ratio of 3 to 1.) Upon closer observation, I might also take note of such foreign matter as fraternal pins and lavarieres, or diamond rings. Not being a violent man by nature (small), I find it in my best interest to honor these claims of my fellow men. (I am realizing more and more every day that Webster and I aren't the only realistic guys around!)
As I tread up and down the many, many, many steps debating the insanity of Mount Oread as the location of a university, my spirits are continually brightened by the abundance of "quality" we have here at KU. I am firmly convinced that the old saying about Kansas farmers keeping their daughters at home and sending their pigs to college is a farce! This current abundance of beauty along with current beauty fashions, i.e. sweaters, short skirts, and stretch pants, have done more for the morale of the male student body since the inventions of booze and Playboy!
E. Cam Austin Independence. Mo., junior
Monday, Oct. 7, 1963
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
NASA Official's Speech Heads KU Science Day
An official of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration said in an interview here Saturday that the proposed moon shot cooperation between the United States and Russia was "an interesting possibility," but would definitely not speed up the U.S. effort to land a man on the moon.
John Eggleston, assistant chief of the Space Environment Division of the Manned Spacecraft Center of NASA, Houston, Tex., was the key speaker at the 12th annual KU Science and Mathematics Day.
Eggleston told about 300 high school students from Kansas and Missouri of the knowledge scientists must accumulate about the moon and its atmosphere before the objective of the Apollo Project can be achieved.
"I see of no technical avenue through which this project can be speeded up." Eggleston said when asked about the proposed American-Russian cooperation. He said there might be some plan of cooperation that could keep the project from being slowed down, but repeated his assertion that there is no way to accelerate the moonshot program.
"As director (James E.) Webb has said, even more money won't speed up the program. The target date remains, at 1970."
Eggleston, who illustrated his talks in Hoch Auditorium with slides, told the high school students the areas in which scientists still seek information about the moon are lighting, heating, launch window, navigation, landing orbit selection, earth re-entry lighting, earth-moon communications, meteoroids and radiation.
"THESE EARTH shine (the reflection of the sun off the earth) on the moon, just as there's moon shine on the earth." Eggleston said. "And, I might add, earth shine is seven times as strong. But, is this enough light for a landing on the moon? This is something we must find out."
"It will be extremely bleak," he said of the lunar surface. "To non- geologists, it may seem a rather boring place."
About 3,000 students were on the KU campus for the day of lectures. tours of KU science buildings and inspection of exhibits and demonstrations.
ior
DR. E.B. BROWN, chairman of the department of physiology at the KU Medical Center, spoke on "Some Physiological Aspects of Space Flight."
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The little fallen leaf hardly has a chance at KU. Before it has time to blow around a little bit, the building and grounds crew rake it up and cart it off.
To some people the idea of raking leaves before they have all fallen is a little senseless.
Fall Just Isn't Fall Without Leaves and the KU Buildings and Grounds
Raking leaves will continue for about two weeks after the first frost next comes snow shoveling.
for raking the leaves as they fall. One reason is the swirling leaves present an untidy campus to visitors.
Another reason for raking the leaves so soon is safety. Gene Blitch, landscape architect, said the leaves blow up around buildings and are a fire hazard.
KU BUILDING and grounds department has several good reasons
down into the drains and clog up the drainage system.
Also, if the Lawrence area should ever get rain, the leaves again would present a problem. The leaves wash
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--today, foregoing levity, let us turn our keen young minds to the principal problem facing American colleges today: the population explosion. Only last week four people exploded in Cleveland, Ohio—one of them while carrying a plate of soup. In case you're thinking such a thing couldn't happen anywhere but in Cleveland, let me tell you about two other cases last week—a 45-year-old man in Provo, Utah, and a 19-year-old girl in Northfield, Minnesota. And, in addition, there was a near miss in High Point, North Carolina—an eight-year-old boy who was saved only by the quick thinking of his cat, Fred, who pushed the phone off the hook with his muzzle and dialed the department of weights and measures. (It would, perhaps, have been more logical for Fred to dial the fire department, but one can hardly expect a cat to summon a fire engine which is followed by a Dalmatian, can one?)
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But I digress. The population explosion, I say, is upon us. It is, of course, cause for concern but not for alarm, because I feel sure that science will ultimately find an answer. After all,
Four people exploded in Cleveland
has not science in recent years brought us such marvels as the maser, the bevatron, and the Marlboro filter? Oh, what a saga of science was the discovery of the Marlboro filter! Oh, what a heart-rending epic of trial and error, of dedication and perseverance! And, in the end, what a triumph it was when the Marlboro research team, after years of testing and discarding one filter material after another—iron, nickel, tin, antimony, obsidian, poundcake—finally emerged, tired but happy, from their laboratory, carrying in their hands the perfect filter cigarette! Indeed, what rejoicing there still is whenever we light up a Marlboro which comes to us in soft pack and Flip-Top Box in all fifty states and Cleveland!
Yes, science will ultimately solve the problems arising from the population explosion, but meanwhile America's colleges are in dire straits. Where can we find classrooms and teachers for today's gigantic influx of students?
Well sir, some say the solution is to adopt the trimester system. This system, already in use at many colleges, eliminates summer vacations, has three semesters per annum instead of two, and compresses a four-year-course into three years.
This is, of course, good, but is it good enough? Even under the trimester system the student has occasional days off. Moreover, his nights are utterly wasted in sleeping. Is this the kind of all-out attack that is indicated?
I say no. I say desperate situations call for desperate remedies. I say that partial measures will not solve this crisis. I say we must do no less than go to school every single day of the year. But that is not all. I say we must go to school 24 hours of every day!
The benefits of such a program are, as you can see, obvious. First of all, the classroom shortage will disappear because all the dormitories can be converted into classrooms. Second, the teacher shortage will disappear because all the night watchmen can be put to work teaching solid state physics and Restoration drama. And finally, overerowding will disappear because everybody will quit school.
Any further questions?
*
© 1963 Max Shulman
Yes, one further question: the makers of Marlboro, who sponsor this column, would like to know whether you have tried a Marlboro lately. It's the filter cigarette with a man's world of flavor. Settle back and enjoy one soon.
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Monday, Oct. 7, 1963
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Loan Approved For Dormitory
Page 5
A $3 million loan for construction of what will be the largest residence hall at KU was approved yesterday by the Housing and Home Finance Agency of the Community Facilities Administration in Washington, D.C.
The Kansas Board of Regents authorized KU to apply for the federal loan last January. The $3.8 million residence hall will be between Ellsworth Hall and Stouffer Place in the Daisy Field area.
J. J. WILCOX, director of dormitories and dormitory administration, said he expects the Regents to consider the loan agreement during their Oct. 18 meeting in Topeka. Terms of the agreement are for a four-year loan at 3 per cent interest.
The approximate cost of the hall for 970 students will include the cost of related construction, furniture and equipment. he said.
The overall capacity of the new hall will be about 222,000 square feet. The largest residence hall now on campus is Ellsworth Hall with 154,- 000 square feet.
Wilson said architectural plans for the new hall should be ready early next year. The building should be ready for occupancy by September 1965.
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Perhaps you should investigate what this field has to offer you. For full information, write for our free booklet, "Career Opportunities", or stop by our campus office.
Forrest Jackson, Lawrence attorney, will speak at a meeting of the Chancery Club at 7:00 p.m. tomorrow in the Moot Court Room of Green Hall.
Chancery Club Opens With Local Attorney
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The club is an organization for students interested in law as a profession. It was established at KU in 1961.
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Officers are: Philip Cooper, Prairie Village senior, chief justice; Alan Roff, Lawrence junior, associate justice; Jill Mons, Lake Forest, Ill., sophomore, clerk of the court and Kent Howerton, Garnett sophomore, baliff.
University Daily Kansan
Francis H. Heller, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is the faculty advisor.
The club will meet on the second Tuesday of each month.
The KU-Y will sponsor its annual mum sale for the Parent's Day Iowa State-KU football game next week.
KU-Y Holds Mum Sale For Parent's Weekend
State-KU football game next week. Sharon Roy, Kansas City, junior, and chairman of the sale, announced that order blanks will be given to the KU-Y representatives in each living group. Students should place their orders through their representatives.
The orders must be completed by
Tuesday. Prices will be $1.50 each.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Oct. 7, 1963
Historic Barn Now to House William Inge
From barn to carriage house to cabinmaker's shop to barn again, the building at 803 Avalon Road is being changed once more — this time into a home for playwright William Inge.
According to Kenneth Deemer, professor of mechanics and aerospace engineering who sold the structure to Inge, the building is one of the oldest in Lawrence.
of the bates. The barn and the house that accompanied it were originally owned by the Dudley family, who were pioneers to Lawrence, Prof. Deemer said.
THERE are many legends and myths connected with the old structure. One is that the barn was a gift from President Abraham Lincoln to a private in the Union Army in 1862.
Another legend says it was used as a place to hide runaway slaves until they could be transported through the 'underground railroad' that ran through Lawrence.
There are many legends about the barn, but there is also much factual material about it.
According to P.D. Olmstead, who has lived in Lawrence all his life and was born in the house next to the barn, it has been used for many things. He said the original barn was destroyed by a cyclone in 1913, but was rebuilt from the same stones and lumber shortly thereafter.
THE SHOP on the north side of the barn was used as a carpenter's shop until 1960.
Mr. Olmstead was born in the house and can remember the original barn. He said after the old one was destroyed, the place was used to make lime.
A few years ago a cave in back of the barn was discovered to contain lime, and was thought to be a cave where slaves were hidden while waiting for the underground railroad.
SINCE 1960, when Prof. Deemer bought the property, the barn has been used for entertaining.
Prof. Deemer said negotiations for selling the building were done by mail and he has never met Inge.
Inge is having the barn renovated into a house in Normandy styling. When completed, it will have a wide circular driveway in front and a swimming pool in back, according to plans.
Remodeling of the place is expected to begin as soon as Mr. Inge arrives in Lawrence sometime in October.
Rock Chalk Staff Sets New Rules
The production staff for the 1964 Rock Chalk Review held a rules meeting with the houses and dormitories that plan to enter scripts.
A director's guide listing all the rules and staff members was given out to the entries at the meeting. Dave White, Prairie Village, senior and producer of this year's review, went over rules changes and made suggestions to the representatives from the houses and residence halls.
"This year we will not allow original music." White said. "In the past we have found that the original music is too much of a burden on the orchestra."
ANOTHER change will be in the scenery department and was announced by John Oakson, Leawood, senior, and stage manager.
"There will be no three dimensional setting allowed this year." Oakson said. "We have found that the settings of this type are a burden to both the stage crew and the skit.
Oakson suggested that the settings be kept as simple as possible, and be made out of cardboard to make construction and handling easier.
On October 15 through 17 the houses will turn in their ideas for a general theme, and the ideas will be approved and turned back by the Rock Chalk staff on the 18th. In case two or more groups should turn in the same general idea, the one turned in first will be the one given first preference.
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Monday, Oct. 7, 1963
University Daily Kansan
$2 Million—
Page 7
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1) social relationship between normal and retarded children," Schieflebusch said. "A mentally retarded child develops a losing attitude because of failures. We want to know how to overcome this attitude so he can function in society."
"The day of shoving a mentally retarded child into an institution and forgetting him is gone."
Schiefelbusch submitted the grant application, a detailed outline of the project, last February. It was reviewed by the NIMH in June, and the allocation was announced last Friday by James Pearson, U.S.; senator from Kansas.
SCHIEFELBUSCH said the high quality of the work of his fellow researchers was instrumental in getting the $2 million grant. "One man can't generate the steam needed to get a grant like this," he said.
"I'm only one of the visible members of the team." All the researchers were interviewed by an inspection board sent out from Washington, D.C.
"Research people work terribly long hours." Schiefbusch said, referring to the team members. "They may work day and night for two years on a project. When the results are published, someone is liable to say, 'Boy, what a bunch of junk!' Usually it's very rewarding, though."
Schiefelbusch singled out for special recognition Dr. Howard V. Blair, co-director of the Parsons State Hospital and Training Center; Dr. Joe Spradill, field director of the Parsons State Hospital and Training Center; and Ross Copeland, also of Parsons, who co-ordinates the work done at Parsons and KU.
SCHIEFELBUSCH likened his position to that of a coach. "If a team wins it is on account of the players," he said.
Schiefelbusch received his bachelor's degree in social sciences at Pittsburgh State Teachers College and his master's degree in speech pathology and psychology at KU. He received his Ph.D. in speech pathology from Northwestern University in 1949, and has taught at KU since then.
Catholic Bishops Pray, Chat, Doze In Vatican City
VATICAN CITY —(UPI)— What do bishops do in the secret sessions of the Equemenical Council behind the huge bronze doors of St. Peter's? They pray and chat, make speeches and take notes. Some doze off.
A PERSON who has access to the closed floor sessions gave United Press International a number of details on matters not covered by the law of secrecy. They resulted in a charming mixture of ceremony, piety and little human weaknesses.
Bishops arrive by foot, car or bus. Two uniformed and two plainclothes genders check the accreditation of priests serving as experts but let the bishops enter without asking for documents.
This means that theoretically a man disguised as a bishop could sneak in without being stopped. In the First Vatican Council in 1869-1870 a Romanian identified as a spy for Italy tried to do so, but was ousted by ushers who noted the unfamiliar face.
Waiting for the meeting to start. council fathers chat in small groups in the council hail — a red-and-green tapestried wooden structure that fills most of the central nave of the world's largest church. Americans chat with Asians, Europeans with Africans. Official observers from non-Catholic churches often join the conversations.
While bishops speak for 10 minutes, in Latin, their colleagues listen, take notes and if they are not exceedingly interested or have difficulty in following the latin discourse they chat among themselves or read documents.
KU International Club Sees 'Animal Farm' Film
A motion-picture version of George Orwell's "Animal Farm" was shown at the International Club meeting Saturday night at the Kansas Union.
After the picture, the members of the club danced in the Jayhawk Room.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Oct. 7, 1963
KU Rally 'Unbelievable'
"It's hard to believe."
Those were the words Coach Jack Mitchell used to describe the result of KU's game with Wyoming Saturday at Laramie. Fans were saying the same thing about the Jayhawkers' 25-21 victory over the Cowboys.
With only 21 minutes to play, KU was behind, 21-7. The passing of Tom Wilkinson, Wyoming's quarterback, had made KU look helpless.
A 31-YARD PASS play from Steve Renko to Gale Sayers sparked the Jayhawks to a touchdown in a 71-yard drive and the score was 21-13.
Two plays later, Greg Roth, sophomore guard, intercepted one of Wilkinson's passes and ran 20 yards for a touchdown. Now, with only 14 minutes left, KU was trailing by 2 points.
KU had failed on both of its attempts for a two-point extra point play and things looked about as bad as when the Jayhawks were behind by 14 points.
This time a fake punt on fourth down and a pass from Tony Leiker to Gale Sayers sparked the scoring thrust. Armand Baughman
made it 25-21 with a 1-yard run.
"We didn't play very well." Coach Mitchell said after the game. "Our boys just thought they were playing a small-school team. It's yet hard to believe how our boys rallied.
"I JUST COULDNT believe we could do it after Wyoming moved the length of the field at the beginning of the first half. This may have been the best game we'll have all year long. You just don't beat this Wyoming. They're the finest team we've played this year."
Mitchell called the pass interception by Roth the key play in the game.
"I just stuck up my hand and was able to get the ball," Roth said. "I was lucky, I know, but I did do what I've been told to do in practice."
"We were in a pro defense when Wyoming ran the pass pattern. The fullback is my man to guard
Wrestlers to Meet
There will be an organizational meeting of the KU wrestling team at 4:30 p.m. today in Room 202 of Robinson Gymnasium.
KU Runners Finish Fast; Win 18th Consecutive Dual
Crimson and blue suits were passing by so rapidly, timers at KU's opening cross country meet here Saturday were having trouble keeping the runners and their times straight.
Paul Acevedo placed first for the Jayhawks, who won their 18th consecutive dual meet, defeating Southern Illinois, 15-49.
Country Club Golf course in 4:55.6.
Filling the next five places were Chick Fero, George Cabrera, Herald Hadley, Ken Holm and John Donner. Lowell Paul placed eighth behind the Salukis' Bill Cornell.
Acevedo was followed by the rest of the KU team within a one-minute span. Acevedo, who couldn't walk about three months ago because of a painful foot infection, finished the three-mile distance at the Lawrence
John Lawson, who couldn't run in the meet for points because of a knee injury, finished third behind Acevedo and Fero.
Coach Bill Easton's team competes against the Chicago Track Club Saturday at Chicago. The Chicago team was the last to defeat KU in dual competition.
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Roth may score other touchdowns as a Jayhawker, but it's doubtful he'll ever score one more important. Just as it was Roth's first score as a college player, a 51-yard pass play from Renko to Mike Shinn in the second quarter marked the first score for the lanky junior end.
Elsewhere in the Big Eight, Colorado defeated Kansas State, 21-7; Missouri beat Idaho, 24-0; Nebraska beat Iowa State, 21-7, and Texas beat Oklahoma State, 34-7.
Texas Christian, which defeated KU in the season opener, was defeated by Arkansas, 18-3, and Syracuse, the team KU upset, beat Holy Cross, 48-0.
KU meets Iowa State here Saturday in its Big Eight opener. Last year, KU defeated the Cyclones, 29-8, on the superb signal-calling of Rodger McFarland, KU quarterback who was graduated.
In its game with Nebraska, I-State held the Cornhuskens to a 7-7 tie for the first half. Dick Hoover, Cyclone captain, ran 70-yards for a touchdown in the second quarter on a fake punt play.
Two KU players suffered injuries in Saturday's game. Guard Larry Ledford suffered a sprained ankle and slot-back Lony Leiker suffered a bruised hip.
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Monday, Oct. 7, 1963 University Daily Kansan
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Oct. 7, 1963
Serious Theme To Be Stressed At Homecoming
The KU Homecoming celebration Nov. 1-2 will reverse the field on the "all for fun" theme of the past to emphasize the part KU and its football guest, Kansas State University, must play in building the State's future.
Richard H. Benson, associate professor of geology and general chairman for Homecoming, said, "In a world shaped by science a state's greatest asset is educated people.
"HIGHER EDUCATION must blaze the trail of the State into the future. This will require the active assistance of all institutions of higher education in the State; and they must work together, not divided.
"Therefore, we have adopted for a Homecoming theme the Kansas motto, 'To the Stars Through Difficulties' and 'Higher Education -- the Road to the Future.'"
Although the football game with K.State is the core of the celebration, the house decorations, other displays and ceremonies will emphasize the constructive theme rather than the traditional pattern of beating an athletic opponent.
A NEW FEATURE of the Saturday morning pre-game program will be a joint discussion of higher education in Kansas by President James McCain of K-State and Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe of KU.
Originally planned as an informal session for a joint meeting of the directors of the two alumni associations, the event will be enlarged and opened to the public.
Placement Exam Slated for Oct.19
The national Peace Corps placement examination will be given October 19 at the Lawrence post office.
Charles C. Woodard Jr., Peace Corps associate director, said developing nations around the world are asking the Peace Corps for teachers, farmers, carpenters and engineers.
Volunteers bust be American citizens and at least 18 years old. Married couples are eligible if both qualify and have no dependents under 18 years of age.
The Peace Corps placement test is not competitive and anyone with the equivalent of a high school education is eligible to take it. There is no "passing" score. The test helps the Peace Corps determine the overseas assignment for which applicants are best qualified.
Prospective volunteers who are interested in taking the examination must fill out a Peace Corps questionnaire and send it to the Peace Corps, Washington, D.C. 20525, or take it to the test center. Questionnaires are available in the Peace Corps Student Committee office in the Kansas Union, the Lawrence post office, or from the national office in Washington.
Faculty Recital Series Opens Monday Evening
Reinhold Schmidt, professor of voice, will present a recital today at 8 p.m. in Swarthout Recital Hall, opening the Faculty Recital of the KU School of Fine Arts.
The program will include the song cycle "Die Winterreisse" by Franz Shubert.
John Perry, assistant professor of piano, will accompany Schmidt.
'Yugoslavic Buildings Don't Just Fall Down'
Herbert Galton, professor of Slavic languages and literature, said Friday, "it is by no means a common occurrence of structures in Yugoslavia to fall down as stated in a Kansan article Tuesday."
Prof. Galton said that he believed the noise to be a minor building collapse and went back to sleep.
University of Kansas
UNIVERSITY THEATER presents: CLAYTON CORBIN as "THE EMPEROR JONES"
by Eugene O'Neill
- Wednesday through Saturday Oct. 9-12
- Free Admission on Student I.D. exchange
- Season Coupon Books Still Available
- Phone UN 4-3982 for 24-hr. Reservation Service
NEW CURTAIN TIME 8:15 P.M.
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified
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COUPON FOR
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Page 11
FOR SALE
Owner leaving town — attractive 3 bedroom ranch in desirable neighborhood.
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1957 "88" Oldsmobile convertible; white,
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New shipment of Pink tying paper, 500
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Volkswagen owners attention; New 3 year premium nylon, tubeless tires on sale at $16.50 exg. plus tax. Retreads $11.00 exg. Ray Stoneback's Discount Tire Center, 929 Mass. Fast free installation. 10-7
GOOD USED FM RADIO $20.00—guaranteed perfect! Used Radio-Phoenix combination with '12 Wooter-$50.00—929 Mass. (Open Tues, and Thurs. evenings.) 10-7
Bike clearance One shopworn men's '26 FF
$29.37 - Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass, 10-7
Over 30 modern pistols, rifles and shotguns left. Hundreds of rounds of ammo far below wholesale. Thousands of dollars invested in this collection. All must go! See now at 824 Ark. or call VI3-1110. tf
General Psychology study notes. Excel-
copy files in sections. $4.00 per
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1957 MGA fligerglass hardtop, wire wheels, new tires, luggage rack, R&R new tires, 48,000 miles. Will consider VW bus in trade. Jack Hibler. VI2-100. 10-11
1963 Olds F-85 Cutlass sports coupe, with
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Antique Trunks — beautifully decorated and lined— makes ideal chests. Must see to appreciate at these prices—$20.00 and $25.00. Call Crestwood 2-0311 Topeka, Kansas or write Louise Johnston, 54248 19th, Topeka, Kansas for appointment. 10-7
Sure—Everything in the pet field at Grant's drive in pet center. Where your $$ have more cents. 1218 Conn. VI 3-2921.
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Manager-1804 Barker, Call III 327-12
12-13
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Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
AUTO LIABILITY INSURANCE, also collision and comp. Most risks covered; under age drivers; scooters; motor bikes; motor cycles; rates avail. Brown Realty Co. Ph. VI 2-0179 — Realtors — $729_{1/2}$ Mass. tf
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FM RADIOS! STEREOS! STEREO FM!S!
Largest stock in Lawrence at low discount prices—New GE FM RADIO cut to $25.00. AM-FM FF $28.99 Mass record albums on Stoneyback's 929 Mass. Stereo record albums cut to $19.99, in set of 10 albums! 10-7
50 Bicycles at low discount prices! New 26" Royce Union lightweight cut to 19"
Royce Union lightweight cut to 19"
Schwind lightweight—Ray Stoneback's.
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To the sports minded and economy minded student—a beautiful maroon. 1962 Jawa motorcycle. Has only 1400 actual miles. Must sacrifice—BIG SAVINGS TO YOU. Cell VI 3-4137 and leave name and number. tf
BUSINESS SERVICES
Business Service: Tutor-Native German to give lessons in German. Call VI 612-345-0700. 10-11
Complete line of soles and heels, laces,
cosmetics and polishes. Have new mermer-
hands. Can also purchase such purses.
Service totes. Burgert's One Day Shoe
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Will tutor first year French students. Exper-
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VI 3-67231
Tutoring by English graduate students—will help with themes, grammar, punctuation or any other special requests. Call VI 3-8175. tf
Do you need a tutor for Chinese? H
You need a tutor for Chinese?
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Dressmaking-alterations, formals and
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VI 3-52633
WANTED
Third man needed to fill vacancy in two bedroom apartment at 2350 Ridge Court. About $50 per month including utilities. Car required. Call VI 2-9143. 10-8
Anyone who has the rank of Rokkuyu and above and is interested in starting a judo club contact Steve Roepke or Bob Clause at 707 Templin Hall. 10-8
Want one student to share furnished apartment Tom Prelock I V-3-0044. 10-10
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart, 1025 Mass. tf
HELP WANTED
Young man wanted to work 1 week end day and one or 2 nights per week. Call Tom Dixon after 5 p.m. VI 3-7446. Dixon's Drive-In Restaurant - 2500 W. 64th.
Evening Switchboard and office help.
Must be mature. Hours 5 to 10 p.m. and weekends. Call VI 3-5920 for interview. 10.7
Found: The party who left their elephant in the Gaslight tavern last Saturday night may claim by contacting Dan Ebeling at the Gaslight. 10-9
FOUND
Since Sat.—black 1/2 Siamese cat. 6 mo.
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10.7
LOST
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If you would like to sing Barbershop harmony, call VI 3-8389. 10-10
PARTY TIME! School house available for private parties, dances, meetings, ensembles with piano, tables, chairs, reservation bar and coolers. V13-745-431 Forrest.
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3250
10-11
University Daily Kansan
Available now for lease (12 months).
Two bedroom apartment, close to campus and downtown. $75. Santee Apartments, 1123 Indiana, VI 3-2116. ft
FOR RENT
Two bedroom unfurnished duplex, wall to wall carpeting, dining area, fenced yard, heated garage, separate utility room, large storage area. No pees-one year lease available Oct Victimity of KU. $35 per month Call I2-10288. 10-10
First floor apartment. Nicely furnished.
Between KU and Town. Reasonable rent.
Off street parking. Married couple preferred.
Phone VI 2-0121 or VI 3-4445.
Furnished apartment for 1 with kitchenette. Private bath and entrance. All rooms are on campus and campus diumens 845 per month. Inquire at 1005 Miss. Call VI 3-4349. 10-10
Why walk or drive a long way to class?
Have a nice sleeping room for single man. Across street from stadium. Call VI 3-8066. 10-8
Very nice partially furnished 2 bedroom
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Located on West 25th St. $85.00 per
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ninings for appointment to see. 10-7
Monday, Oct. 7, 1963
FOR RENT or OR SALE: 35*x8' one bedroom trailer. Call VI 3-9453 for 5 per month.
Spacious 2 room apartment, private bath,
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Duplex 2 bedrooms, stove and refrigerator
cept electricity. Call VI 3-2281. 10-10
Ridge House Apartments. Available and now renting* 1 and 2 bedroom apartments, air-conditioned, carpeting and carpet tiles. All furnished with airlances in colors. New furniture packages available. 24th and Ridge Court, V1-131-106. "Let us move you for free."
Quiet large room for two boys, and large room for one boy. Linens furnished Near campus. 1701 Ohio. Call VI 2-3618
1 bedroom house, completely furnished,
air-conditioner, near downtown, no pets;
unfurnished apartment for couple, near campus. Call VI 3-0554 before 9 a.m. or after 7 p.m. f. t.
Vacancies in contemporary home with outside swimming pool for young man. more entrance, utilities paid, $450 per month. booked dinner if needed. Call VI 3-9635. 10-15
Typing; Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter with carbon ribbon (inked ribbon if re-used). Hardcover. Available. Call W 3-6048 at 5:00 p.m. or before 7:30 a.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley 408 West 13th Street. 10-11
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Oct. 7, 1963
Da Vinci the Musician To Be Lecture Topic
The secret of Mona Lisa's smug smile is out at last: Leonardo da Vinci was also a musician!
"Leonardo da Vinci As a Musician" is the topic of the first 1963-64 Humanities Series lecture to be given Tuesday, October 15, by Dr. Emanuel Winternitz, curator of musical collections at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City. The lecture, kicking off the 17th year of Humanities Series, will be at 8 p.m. in Fraser Theater and will be followed by an informal reception by the Faculty Club.
DURING HIS THREE-DAY visit to the KU campus, he will speak to classes in music and art history, will lecture on "The Variation Form in Music and the Visual Arts" at a music convocation at 2:30 p.m. Tuesday in Swarthout Recital Hall, and will speak in Topeka at a Menninger Foundation forum on Monday evening.
Dr. Winternitz will illustrate the lecture with slides and by playing the piano. His mother was an excellent pianist, and she taught him to play the pianoforte and violoncello; he later learned to play the organ.
Before coming to the United States in 1938, he taught philosophy of law at the University of Hamburg, lectured in philosophy and aesthetics in Vienna, was admitted to the bar in Vienna, and practiced as corporation lawyer for ten years. He became a U.S. citizen in 1943.
He has lectured on the history and theory of music, comparative history of the arts, and aesthetics at Harvard, Yale, and other universities. He was lecturer at Columbia University, professor of music at Yale, 1949-60, and now lectures at Rutgers University.
IN 1941, HE WAS PERIPATETIC professor for the Association of American Colleges, under auspices of the Carnegie Foundation. That year, he was appointed to the Metropolitan Museum of Art staff. He reorganized the Crosby Brown collection of musical instruments there, the largest collection in the western hemisphere.
Besides a book, "Musical Autographs from Monteverdi to Hindemith," he has published many articles on musical instruments, history of music, and musical symbolism as exploited by painters and other artists.
He was born in Vienna in 1898, was educated there, and served three years in World War I on Austria's frontier in Tyrol.
Official Bulletin
**Foreign Students:** Students interested in participating in the Olathe, Kansas. Home Hospitality Week-End on Oct. 18 from 6 to 9 p.m., People-to-People office, 113 Kansas Union. See page 4 of the October International Campus newsletter for details.
TODAY
Center, 1915 Stratford Rd. "The Relief and Practice of the Congregational Giant."
Catholic Mass 5, 101. St. Lawrence
Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
Rd. Lawrence Street
Graduate Student Discussion Group, 7 p.m.
St. Lawrence Catholic Student
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
Catholic Masses, 6:45; 7:15 a.m., 5 p.m.
Stretton Rd. Rosery at 4:45 p.m.
Struttown Rd. Rosery at 4:45 p.m.
Quack Club Final Tryouts, 7-9 p.m.
204 Robinson.
Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m.
Dunforth Chapel.
P
TV JEE BEES SUA Carnival
This Coming Saturday October 12th
— 7 p.m. till 11 p.m. Get your tickets Wednesday at the Information Booth for 85c
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Remember — this Sat. in the Kansas Union
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IF you are dedicated to research, come to an expanding organization where basic research provides a solid foundation for the program; where recognition for accomplishments brings opportunities for new projects and programs to challenge the future; and where you have the opportunity to pursue fundamental discoveries or follow their expansion into more applied fields.
IF you desire to be associated with a research center internationally recognized, small enough to give attention to individual growth and advancement and at the same time part of a larger organization offering many benefits, such as diverse research projects appealing to particular interests, freedom to exchange ideas and results, and recurring opportunities for higher positions either here or elsewhere:
IF your objective is one or all of these:
To specialize in a chosen field and to build scientific status for yourself
To grow professionally through your work and study, stimulating seminars, and advanced lecture courses by visiting professors and other leading scientists
To advance vertically in the same line of work as fast and as far as your ability will take you
To present papers before national and international scientific meetings
To enjoy the advantages of freedom to publish
IF these are your goals, then join us and advance your career in challenging basic and applied research on the derivaties, reactions, structure, and general physical and chemical properties of organic chemical raw materials.
Sign up for an interview with our representative on October 16,1963 At your Placement Office
Or write to
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M.
NINETY-FIVE DEGREE WEATHER OR NOT—Bob McArtor, KU's jayhawker mascot wears the heavy uniform of crimson and blue. Shading her eyes in order to see KU score against Syracuse is Phyllis Schneider, Shawnee Mission sophomore. The Jayhawker mascot not only helps the cheering squad here but travels with them to most out-of-town games.
Cheering Trips Include Car Repair, Expenses
While the football team is fighting its way to touchdowns, the KU cheerleaders have problems of their own.
Unforeseen travel expenses, learning new acrobatic stunts and long hours of practice can make the job hectic.
ALTHOUGH a budget is provided by the ASC for travel, the cheerleaders often run into such unexpected expenses as car repair, extra gas or medical care.
The 10 cheerleaders and the Jayhawk Mascot attend all away games when possible. However, they were unable to go to the Wyoming game last week because too much money was spent going to the T.C.U. game.
When possible the group stays at fraternity and sorority houses or residence halls. But if they arrive too late they also face the problem of finding a place to stay in hotels or motels.
Tuesday, Oct. 8, 1963
MERCADO MAYORAL
BALANCED FOR THE KICK—Jill Newburg. Indianapolis sophomore, and Bob Lightstone, Coffeyville senior, do the shoulder stand. The KU cheerleaders spent hours perfecting the stunt despite the wear and tear on uniforms.
GEORGIA LONNECKER.
Kansas City junior, said one of the problems the group faces is losing each other during the long trips. Since two or three of the cheerleaders drive cars it is easy for one of them to get lost in traffic as it happened on the way to T.C.U., she said. Due to "getting lost" and car trouble, it took one carload 12 hours.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
The squad has worked out several new stunts for the games. One used at the recent Syracuse game was a shoulder stand where the girls stood on the shoulders of the boys and balanced themselves there while a cheer.
HOWEVER, the person with the biggest problem concerning his uniform is John McArtor, Webster Groves junior — the "inner man" of the jayhawk mascot. He, too, travels to all of the games with all his heavy equipment.
This years' cheerleaders, who have made tentative plans for a pep rally before the KU-MU football games, are Suzanne Fisher, Prairie Village senior, Jill Newburg, Indianapolis sophomore, Cris Bergman, Webster Groves sophomore, Phyllis Schneider, Shawnee Mission sophomore, Georgia Lonnecker, Kansas City junior, Tim Hamill, Colby senior, Ron Tucker, Kansas City senior, Larry Colburn, Lawrence sophomore, Bob Lightstone, Coffeyville senior, and Bob Pitner, Glasco junior.
Daily hansan
61st Year. No. 18
Flora Lashes Haiti and Cuba; Death Count Rises to 4,000
MIAMI — (UPI) — Hurricane Flora crossed Cuba today for the third time, heading for the Bahamas and leaving a trail of destruction across three Caribbean islands which counted more than 4,100 dead.
The Weather Bureau urged emergency hurricane precautions be taken in the Southeastern Bahama Islands at once. It predicted the center of the deadliest storm in 63 years would cross Acklins Island late this afternoon and cross Crooked Island a few hours later.
FLORA WENT on the prowl today after spending an unprecedented four days pounding Cuba where the death toll mounted to more than 100. It left the economy of Premier Fidel Castro's regime reeling and the government ordered tight new food rationing.
A Cuban government broadcast monitored here said the town of Santa Cruz del Sur, on the southeast coast of Camaguey Province, was being flooded by ocean tidal
THE WEATHER BUREAU said Flora would move generally toward the northeast at about 10 miles per hour during the day.
The hurricane crossed into the Atlantic at 11 a.m. EST (noon EDT) near Cape Lucrecia, the Miami weather bureau said. Its center was located near latitude 21.1 north, longitude 75.7 west, or about 80 miles north-northwest of Guantanamo Bay. This was 440 miles southeast of Miami.
waves. The broadcast said urgent help was needed.
A tidal wave that crushed Santa Cruz del Sur on Nov. 9, 1932 killed more than 3,000 persons.
HAITI WAS devastated by the storm which was still packing winds of 75 miles per hour, when it moved into the Atlantic today. An estimated 2,000 bodies had been recovered and Haitian authorities feared the death toll would climb past 4,000 when communications were finally restored.
The storm made its vicious sweep across Haiti's jungled south-
U.S., Russians Near Pact in Wheat Sale
WASHINGTON —(UPI)— Senate Democratic Whip Hubert H. Humphrey said today after a White House meeting that he expects the United States to sell the Soviet Union and three of her satellites up to five million tons of wheat.
Humphrey's statement was made in the wake of a disclosure that the Soviets, for the first time, have indicated they were interested in buying between $150 million and $200 million worth of wheat from this country.
The Senator's estimate of the total amount of possible sales — to Czechoslovakia, Hungary and Bulgaria as well as to Russia was somewhat higher.
Library Addition Will Be Home For 190,000 Books
More than 190,000 books will have a permanent home when the new addition to Watson Library is completed.
These volumes are being stored in four locations on the campus as the construction project moves into its final stages.
Many of the books were taken from the library and stored to make room for the construction. Others have never been accessible before at the library.
JOHN L. GLINKA, assistant director at Watson, said that the space shortage there has caused books the University has owned since World War II to be stored elsewhere on campus.
make students
A second storage spot for the overflow of books is 205A Haworth Hall. Over 80,000 volumes are kept here and 30,000 more are packed in cartons in 5 Haworth.
Memorial Stadium is the temporary location of 20,000 volumes. They are being kept in a section
which once was used to house male students.
MURPHY HALL is another storage place. Four years ago temporary shelves were built in the basement of Murphy under the Music Library. Most of the 20,000 books stored here are novels or history by Irish writers and are from the O'Hagarty collection.
Several years ago, KU purchased a number of volumes on economies from the Creeror libraries in Chicago. These books, and others totaling 40,000, are now stored in the upper deck of the science library at Malott Hall.
ern peninsula Thursday but it was only yesterday that the full extent of the death and destruction began to reach the outside world.
CUBAN PREMIER Fidel Castro and 16 aides swam the swollen Rioja River in Oriente Province to set up disaster relief headquarters, Havana press dispatches reported.
Castro was reported wearing a steel helmet instead of his usual beret.
The Weather Bureau warned Bahamas' residents the storm is expected to gradually step up its power over open water.
Two later reports sent the death toll in Cuba soaring and told of new perils.
AN AMATEUR operator radioed the urgent plea for assistance for Santa Cruz del Sur, on Cuba's southeast coast.
Late yesterday, another radio operator reported more than 80 persons had been killed in Mayari, on Cuba's north coast near the spot
(Continued on page 12)
Rights Bill Set For ASC Action
The Human Rights Committee's "Declaration of Human Rights" will be brought before the All Student Council again tonight.
THE ASCS second meeting of the semester will begin at 7 p.m. in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union.
The declaration received approval from the Committee of Committees and Legislation last week after parts of it had been rephrased. ASC leaders had expected the council to approve the bill at its first meeting two weeks ago.
It was returned to the legislative committee, however, for rewording to clarify that the University already complies with all but several of the bill's policy statements.
The bill was introduced by the HRC in conjunction with results of a student survey it conducted last spring and announced two weeks ago.
ALSO TO be decided will be a bill establishing a committee to act as host to University visitors. It was introduced by Sue McKinley, Ottawa sophomore, and was passed by the Committee on Committees.
Radio station KUOK will broadcast the meeting if equipment can be installed. John Stuckey, Pittsburg senior and ASC chairman, said this will be the first time ASC proceedings have been broadcast.
Kansas Playwright William Inge Developed Skill While at School
By Linda Ellis
In that era when the campus casanova was the rage, a student was gathering information he would use later as a recorder of life in the small Kansas town.
For some reason a college atmosphere concerned with bathtub gin, radical political groups and the Boop-boop-a-doope produced a gifted playwright back in the '30s.
The student in the '30's, as any alum will verify, was a mixture of Cable, Barrymore and Valentino rolled into one. Or so he thought.
WILLIAM INGE, one of the most famous members of the class of 1935, was a quiet fellow while a student at KU.
Allen Crafton, professor emeritus of speech and drama, remembers Inge as "a good fellow. People liked him. He was shy, and not one of the crowd. He was not at all interested in writing while he was a student of mine."
In reminiscing about his former pupil, Crafton said Inge used to send him all of his plays to be criticized.
Inge got his initiation into the theater while acting in Sean O'Casey's "June and the Paycock" here. He had a minor part in the play. However, he enjoyed standing in the wings of the theater watching the others work, and hearing their lines. Inge told Prof. Crafton he thought listening to the play taught him something about them.
"I did criticisms on many of Bill's early plays. When "Come Back, Little Sheba" was going into production, he wrote saying if it was not a success, he would quit the whole business," Prof. Crafton said.
"BILL WAS NEVER interested in campus politics or other activities while he was here. He was a person of his own environment," Prof. Crafton said.
Concerning his success in the theater, Crafton said, "He just hit the right time. People were ready for what he had to say."
HIS FRIENDS here have said he was a very shy young man and still is publicity shy. Also he is known to be unpredictable. Even though he has bought property in Lawrence, many people are skeptical as to whether he will ever really come.
All his plays are about people in small towns, their vices and morals. At times he was unfair to the people, Prof. Crafton said.
In coming to live here, Inge apparently hopes to lead a secluded life.
Weather
Warm weather will continue in the area tonight and Wednesday. The low tonight will be near 50 and the high for Wednesday will be in the lower 80's.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Afraid of Stopping
The word is that we're still racing the Russians to the moon, and officials in Washington are determined we'll get there first.
But there's a bigger race being run today, one you won't read about in the headlines.
Everyone of us is running for fear of being caught. Caught in some little corner of the world where no one will find us, where nothing moves.
OUR SKYROCKET to success is the University. An education.
This we seem to realize with little doubt. We set aside these four years, or more, to gain our independence from home and to develop the talents we'll need for the future.
We're people on the move, and a college graduate seems well on his way toward security.
But, far too often, the Kansas graduate settles in some other state.
While the total population of Kansas between the years of 1950 and 1958 increased 10.3 per cent, the 18 through 64 age group—the working population—had a rather low increase of 1.9 per cent.
AT THE SAME TIME, the number of children under 18 went up nearly 27 per cent and the elder population. 65 and over, rose 9.6 per cent.
What this means is simply that the same number of Kansas breadwinners must support and educate many more children and provide services for an increased number of senior citizens.
Experts projecting current trends into the future think that by 1970 the school-age group under 18 years of age will have zoomed up 34 per cent. The oldsters will gain 16 per cent, the wage-carners only 15 per cent.
For any state this could be disastrous, and Kansas is certainly not alone in its problem.
As Max Lerner says, to an American, "the sensation of being trapped is the ultimate indignity. So he moves. And his moving keeps alive his sense of social possibility, the belief that something can happen; and as long as something can happen all is not lost."
THE REAL POINT to discover is that it doesn't necessarily follow that the meandering American finds what he's looking for. All along it may be waiting for him right in his own back- yard.
The people of Kansas realize the population dilemma and are working feverishly to make the state more attractive to economic and social development.
Our own expanding University, along with 41 other accredited institutions of higher learning in Kansas, is evidence that an effort is being made to keep the local college student close to home.
More recently, Chancellor Wescoe announced an accelerated program to encourage the state's top high school students to attend KU. And government, business and industry, as well as agriculture, are doing their share to keep Kansas a healthy, forward-looking place in which to live and work.
BUT LITTLE CAN be done without you.
You and your fellow classmates will provide the leadership for tomorrow's progress. You are the essential ingredient of the Kansas product.
We've all heard the plea to stay in school and graduate. Now, here's another.
Stay in Kansas and produce. - Larry Schmidt
It's That Time Again
Ah. politics.
From now until after the Republican convention next summer.all the Republican candidates can be busy publicly denouncing all the other Republican candidates.
Goldwater can say what's wrong with Rocky; Rocky can say what's wrong with Goldwater. In between jibes at each other, they can both rake President Kennedy back and forth across the coals.
Seranton has things to do at home, and so for the time being doesn't have to publicly hate any of the other Republicans.
And then there's Nixon, more or less.
We hear that there's talk of New England states joining together to support a favorite son. One possible favorite mentioned was Henry Cabot Lodge Jr., currently in Viet Nam on business for President Kennedy. He more than likely
will be too busy to hate anybody in print for awhile.
The Democrats, unless something happens like happened to Herbert Hoover, will go with Kennedy again. He, too, is probably too busy with a relatively recalcitrant Congress to hate anybody besides them for awhile.
Then, come next summer, all the Republicans can join hands again and team up on denouncing Kennedy, Cuba, Russia, Kennedy's failure to get Congress to act, Bobby, Birmingham, and the like. Kennedy and Johnson will demonstrate their good record during the past four years, will defend the Alliance for Progress, the quarantine of Cuba, the test-ban treaty, Bobby, and Tito's visit.
They will compare their record to Eisenhower's.
Then, in 1968,...
—In the University of Texas Daily Texan
ANTI-DEMOKRATIC FORCES
CASTROISM
FIGHTING RIGHT-WING RILLIARDS
© 1963 HERBLOEKS
@1963 HERBLOE
THE WASHINGTON POST
“Observe Closely, Mi Amigo——”
The People Say . . .
Editor:
In Friday's Daily Kansan there appeared an article entitled "Hootenanny Hoot." I agree with the writer's advice to remain at home this weekend.
Country Ain't Folk
The writer, however, made the mistake of thinking that hillbilly music is synonymous with "Hootenanny."
This commercialized, pseudofolk music which is termed "Hootenanny" should not be confused with good country and western music. Country and western artists such as Grandpa Jones and the Lonesome Pines Fiddlers would be appalled if they felt they were being connected with the Hootenanny trash.
No self-respecting folk singer would have anything to do with a Hootenanny, and Hootenannies are completely out of the question for country and western artists.
This pseudo-folk music should have died out with the Kingston Trio. If the college student is so eager for country music, he should tune in to the Grand Ole Oprey, instead of wasting time with Hooten-annies.
Jerry Leisy Wichita senior
Watching Farms Die Like Looking in Coffin
By Tom Coffman
Down in the corn and pig and wheat and cattle country in Osage County, where my home is, there is a new buzz. It's for money. The Pomona Dam, one of Kansas' 29 big federal government-built dams, is almost completed, and the money creature is everywhere.
Whoo-ee people are going to water ski and fish cut there. They'll need groceries, beer, boats, bait . . . houses. We'll build 'em houses. All those folks coming down from Topeka and Kansas City are going to do this old county a lot of good. Yes, sir.
This is the American way. It must be a fine thing. Enterprise, that's the ticket.
I HADN'T BEEN HOME often for two years before this past summer. I had heard the hullabaloo about farmers fighting the government's appropriating their land and the merchants' talk of new money to be made.
The big dam bridges two hills like the web of between a duck's toes. When closed, the dam will back water up to the east for eight miles along Dragoon Creek to U.S. 75 and to the northeast for 10 miles along 110 Mile Creek.
F
N
Like everyone else, I had to see the nearly completed lake site. I drove out alone on a spring afternoon.
The crush of man's machines had played heavily on the two valleys, and on that day I took no pride in being part of the present age. The valleys lay treeless, naked. A brush contractor had burned and bulldozed it out to make the lake free of snags. The farmers were gone, and the charm of the two valleys had been lessened to that of a poorly kept city lawn.
Dragoon Creek was so named because a young dragoon soldier died and was buried on its banks long ago. Settlers bound west on the Santa Fe trail out of Westport forded a stream 110 miles out, hence the name of the second creek.
Up at the end of the lake on my father's farm the old stone barn was shoved down. It was more than 100 years old and didn't have a nail in it. It was all stone and mortar, beams and shingles, tied to gether with hand-fashioned wooden pegs. Beside the barn stood a great spreading elm tree; an old man once told me that the prairie tribes used to palaver under it. It was a mighty tree, and it is gone.
THE FINE OLD STONE house where my uncle lived was a pile of rock, and his rambling yard a weed patch. The creek below his house, where I swam on summer days, was filled with charred wood from the brush fires and mud from the churning caterpillars.
Over on the Neill farm the only visible sign of the once well-kept barnyard was a pile of ruble and the entrance to the storm cellar. Glenn Neill was deathly afraid of tornadoes, and he would get his wife and kids out of bed to go to the cellar whenever anything more than a breeze stirred on a summer night.
The farmer did not want it, but his voice was drowned in the chorus. The drama of the passing of the small farmers and the small farm countryside is not always so abrupt, but it is there. The economy has no use for most of the farmers, and they must now man the industries and offices. The land must fall to big capital, big machines, and in this case, to the big fishing hole.
There were other farmers. The Woodards were gone. They were known as good farmers who paid their bills. The Bryson farm will go under water too. My aunt called them Grandma and Grandpa Bryson because of their extreme old age.
THE PEOPLE DOWN-STREAM wanted that dam. They wanted the water for industry and the security of flood control. The water skiers wanted it, and the white collar fisherman who yearned to get out into the good old out-of-doors on his day off wanted it.
As I drove down the country roads, stripped of their protective hedge-rows, I felt the curious embarrassment that one feels when he looks into another man's casket.
As for the farmers who lived in the Dragoon and 110 Mile valleys, some will re-settle on different land. But many will be swept into new roles in the changing economy.
All the sentiment in the world will not bring them back to small farm country, for it cannot fit them in. But I guess that when they are fumbling to put on their water skis, they will remember the days when they got up early to curse the weather and fret at the mud or the grasshoppers. And remember the fierce pride of a man who has his own land.
Tom Coffman
Daily Hansan
111 Flint Hall
University of Kansas student newspaper
UUNiversity 4-3646, newsroom
UUNiversity 4-3198, business office
Founded 1889, 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 Lawrence, Kansas.
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Tuesday, Oct. 8, 1963 University Daily Kansan ___ Page 3
KU's Radio Museum Needs More Space for Collection
By Carol Lathrop Knupp
There's a museum on campus that is all dressed up with no place to go
is all dressed up with no place to go. That museum is sitting in the studios of the campus radio station, KUOK, in Hoch Auditorium, and is dressed in Early American pieces of sound reproduction, most of which are still in working condition. A 1911 RCA radio tuning unit, the oldest piece in the collection of about 35, is the highlight of attire.
THE COLLECTION of sound reproduction pieces began with an idea by Larry Knupp, Lawrence senior, who was station manager of KUOK in the spring semester of 1962.
His idea was to solicit old pieces of equipment from any generous person, cob-webbed attic, or dark storage room. Those contributions would then be used for teaching aids in the classroom work of the department's courses.
Mike Bush, Glendale, Mo., senior, became interested in the idea and began to bring in solicited pieces. The interest continued to spread among the department's students. Weekends and vacations were spent on electronic safaris to obtain Stromberg-Carlson, Sears-Roebuck Cresent models, and Tip-top table cone speakers. The searches extended into eastern Missouri and western Kansas. Some pieces were transported over 250 miles back to the rapidly growing museum.
"WITHIN A FEW months we realized our collection was going to outgrow the space we had available." Knupp recalls. "And yet we kept on gathering pieces from people who were just going to throw them away because they were junk. They didn't realize that they would be throwing away equipment that will be lost forever unless someone makes an effort to gather the pieces."
---
The students increased their efforts and the number of museum items increased until it became necessary that more space be provided for display area.
SOME PIECES have been taken to Topeka where they are being exhibited by the Kansas Association of Radio Broadcasters in the Kansas Historical Museum.
However, the Radio and Television Department is still looking for somewhere to take its museum to allow it room to grow to its full potential.
Are You A Slow Reader?
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.
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.
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 Diverse Parkway, Dept. 3247, Chicago 14, Illinois. A postcard will do.
The Classical Film Series presents
"FORBIDDEN GAMES"
a French language film with English sub-titles Directed by Rene Clement
***
Forum Room—Admission: $.60
Wednesday—October 9th
Two Showings: 7:00 and 9:00
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Page 4
Tuesday, Oct. 8, 196;
University Daily Kansan
Freshman Dormitory Officers Discuss Aspects of Leadership
A picnic at Lone Star Lake Sunday turned into an afternoon of hard work for more than 100 freshman women's residence hall officers, the Dean of Women and assistants.
The officers were divided into committees under the supervision of Emily Taylor, dean of women, and her assistants. The committees discussed the various aspects of leadership, and discussed their responsibilities as officers of the freshman women's residence halls.
The new floor chairmen who were elected Thursday night are:
CORBIN HALL: Nancy Soderstrom, Wichita, first floor north; Trish Collins, La Jolla, Calif, second floor north; Cecilia Pitts, Merriam third floor north; Bonnie Stenzel, Ness City, fourth floor north; Libby Roberts, Shawnee Mission, fifth floor north; Mary Halloran, Topeka, sixth
floor north; Vicki Secrest, Colby,
seventh floor north.
Joanna Longley, Chicago, Ill. first floor south; Sharon Robertson, Silver City, N.M., second floor south; Spring Stidham, Park Ridge, III. third floor south; Vicki Harris, Shreveport, La., fourth floor south.
Gertrude Sellards Pearson Hall: Rena Olson, Omaha, Neb., ground floor; Jane Carlson, River Forest, fil, first floor east; Jean Brurgardt, Des Moines, Iowa, second floor east; Glenda Hord, Kansas City, third floor east; Leslie Spurck, Shawnee Mission, fourth floor east.
Trishia Cowen, Junction City, crossbar; Connie McLain, Leavenworth, first floor west; Lillian Genther, Prairie Village, second floor west; Marcia Bunn, Tulsa, Okla., third floor west; Betty Arnold, Hoisington, fourth floor west.
Statewide Activities To Select Chairmen
Applications have been sent to all living groups by Statewide Activities for anyone interested in becoming a County Chairman or Home Town Correspondent.
The applications are due Oct. 15,
at the alumni office, 127 Strong.
Statewide Activities carries on all phases of public relations with high schools, alumni, and citizens of the state.
Members of the organization keep KU's achievements before the public eye.
The members of the Statewide Activities Executive Council are: Thomas Hamill, president; Charles Whitman, vice-chairman in charge of Speakers' Bureau; Jerry Bell, vice-chairman in charge of county Chairman Program; Gary Grazda, Public Relations Chairman; Marylin Miller, secretary; and Roger Harmon, treasurer.
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Savings and Loan Institute Opens Thursday for Junior Executives
A KU Savings and Loan Institute for Kansas junior executives will be held October 10-12 in the Kansas Union.
The 15th annual institute is sponsored by the Kansas Savings and Loan League and the KU Extension. It offers a three-year sequence of programs for the young executives. The program will have separate lectures and discussions for the first, second and third year groups. Each year the executives return to take a more advanced class until they finish the program.
"The program is designed to give instruction, ideas and inspiration for the executives of the savings and loan industry and keep them informed." Robert M. Nelson, a coordinator from the KU extension said.
Registration for the institute will begin at 8:30 a.m., Thursday and programs continue until 4 p.m., Thursday and Friday. Saturday the program ends at noon and the executives will attend the KU-Iowa State football game in the afternoon.
ALBERT GROSSMAN PRESENTS
IN PERSON
Peter, Paul and Mary
EXCLUSIVELY ON © Warner Brothers Records
KANSAS CITY MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM
FRIDAY, OCT. 18 8:30 p.m.
Enclose stamped self-addressed envelope to Municipal
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Tickets: $2.00,$3.00,$3.50,$4.00
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Tuesday, Oct. 8, 1963
University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Law Review Nominates Membership Candidates
The Law Review, now in its 12th year of publication at KU, serves both as a current source of legal information for lawyers and as a working honor roll for KU law students.
Seventeen KU law students are candidates for membership in the Kansas Law Review.
The quarterly publication is assembled entirely by students, with writing done by professors, private attorneys, and law students.
THE SECOND or third year students do research and write many of the articles each semester. They are chosen for their scholastic achievement, after completion of an article suitable for publication.
To qualify for election to the board of governors, a student must have written two articles for the Review.
Membership is limited to 30 students or 20 per cent of the Law School enrollment.
Members of the board of governors are:
Board members, who are elected in the spring, are responsible for assigning, editing and grading articles for the publication. All are third year students.
Jerry G. Elliott, Hutchinson; Lynn L. Anderson, Atwood; Robert L. Driscoll, Lawrence; Terry Bullock, Wilsey; Benjamin C. Langel, Salina; James A. Dougherty, McPherson; William Haught, Lawrence, and Kent M. Berkley, Tescott.
EACH STUDENT doing work suitable for publication receives one hour credit.
Representative to the honors committee is Gerald T. Elliott, Geneva, Ill.
CANDIDATES FOR membership to the Law Review are;
Clarence Bender, Lawrence; George D. Blackwood, Springfield, Mo.; Edward M. Boyle, Shawnee Mission; Walter C. Brauer III, Bonner Springs; James Lee Crabtree, Ransom; Allan J. Fanning, Shawnee; and Frederick Lee Haag, El Dorado.
David R. Hederstedt, Salina; James M. Immel, Iola; John H. Johntz Jr., Wichita; Ronald Lee Leslie, Goodland; Ralph Metcalf, El Dorado; Cleve Douglas Miller, Salina; Loren Lynn Obley, Emporia; Gordon Michael Penny, Garden City; William Henry Reeder, Shawnee, and Karen I. Stewart, Hutchinson.
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Chosen by Glamour Magazine as one of the Ten Best Dressed College Girls, 1963 For the Drawing Muff is wearing a Villager V-neck sweater and a turtleneck dickey with a coordinated John Meyer skirt.
Barbara Crow Villager Sweater
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Jenni Hanna 500 W.11
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Judy Miller
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Oct. 8, 1963
清康熙年间,画师吴伟里以“春水”为主题,描绘春天的山水风光。他运用浓淡相间的笔法,细腻生动地描绘了山林、湖泊、草丛等自然景色。画面中,群山连绵起伏,山峦间有白鹭飞翔;溪流在山脚下形成一条蜿蜒的河道,水面上漂浮着一些小鱼和昆虫。画中的人物也表现出了不同的姿态,如一位身穿红衣的女子手持枝条,站在树下微笑;另一位身穿绿衣的男子正坐在树上,静静欣赏风景。他的神态各异,展现了不同的人生状态。
CHINESE WALL HANGING "WILLOW TREE"
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The Bookstore will present prints that display a trend that afford ample choice to even the most specialized to any decor
BE SURE TO COME EARLY TO SEE THE COMPLETE SELECTION.
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Tuesday, Oct. 8, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Oct. 8, 1963
Dean Woodruff Reports Athletes Score in Class
The academic performance of athletes at KU is not significantly different from that of non-athletes of similar ability. Laurence C. Woodruff, Dean of Students and KU faculty representative to the Big Eight Conference, told Conference faculty representatives meeting in Kansas City yesterday.
He reported on the completion of a study performed at KU at Conference expense. The study compared 340 male students who entered their first classes for credit in the fall of 1957; 100 of them were athletes.
One implication of the report: members of an athletic squad are truly representative of the undergraduate male segment of the student body. One conclusion: present eligibility standards of the Big Eight Conference do not work an injustice on the athlete.
PERHAPS MORE important, the report concludes that proposals to increase eligibility requirements for competition would require the athlete to meet higher standards than those applied to other students. College standards may have been raised in recent years, the report continues, but the athlete also is meeting this higher level of achievement.
Assisting Dean Woodruff in the preparation of this study were E. Gordon Colliser, director of KU Guidance Services; James K. Hitt, director of admissions and registrar; and George B. Smith, vice chancellor for institutional planning.
Athletes and non-athletes were grouped according to rank in high school and according to rank on two of the University's placement examinations given every entering student. These groups were compared as to the number of semester hours of classwork passed,
cumulative grade point averages persistence of enrollment, and graduation.
"When compared at their own level of rank," the report states, "these data indicated no significant difference between the performance of athletes and non-athletes for any of the items tested."
ON THE STUDY of graduation, the final figures were almost identical: 44% of those students who enrolled in 1957 and participated in athletics were graduated at the end of 10 semesters; 45% of the students who enrolled in 1957 and did not participate in athletics were graduated during the same period.
"The study carries no implications that those students who were not graduated 'flunked out.'" Dean Woodruff said. "Other KU studies have shown that a large proportion of students who leave the University do so for personal or financial reasons or to transfer to other institutions."
In final percentages the graduation of athletes was virtually the same as that of non-athletes. In the comparison by rank on one of the two placement examinations, however, higher percentages of athletes were graduated than of non-athletes in all three ability groupings; in the comparison by rank in high school class, in two of the three groupings.
Using rank on the other placement examination, percentages of graduation of the non-athlete were slightly higher in two of the three groupings, and higher for the athlete in the other.
WALTER JOHNSON OF THE Washington Sentors holds the all-time major league record of 113 shutouts during his career.
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K
Cash & Carry 1903 Mass.
University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Dillon Pleases Big Spenders With Deficits
By Lyle C. Wilson United Press International
The U.S. dollar was worth 45.6 cents in October, 1932, in comparison with its purchasing power in 1939. When the Bureau of Labor Statistics publishes its consumer price index for October of this year, the dollar will have slumped to about 45 cents. Not much less perhaps, but overall it adds up to 55 cents in 24 years.
At that rate we will have a two bit dollar in 10 years or so and finally a dollar will be worth a dime, a nickel and a penny. At that point the pensioners, the prudent savers, the family collecting life insurance on a breadwinner — all of these are likely to be out in the woods fighting the squirrels for nuts.
The big-time spenders of the taxpayers' dollars never had it so good in peacetime as during the last three months. These months comprise the first quarter of the 1964 fiscal year.
SOME CITIZENS will not be as enthusiastic as Secretary Dillon about the first quarter treasury figures. These will be citizens with life insurance policies, pensions, money in the bank and other assets measured in terms of U.S. dollars. These big fat deficits gradually are creating a currency inflation that sweats the dollar of its purchasing power.
Treasury Secretary C. Douglas Dillon must have been greatly pleased. He believes big-time spending and treasury deficits are good business for everybody including the common man and, of course, the Democratic party.
Tuesday, Oct. 8, 1963
The treasury does not regularly publish figures for expenditures and receipts It did at one time on a daily basis. What is daily published now is an accounting of "withdrawals" from and "deposits" in the treasury. These figures roughly represent expenditures and tax revenue. The daily figure also includes the public debt, the gold balance and some additional matter, including figures for the same period in the last previous year.
THUS, THE treasury has reported that as of Sept. 3, 1963, withdrawals since July 1, were $31.3 billion compared with $29.4 billion in 1962. Deposits have been $28.9 billion so far this year and were $26.8 last. Since Sept. 30, 1962, the public debt has increased by $7.3 billion to $306.9 billion, a record that should encourage Secretary Dillon, if not the Democratic party.
The U.S. Gold Board, meantime, had shrunk since Sept. 30, 1962 by $485 million to $15.5 billion, a statistic that will encourage nobody unless, perhaps, it be Nikita Khrushchev.
The treasury probably will connect more than $100 billion in taxes in this fiscal year. But that won't be enough to pay the bills incurred by the politicians in behalf of the U.S. government. Deposits so far in this fiscal year are more than $2 billion greater than in the like period last year. But the spenders still are able to get rid of the dollars faster than they roll into the treasury.
It is a fact little noted that most of these tax dollars are from the pockets of the little fellows, the common man. The little guys will find out about that some day.
Humanities Lecture Schedule Completed
THE COMPLETE 1963-64 HUMANITIES LECTURE SERIES, as announced by Prof. Elmer F. Beth, chairman of the Humanities Committee.
Tues. Oct. 15-Dr. Emanuel Winteritz, curator of musical collections, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York City.
Tues. Nov. 5—Dr. Bruce Archer Mor-
eral scholar, University of Chicago.
Tues. Feb 18—Dr Bruno Snell, classics
& theater, University of Hamburg, GERM-
NYU.
Tues., Dec. 3—Dr. Richard DeGeorge philosopher, University of Kansas.
Thurs. Jan. 9—Dr. Frederick Norman
Gorman, College, King's College,
London, England
Tues. Mar. 17-Dr. Madeleine Doran
spearepe scholar, University of Wisc-
square
Tues. Mar. 24—Dr. John Hope Franklin
American history scholar, Brooklyn
College.
Tues. April 21- Dr. Albert Marck-
cardiologistics scholar, University of Michigan
All lectures will be at 8 p.m. in Fraser Theater and are open free to the public.)
Two Awards Set Up For Graduate Women
Two $1,500 scholarships have been offered to Kansas women for graduate study by the Kansas Federation of Business and Professional Women's Clubs.
One scholarship will be available for the 1964-65 school year and one for 1965-66.
A bachelor's degree is required for application. Application blanks may be obtained from Miss Audrey Smith, Box 232, Goodland, Kansas. Application must be made before Dec. 15, 1963. The 1964 award will be made early next year.
Hunter Kills Hunter
LA ROCHELLE, France—(UPI)—Claude Auditeau, 28, committed suicide yesterday by shooting himself minutes after he accidentally shot and killed Michel Cointard, 14, while the two hunted pheasants, police said today.
Bruegel's Sketches Shown at Museum
Sunday marked the opening day of the art museum's latest exhibit, a collection of sketches by Pieter Bruegel the elder, and two oil paintings by Nick Vaccoro.
Mr. Voccoro, new chairman of KU's department of drawing and painting attended the opening. He answered questions about his pictures and discussed them with the public.
The Bruegel collection, which is owned by Mr. and Mrs. Jake Zeitlin of Los Angeles, Cal., includes many of the Alpine landscapes for which Bruegel was noted. Interest, however, seemed to focus on the "Seven
Sins" sketches and the "Seven Vittues"
CAP PETERSON, ROOKIE IN-fielder with the San Francisco Giants, is in the middle of an eight-year plan to attain his degree at Pacific Lutheran University. He enrolled at the Parkland, Wash., school in 1960.
Also of interest to the 400 people who attended the opening, was the new fire and burglar alarm system. The new system, which was installed as a result of last year's thefts, picks up unusual noises and degree of heat rise and relays this information to the police and fire departments.
HONN'S COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY
SPEED QUEEN WASHERS OPEN 24 HRS.
Across from the high school 19th & Louisiana VI 3-9631
Auto Wrecking and Junk
Now and Used Parts and Tires
East End of 9th Street VI 3-0956
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results
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EVER interested in modern promotional techniques, exterior garment merchandising-wise, we at Eagle have devoted particular attention of late to the commercial practices of our colleagues in the tunafish, soup and soap lines. It seems that these three diverse industries have all discovered that by offering you a free discount coupon good for three cents off the purchase price of their product, they can lure you down to the neighborhood store. Well, we have been considering various ways to market (we believe that's the word they use) our Inishowen Cheviot Brooketowne. The first two adjectives describe a heavy herringbone oxford designed by our shirting gourmet who describes this fabric as meaty. Brooketowne is our tapered body button-down with the sloppy bulge we used to call flare before everyone else did too. So, tunafish on the mind, we decided to dip into that great fund of American advertising knowhow. Friends! as soon as you've written us to learn the name of your nearest Eagle dealer (not all Eagle shirts have the Eagle label in them, recall), and we answer you, and you need a shirt, run! don't walk and claim your Eagle I. C. shirt at three cents off! At once!
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Eagle Shirts are available at Woolf Brothers (Varsity Shop), Kansas City.
Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Oct. 8, 1963
Coed Prepares For Double Role In Horse Show
For a KU coed doubly-involved in the American Royal Horse show, next week's schedule looks like a rough one.
Elsie Mayor, Kansas City sophomore, will compete in three classes, and also will coach several of her students for the show. To do this, Miss Mayor must be at the American Royal grounds at 6 a.m., every day, drive to Lawrence for classes at 8:30, and return to Kansas City for the afternoon and evening competition.
"This is the 11th straight year that I've ridden in the Royal," Miss Mayor said. "In 1953, I was the youngest junior rider jumping in the show. This year, one of my students is again the youngest junior rider."
THE BLUE-EYED blond is enthusiastic about the success of her six students. "They've been winning prizes in all the horse shows in this area." Miss Mayor said proudly. "Now I know how my instructors felt when I came home with a blue ribbon. I get goosebumps just thinking about it."
Miss Mayor's career in horsemanship began when she was nine years old. "I was hiking through the woods near our home when I saw a beautiful horse. I followed him back to the stables, where I met an eighteen-year-old girl who agreed to give me riding lessons if I would work in the stables."
After learning the basics of riding and jumping, Miss Mayor spent several years training horses and riders. She was a show rider and assistant instructor for Capt. William C. Meyer at the Meyer Remount Farm at Leavenworth.
DOW FINSTERWALD WAS THE youngest golfer ever to be chosen PGA Player of the Year. He was 29 when selected in 1958.
life stride.
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S.U.A. Carnival "T.V. Jee Bees"
Saturday, Oct. 12
7:00 to 11:00
Kansas Union
Tickets 85c (on sale tomorrow at Info. Booth)
Games! — Skits! — Queens! — etc!.
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified
Cheerleaders and Pep Club Members:
Ready for the Game Saturday? Be sure you're looking your best while you cheer the KU team.
Have your uniforms cleaned at
KU
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Alterations Repairs Reweaving
Robert Mitchum Elisa Martinelli Jack Hawkins
RAMPAGE
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Adults 90c
Children 50c
Granada
TWEATRE-Telephone W 3-5788
Joseph E. Levine presents FEDERICO FELLINI'S 1/2
AN EMBASSY PICTURES RELEASE
Now! 7:00 & 9:30
Adults Only $1.00
VARSITY ART Attractions
O1/2
OS
VARSITY ART Attractions
A ROSS HUNTER PRODUCTION IN ASSOCIATION WITH JOSEPH FIELDS
RODGERS & HAMMERSTEIN'S
FLOWER DRUM SONG
NANCY KWAN • JAMES SHIGETA
JUANTA HALL ...and MIYOSHI UMEKI
Shows at 7:10
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Joel McCrea as
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In Color at 9:40
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Sex is not a forbidden word!*
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HESTON GARDNER NIVEEN
55 DAYS at PEKING
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Classified Ads
MISCELLANEOUS
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If you would like to sing Barbershop harmony, call VIT3-8389. 10-10
PARTY TIME: School house available for private parties, dances, meetings, equipped with piano, tables, chairs, restroom and coolers. S 7-5483 - 431 Forrest.
WANTED
Save on food costs. Rent a frozen food locker. Meat for sale. Budget plan. Triple Lockers, 6th and Miss. Call VI 3-6250.
10-11
Third man needed to fill vacancy in two bedroom apartment at 2350 Ridge Court. About $50 per month including utilities. Car required. Call VI 2-9143. 10-8
Want one student to share furnished apartment. Tom Prelock I-3-0044. 10-10
Anyone who has the rank of Rokkyu and above and is interested in starting a judo club contact Steve Roepke or Bob Clause at 707 Templin Hall. 10-8
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart, 1025 Mass. tf
HELP WANTED
Young man wanted to work 1 week end day and one or 2 nights per week. Call Tom Dixon after 5 p.m. VI-314-765. Dixon's Drive-In Restaurant -2500 W 6th
TYPING
Typing: Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter with carbon ribbon (linked ribbon if requested manually). For VI, TI-6048 after 5:00 p.m. or before 7:30 a.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley 408 West 13th Street. 10-11
Typing, my home. Experienced, electrician.
Lois Clark, 1301 Vermilion V-1 2-1872.
Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1648.
MILLIKENS SOS—always first quality typing on LB.M. Carbon ribbon machines.
house 1-7 d.m. tape transcriptions. Office house 5-12 m. tm. 12 p.m. $1,021-$1,381.
Phone VI3-5920.
Experienced typist for theses and term papers
for M.S. in Computer Science
Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Miss VI, VI 3-0558,
fax: 612-764-0988
Efficient and experienced typer would like to do work in home. Prompt and guaranteed work: Call at any time. VI 3-2651. 10-31
Typing: Dissertation's theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines: 33 special symbols, carbon ribbon biblion. Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI-1546 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI-3-3057. tf
Typing; Desertations, theses, manuscripts, term papers typed. New Smith-Corona machines; 35 special symbols, carbon ribbon—if desired. Prompt. efficient service. Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI2-1546 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI3-3057.
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers,
lectures, publications and reports on rates. Electric Typewriter. Mrs.
McEdlowenny, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568 f
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
legal terns. Marsha Goff, VI 3-2577.
New electric typewriter. Reasonable rates for themes, term papers, dissertations, and theses. Mrs. Barta, 1955 Miller Drive, VI 3-6949. tt
Prompt, neat and accurate work on wide carriage electric typewriter. Journalism, Business and Secretary experience. Charlotte Weber. VI 3-3495. tf
Thesis Typist, Electric typewriter,
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Iff
Page 11
LOST
FOUND
Lost: black plastic notebook lost in Zone X driveway. Call VI 2-8942. 10-10
Found: The party who left their elephant in the Gaslight tavern last Saturday night may claim it by contacting Don Ebeling at the Gaslight. 10-9
BUSINESS SERVICES
Let your pre-schoolers join the morning
group at 1707
Street VI 2-83-10 10-14
Business Service: Tutor-Native German to give lessons in German. Call VI 521-4960.
[10-11]
Complete line of soles and heels, laces cosmetics and polishes. Have new mermaid skins to match purses smoke totes. Burgert's One Day Sho- Service — 1113 Mass. St.
Will tutor first year French students. Experi-
ences include Barbara Garcia
3-6722 3-6728 10-58
Tutoring by English graduate students—will help with themes, grammar, punctuation or any other special requests. Call VI 3-8175. tf
Do you need a tutor for Chinese? If
you need it, leave a message.
If not in leave name and number. 10-16
Johnny's Super Oil - Bay Products - 23rd and Ousdahl. All work guaranteed. Free pick-up and delivery. Call VI 3-9691. Oil-Lube-Wash and Polish. 10-14
Will do paper hanging evenings—reasonable rates. Call VI 3-2906. 10-10
Dressmaking-alterations, formats and
gowns. Ola Smith, 939½ Mast
III 5-3263
FOR RENT
For Rent: Free rent for couple or elderly apartment Call VI 3-8283 evenings 10-14
for rent. Two room furnished apartment with garage. Very nice. All utilities said. $58, 144 Vermont (15th and Vermont) VI 3-6328. 10-14
For Rent: A spacious nicely furnished
office with flat screen TV. Call VI 2-9466, 1400 Term. 10-14
Available now for lease (12 months).
Two bedroom apartment, close to campus and downtown. $75. Santee Apartments. 1123 Indiana, VI 3-2116.
Two bedroom unfurnished duplex, wall to wall carpeting, dining area, fenced yard, heated garage, separate utility room, have storage space, not one.
room, large storage area. No pets—one
child. 1 year lease available Oct. 16.
Victimity of KU. $95 per month. Call
VI 2-1028. 10-10
First floor apartment. Nicely furnished.
Between KU and Town. Reasonable rent.
Off street parking. Married couple pre-
ferred. Phone VI 2-0121 or VI 3-4454.
Furnished apartment for 1 with kitchenette. Private bath and entrance. All furnished rooms. To campus and dium $40 per month. Inquire at 1005 Miss. Call VI 3-4349. 10-10
Why walk or drive a long way to class? Have a nice sleeping room for single man. Across street from stadium. Call VI 3-8066. 10-8
Duplex 2 bedrooms, stove and refrigerator with cept electricity. Call VI3-2281. 10-10
FOR RENT OR SALE: 35'x8' one bedroom rent. Call V1-93453 after 5 p.m.
Spacious 2 room apartment, private bath,
kitchen. Double bath. Furnished. Paid.
Invoice. Inquire at 1334 Ohio after 5. 10-8
Vacancies in contemporary home with outside swimming pool for young man. Private entrance, utilities paid $45.00 per month. Cooked dinner if desired. Call Vi 3-9633. 10-15
1 bedroom house, completely furnished,
air-conditioner, near downtown, no pets!
Also on one bedroom furnished apartment
car parked nearby can accommodate
YI 3-0554 to 9 a.m. or after 7 p.m. tf
1956 Ford Two door, V-8; automatic
engine. Go on board. Call
Trachsel 1-2-9100 10-14
For sale — tux suit, white dinner jacket,
extra tux trousers, three tux shirts, excellent
condition, size 39-long, $45.00.
Call VI 3-0800. 10-14
For sale: Electric guitar and amplifier for sale. dual pickup, tone and volume controls. Also, unamplified guitar. Call Pat Hardmen — VI 3-3770 at 6:00 p.m.
FOR SALE
For Sale: Two snow tires practically
new. White tires, size 800x14 tubeless,
nylon, only $25.00 for two. Call VI 3-4196.
evenings. 10-14
For Sale: Three speed. English style bike in good condition. Side baskets and flexi-
able cable lock. Price. $15 — Call VI 2-
9356. 10-10
For Sale: Road and Track, Car and Driver and Motor magazine. Early issues —25c and 35c. Abington Book Shop —1015$! Mass. 10-10
For Sale: Schwinn 27" 15 speed racing bicycle — demonstration model — Call John Carnahan or Jim Ash — VI 3-7922. 10-14
Owner leaving town — attractive 3 bedroom ranch in desirable neighborhood.
Accommodates 8 bedrooms, 4 baths, schools and shopping center 217 Belle Haven Drive. Phone VI 3-4364 10-11
1957 "98" Oldsmobile convertible; white;
excellent condition; power windows,
steering, radio, seat, brakes. Four new
radio, take offer. Call: Bill Murdock.
VIA-4282.
New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500
mm thick cream - $85 Lawrence Outdoor -
1005 Mass
For Sale: 1960 VW clean. good condition.
Fair offer will take. Call VI 2-1403. 10-11
Over 30 modern pistols, rifles and shotguns left. Hundreds of rounds of ammo far below wholesale. Thousands of dollars invested in this collection. All must go! See now at 824 Ark. or call VI3-1110. tt
General Psychology study, notes. Excel-
copy. Call VIT-92-9788. $4.00 per
copy. Call VIT-92-9788.
University Daily Kansan
1957 MGA fiergager hardtop, wire wheels, new tires, luggage rack, R&H, monitor, Dual LCD screens, 48,000 miles. Will consider VW bus in trade, Jack Hibler. VI 2-12-00. 10-11
1963 Olds F-85 Cutlass sport coupe, with
wheel drive. Call Vi 3-7807 for information
10-8
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ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLEANERS.
New electrolysis and a limited number of rebuilts, fully guaranteed. All parts available. Equipment picked up for service and delivered. Frank V Cox, Local Manager—1904 Barker. Call VI 3-123-7113
Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outlining of courses and classes. Formerly known as the Theta notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50.
AUTO LIABILITY INSURANCE, also collision and comp. Most risks covered; under age drivers; scooters; motor bikes; motor cycles; rates avail. Brown Realty Co., Ph. VI 2-0179 - Realtors - $729½ Mass. tf
Typewriters, new and used portables, standards, electronics. Olympia, Olivetti, Royal and Smith Corona portables. Typewriter and adding machine service and rental. Lawrence Typewriter, 730 Mass. Call VI 3-3644. tt
To the sports minded and economy minded student—a beautiful maroon, 1962 Jawa motorcycle. Has only 1400 actual miles. Must sacrifice—BIG SAVINGS TO YOU. Call VI 3-4127 and leave name and number. tf
THE EMPEROR JONES
.95 — paperback
many other of Eugene O'Neill's plays also on display
WE HAVE
2. 45 hardbound
KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORE
8 a.m.- 5 p.m. Mon.- Fri.
8 a.m.- 1:30 p.m. Sat.
Tuesday, Oct. 8, 1963
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
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- General typing service
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$1021_{1}{}^{2}$ Mass., VI 3-5920, 7a.m.-11p.m.
STUDENTS
BRAKE ADJUSTMENTS ... $ .98
LUBRICATION ... $1.00
Motor tune-ups, wheel balancing
FREE—one quart of oil with each
oil and filter change
— all major brands —
PAGE-CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Oct. 8,1963
Voice Professor's Last Recital Marked by Praise and Applause
Rv Tom Winston
Hearty applause greeted Reinhold Schmidt, professor of voice, before his faculty recital last night at Swarthownt Recital Hall but his bewitched audience gave him an ovation when he had finished.
There was more applause just before the intermission, and more again before he began the second half of his program. There would have been still more, but the printed program requested there be "no applause except at intermission and at the close of the program."
"It was glorious. His voice is richer and fuller than ever. It was as if you were pushing buttons and the sound came out, only there was a heart behind it and there was none of that noise in between."
ONE WOMAN who obviously had heard him before said:
Last night was a very special recital for Prof. Schmidt, a bass baritone. He sang Schubert's great song cycle, "Die Winterreise" (The Winter Journey), which he said is his favorite.
favorite.
Also, he said last night was his last faculty recital. He turned 65 last Thursday.
John Perry, assistant professor of piano, was Prof. Schmidt's partner. It was Prof. Perry's first KU appearance as an accompanist.
Hurricane—
(Continued from page 1) where the hurricane re-entered the Atlantic today.
Atlanta The unidentified radioman reported in a hoarse voice that three-fourths of the city was covered with flood waters and "the situation of this city is desperate."
"PLEASE DO something," the operator pleaded. "There is danger of an epidemic, since bodies, some stacked up and others floating in the waters, could set off an epidemic."
Another radio operator interrupted the report, saying, "Comrade, remember your orders, remember your orders," apparently referring to an order from the Communist government not to give information on casualties.
AT LEAST 21 other victims of the hurricane had been reported from Cuba including two U.S. sailors lost in flood waters that swept over a corner of the Guantanamo Naval Base.
The "at long last" turn of the hurricane — as the weather bureau described it — apparently removed the Florida coast out of danger.
BOTH THE SONG line and the accompaniment in Schubert's songs are greatly dependent upon one another. Prof. Schmidt and Prof. Perry breathed and thought as one.
As in "La Dolce Vita," Fellini has concentrated on the life of one man in contemporary Italian society. The same actor, Marcello Mastroianni, who appeared in La Dolce Vita portrays his central character, the motion picture director, Guido Anselmi, in "812";
Throughout the evening Prof. Schmidt showed what a good storyteller he is (and songs are stories set to music, let no one tell you otherwise). His manner was conversational and it varied beautifully with the story; his diction (in German) was clear and natural-sounding.
ANSELIMI HAS reached a point of artistic stagnation beyond which he cannot progress. Day dreams, fantasies and memories of childhood fill his imagination, but he is unable to create the work of significance which he wants to. As producers, actresses, scriptwriters, harass him about the film he is going to make, Anselmi only withdraws further into his own fantasy-world.
Film Maker's Artistic Limit Shown in $ 8^{\frac{1}{2}} $
" $ \frac{8}{1 2} $," the latest film with English subtitles by Federico Fellini, director of "La Dolce Vita" is now showing at the Varsity Theatre as one of a series of art films.
Images of Anselmi's world—both mental and physical—flow past in an unbroken rhythm. Equally apart of his world is the overwhelming presence of the human voice: people speak incessantly and often in several languages.
In the end Anselmi comes to realize that the complexity present in the world around him is a reflection of the complexity that lies within him. Thus he is able to face his world and himself and to develop as an artist.
THOUGH Fellini has chosen a film director as his protagonist, his meaning is not thereby limited. For the problems that face Anselmi are in essence ordinary human problems, which are not restricted to any class or occupation.
Baldwin Art Theater Baldwin, Kansas
Baldwin, Kansas
FIRST ART FILM THIS SEASON
"The Mouse That Roared"
BASED ON A NOVEL BY
LEONARD WIBBERLY
OCTOBER 8,9,10
7:30 p.m.
Free Coffee
Fine Music
Official Bulletin
GEM THEATRE
Foreign Students: Students interested in participating in the Olathe, Kan. Home Hospitality Week-End on Oct. 19-20 should sign up by Friday noon at the People-to-People office, 113 Kansas Union.
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence.
Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
Catholic Inquiry Class, 7 p.m. Lawrence
Center, 1915 Stratford Rd. Open to anyone interested
TODAY
in learning more about the Catholic faith.
final tryouts, 7-9 p.m.
Robbins pool.
Western Civ. Discussion, 9 p.m.
Lawrence Catholic Student Center. 1915
Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
TOMORROW
Newman Executive Board: 8:30 p.m.
16th Street Public Student Center,
16th Stratford Road
Timely Topics, 7 p.m. St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center, 1915 Stratford Road. "Fred, Faith and Fear"—Rev. Brendan Downey, OSB.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel.
Le Carte Francais se réunira mercredi 9 Octobre a quatre heures et demie dans le 18e siècle, accompagné de diapositives, sur l'Université americaine à Alx-en-Provenice, par Jane Cayley Kimbrough, Joyce Voth. Tous ceux qui s'intèressent au francis sont invités.
Don't Miss The SUA Quarterback Club
TONIGHT 7 p.m.
In The Forum Room of The Student Union See film of Wyoming game narrated by Varsity football player.
Don't Miss The TRAVELING HOOTENANNY
with stars of the ABC television program "Hootenanny" hosted by Jack Linkletter
★
★ Modern Folk Quartet
★ Lynn Gold
Bessie Griffen & the Gospel Pearls
★
★ Knob Lick Upper 10,000
and featuring Dr. Louis Gottlieb of the "slightly fabulous" Limelighters
Friday, Oct. 11 - 8 p.m. - Hoch Auditorium Tickets $ .75 - $1.00 - $1.25
On sale this week at information booth & Union ticket lobby Hurry & get yours
Daily Hansan
61st Year, No. 19
LAWRENCE. KANSAS Wednesday, Oct. 9, 1963
Modern Languages in Mass Approved By Vatican Council
VATICAN CITY—(UPI) — Ecumenical Council fathers today overwhelmingly approved a series of proposals authorizing introduction of modern languages to replace Latin in large portions of the Mass.
Eight separate amendments to the document on the worship of the church were ratified at today's session of the Council by top-heavy majorities.
They also provide for a wider use of vernacular than the original text would have done. For example, the original text would have restricted modern languages to the reading of the Gospel and Epistles and certain other portions of the so-called "fore-Mass."
THE LARGEST NEGATIVE vote on any of the amendments was 96 out of 2,227 votes cast.
An amendment approved today says that if local circumstances warrant, modern languages may be used in all parts of the Mass which "belong to the people." That is those chants and responses in which the congregation is supposed to participate, such as the Credo and Sanctus.
Four of the amendments concern the use of the vernacular — the everyday language of the people in the Mass where it is desired by national or regional conferences of Bishops.
The effect of the amendments approved today is to make it clear that the use of modern languages is optional with the Bishops of each country, and those who wish to continue an all-Latin Mass may do so.
ANOTHER SIGNIFICANT amendment says that a still wider use of modern language may be permissible if proposed by the bishops of a country and approved by the Pope.
This opens the door on possible future introduction of modern languages even in the "Canon" of the Mass — the most sacred portion of the service in which the priest renews the sacrifice of Christ on Calvary.
Other amendments approved today strongly commend the reception of Holy Communion by the faithful each time they attend Mass
rather than only on special occasions, and authorize the reception of communion wine as well as bread by the laity on certain occasions.
As a consolation to the traditionalists in the church, the fathers also adopted an amendment urging pastors to teach the faithful how to make their responses in Latin even though the service is normally conducted in a modern language. The amendment says this is desirable so that Catholics can take part in Mass when they go to another country.
the entire service is especially great on Sundays and holy days.
Vatican sources predicted before the vote almost unanimous approval of the proposals.
ONE AMENDMENT stresses the importance of worshippers taking part in the "service of the Word"—reading portions of the Mass — as well as the actual Eucharist. It says that the obligation to attend
After this morning's vote, the council fathers again went on with their discussion of a document about the church.
Bishop Anoveros Ataun asked that a fuller treatment of the priesthood stress clearly that priests are "not merely delegates of bishops."
**IRISH ARCHBISHOP William Conway of Armagh also asked that more attention be given to the priesthood and pointed out that in the "De Ecclesia" (about the church) draft, nine pages are dedicated to bishops, seven to the laity and only a half page to the priests.
Combination Alarm System Installed In Art Museum
A combination fire and burglar alarm system installed in the Museum of Art should greatly decrease chances of theft or destruction of art objects.
Keith Lawton, vice-chancellor in charge of operations, said the new alarm system was installed with fire prevention as its primary goal.
Small metal bulbs hanging from the ceiling of the museum will detect any abnormal rise in temperature and the presence of smoke.
WHEN SMOKE or an increase in temperature is detected, an alarm will alert the KU operator and the Lawrence Fire Department, and a horn will sound an alarm to anyone near the museum.
In addition to the fire alarm, sensitive microphones have been installed.
If a fire does occur, firemen arriving at the museum will be able to locate it with the aid of a panel of lights which will indicate the section of the building from which the alarm is being sounded.
ove microphones have been installed. These microphones amplify small noises to such a degree that a night watchman could hear anyone who might enter the galleries.
IF THE WATCHMAN hears someone enter, he will call over a loudspeaker for the person to identify himself. If the intruder fails to do so the police will be contacted.
In the past few years six art items have been removed from the University according to Marilyn Stokstad, director of the Museum of Art.
From the museum itself, a piece of sculpture, a print, and a Manet painting were all objects of theft, but have since been recovered.
The installation of the system cost $6.660.
Two sculpture items were removed from the garden and also have been recovered.
Last year a tapestry was removed from the Student Union. It has not vet been located.
WEATHER
Fair weather is forecast for the Lawrence area through Thursday. Indian summer temperatures will also continue, with a low tonight in the 50s and a high tomorrow in the 80s. Topека had a trace of rain last night—the first rain to fall in Kansas in over two weeks.
Highest Scholarship Awarded
The sophomore with the highest grade point could not accept her award last night—she had to stay home and study.
And the senior with the highest grade point could not remember what his grade point is.
"Ask the College office," Barry Isaac, Mankato senior, said. A cultural anthropology major, Isaac won the Paul B. Lawson award for the senior with the highest grade point. Francis H. Heller, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said later Isaac's grade average is 2.89.
MICHELE GAMBLE, Kansas City sophomore, is the winner of the Veta Leer award for the sophomore with the highest grade point in the college. Her grade average is 2.94.
Both the awards are certificates for credit in the Kansas Union Book Store.
A special award went to Donald Malone, Lawrence junior. Malone, who has a 3.0 grade average, has never been classified as a freshman. He took college courses while he was still in high school.
THE AWARDS were made last night at a joint dinner of the Watkins and Summerfield scholars.
Prof. Philip Mitterling, director of the Inter-University Committee on the superior student, spoke at the dinner. Dr. Mitterling talked about a nineteenth-century naval expedition to the Antarctic. This expedition was the first federal government-financed enterprise in science and exploration.
1962
FRANCIS H. HELLER (right), associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, congratulate Barry Isaac, senior with the highest grade point. Isaac was awarded the annual Paul B. Lawson award last night.
Human Rights Policy Passed by Two Votes
By Fred Frailey
The All Student Council last night approved by a two-vote margin the "Declaration of Human Rights," setting forth a University policy concerning civil rights.
Provisions of the declaration prescribe University policy against discrimination in admissions, scholarships and loans, classroom procedures, employment, student organizations, campus and off campus housing, health services, recreation and physical education.
The roll call vote in favor of the bill was 13 to 11, with one abstention. It was enacted as an amendment to a bill passed in 1947, and, in effect, replaces the earlier legislation.
THE BILL recognizes the University's present compliance with all but several of the provisions.
Only two sections of the bill involve changes in the University's policy. One states that no new group which requires discrimination
See related story on page 8.
During debate on the legislation, an amendment was introduced by Robert Steffen, Staten Island, N.Y., graduate student. The amendment would have denied recognition to existing student groups with racially discriminatory qualifications for membership.
by race or national origin shall be recognized by the University. The other part states existing organizations having discriminatory qualifications must inform students considering membership such practices exist.
STEFFEN, who later voted against the bill, withdrew his proposal.
Frank Thompson, Iola senior and chairman of the Human Rights Committee, which introduced the bill, said in objecting to Steffen's amendment the only organization to be affected would be Sigma Nu fraternity.
"This amendment would deny recognition to Sigma Nu." Thompson said. "It is the position of the HRC that we should do everything short of getting rid of Sigma Nu to help them eliminate their clause. At the fraternity's last national convention, the KU chapter led the battle to get rid of the bill."
THOMPSON SAID the opinion survey upon which the bill is based showed the majority of students believe fraternities having discriminatory clauses should be responsible for eliminating them, and not the ASC.
Several other ASC members objected to the bill during debate.
Marshall Crowther, Lawrence sophomore, said the declaration would not give the ASC "any more power to do something in the field of civil rights than it already has." He was referring to the 1947 human rights bill, which said the ASC would not recognize, in name or through financial support, groups practicing racial discrimination.
"I want to see discrimination against minority groups ended," Portwood said. "But I don't like the idea of discriminating against the majority."
CHARLES PORTWOOD, Shawnee Mission senior, said he could not agree with a statement asking the University to discourage discriminatory restrictions attached to scholarship gifts unless such funds were used to aid minority groups.
Mike Miner, Lawrence junior, suggested the declaration be read into the minutes of the ASC instead of enacted as legislation.
"THIS DOESN'T state anything except what is now being done or what is already accepted as being correct," he said. "By having it read into the minutes, we would still have a stepping stone to further action."
Support for passage of the declaration in bill form was also heard.
Student body president Reuben McCornack, Abilene senior, said the proposal offered the Council "more latitude" than it was given in the 1947 bill, because the older bill applied only to discrimination in student groups.
Bob Tieszen, McPherson senior, was opposed to Miner's suggestion that it be read into the minutes.
"WE HAVE an excellent opportunity to express that students are concerned and willing to do something about discrimination," McCornack added.
"If we did this, chances are that nobody would ever see it." Tieszen said. "We want a policy statement we can refer to so it can be used to its best advantage."
GREG TURNER, Seattle, Wash., senior, said the 1947 bill provided a precedent for passage of the declaration.
A member of the HRC told the council the bill would accomplish the same purpose as the Bill of Rights to the U.S. Constitution.
"It is true many things in this bill are now in practice," said Cordell Meeks, Kansas City senior. "But throughout the United States many conditions are supposed to exist which do not in fact. As long as there is nothing specific to show people, we will continue to have problems concerning civil rights."
Steffen said after the bill was passed he opposed it because it "didn't say enough."
"The old bill said the ASC would not support any group practicing discrimination," he said. "This one says only that new groups requiring discrimination shall not be recognized. We have gone away from something we could have enforced."
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 9, 1963
Keep the English Pro
The English proficiency examination will be given tomorrow night, an event which invariably occasions much wailing about and railing against the cursed exam.
It's ridiculous, people say. It shouldn't be required.
Why shouldn't it? Because a two-hour examination probably won't prove, positively, that a student is or is not proficient in English? Granted.
Because a student must take 10 hours of English before enrolling for the exam, and a student who has passed 10 hours of English is proficient in English? Nonsense.
A GREAT MANY people on this campus have passed 10 hours of English and can't use English coherently, let alone well. For that reason, the idea behind the examination is sensible — and completely defensible.
People who are not proficient in English and cannot express themselves in a grammatically correct, rational manner should not be graduated from this or any other university.
Some method must be devised to weed out the semi-literate, to deny them the honor of a university diploma.
The present system, however, is not satisfactory. Persons who, because of high grades in freshman English courses, were exempt from the examination in the first place have been known to fail. Persons who could be called proficient only in gutter idiom have passed.
An essay examination, for all the theories about "using the language will prove proficiency," is not necessarily the best way to test a person's real knowledge of English. There are, moreover, innumerable ways to cheat. Cutting a previously-written essay into pieces and pasting the pieces throughout a dictionary is a favorite, and effective, way to cheat.
TO IMPROVE THE TEST, a section on spelling, grammar and basic usage should be incorporated into the exam. A person who believes that "between you and I" is correct use of case following a preposition probably is not proficient in English, but might not be trapped by the examination.
Cries about pettiness are undoubtedly forthcoming about such a recommendation, but such
a section would help graders determine if a student was proficient or just smart enough to avoid constructions about which he was not sure.
Such a test should be devised and administered by the Department of English, since those people are, supposedly, most qualified to determine proficiency in English.
The test should be given after the first six hours of English, not after the required ten.
In the first place, every student in the University would have to take the test; every student should.
In the second place, it would give both the student and the English department a chance to correct deficiencies.
PERSONS WHO PASSED the exam the first time would be allowed to finish their English requirement by taking courses in literature and creative writing. This is possible now for students who make a grade of "B" or above in English 1 and 2.
Persons who failed the test would be required to take four more hours of basic composition and grammar drill, after which they would be required to take the test again. Those who passed would be through. Those who failed should be required to take more courses—for no credit—in remedial English.
This should be tied to a general policy statement regarding remedial English courses at KU. Such courses, after a four-year warning period to give high schools a chance to up-grade their English instruction, should not even be offered at the University level. There just isn't enough time.
The University of Illinois announced such a policy in 1956, effective in 1960. Students who could not keep up in regular English courses would be flunked, not only in English courses, but out of the university.
That may sound hard-hearted, but it doesn't sound unreasonable, particularly if the present farce of determining proficiency by essay examinations alone is continued.
It makes even more sense if the University continues to require the English proficiency examination after students are no longer required to take remedial courses.
— Blaine King
The World-Wise KU Student
The deadline for applying for consideration in the Fulbright scholarship and Foreign Study programs will soon arrive. Graduate students and seniors graduating in June or August of 1964 have until Oct. 19 to make their interest known.
The Fulbright advisor at the University of Kansas, Prof. J. A. Burzle, has been urging students to look into these and other opportunities to study in foreign lands. He has explained that the purpose of such studies is to increase mutual understanding between the people of the United States and other countries through the exchange of persons, knowledge and skills.
Naturally, there's a great deal of excitement, prestice, and responsibility involved too.
BURZLE ADDS THAT in the past 14 years grantees from KU have consistently been a credit to our school and to the nation.
Fifteen KU students are abroad in 1963-64 on Fulbright grants.
In addition, the University's complex relation with Costa Rica has been increased recently by a University-administered program for the Peace Corps, and 29 graduates who were trained here last fall have been at work in Costa Rica for several months. Our Summer Language Institutes in Europe will be three years old next summer, and about 150 students will be learning Spanish, French, German, and Russian in communities where those languages are the mother tongues.
The Ford Foundation has awarded the school a grant of $177,000 for three years of experiments in undergraduate courses increasing international understanding.
THERE IS THE school's long-standing international program in the orientation of foreign students, our own international student enrollment from more than 65 foreign lands, the exchange between our School of Medicine and that of the University of the Philippines, the direct exchange we have with some 16 European universities, faculty members from foreign countries coming to the University to teach, and KU
students and faculty going abroad to study and some of them — such as the student ambassadors for the People-to-People program — as purvevers of international understanding.
We have students in Africa and have sent several members of our staff there as consultants.
IN ADDITION TO the broad participation in student exchange activities, KU also has contributed to the cultural aspects of the program. In the summer of 1960 the University's production of "Brigadoon" toured Armed Forces camps in the Pacific and Far East. The KU version of the musical "The Boy Friend" recently returned from an almost identical tour for the U.S.O.
By the end of 1962 some 21,500 Americans and 53,000 nationals from other countries and territories had fulfilled grants under the program conducted under authority of the Mutual Educational Cultural Exchange Act of 1961, better known as the Fulbright-Hays Act.
Under programs such as these, thousands of foreigners each year are given a personal experience with American society. Americans going abroad to study, carry on research, lecture, or perform bring back with them increased knowledge and understanding of other peoples.
THESE YOUNG Americans add each day to the competence of the U.S. in meeting the challenging problems we face around the globe.
Now, in a world where tension seems to be easing while the chances for peace expand, we hope more opportunities will become available for the students of the world to interact.
And, this coming spring, the University's brass choir is scheduled to follow a similar route for the State Department.
Those we send to represent the University of Kansas must be the best we have to offer. You may be such a person.
If so, or if your curiosity is tempted, go to room 306 in Fraser Hall now as your first step toward becoming a Fulbright or other foreign scholarship student . . . and a better, wiser citizen.
—Larry Schmidt
LATIN AMERICAN DEMOCRACIES
MILITARY SOURCES
JEK.
© 1965 HERBLOCK
THE WASHINGTON POST
"Don't Think I Stand Idly By——I Keep Asking Them Not To Do This"
The People Say...
Reverse Discrimination Editor:
In the lobby of Snow Hall there is an offer for Medical School Scholarships for Negro men.
What do you believe would be the repercussions from local integrationist groups, the Civil Rights Council, and the NAACP if this offer were to have been made for "white" men only?
Since we are to be proud of the record of the University of Kansas as a fully integrated university, should we, the broadminded students, tolerate such a discriminatory offer?
Gene George
Salina senior
Gerald Woods
Larned senior
Bill Murdock
St. Louis senior
Leave It Blank
Editor:
It is sometimes more thought-
provoking to leave a blank space
in contrast to the article on the
KU grounds and Mr. Blitch.
A blank space leaves some question in the students' minds—your article, headlined on page three of Monday's Kansan, "Fall Just Isn't Fall Without Leaves and the KU Building and Grounds," answers it with another. Is the UDK worth the trouble?
I am looking forward to December and an article on snow shoveling.
Kate Cameron
Mill Valley, Calif., senior
No News Is Bad News Editor:
Just what kind of a newspaper are you?
You claim to serve the community. You claim to objectively inform her members of news, activities and opinions in accordance with the highest standards of journalistic reporting; in the name of Truth and the Free Press. You claim this is our right, both as members of the KU community, and as members of a greater free
society. You proclaim it is our right to know and to be informed, that we may freely judge all sides, and choose for ourselves.
Yet you are hypocrites as well as distorters of truth—proclaiming these ideals while blatantly practicing irresponsible journalism; while misrepresenting and censoring the news.
Why is it, for example, that for the past three weeks no coverage of the International Club and its activities has appeared in your paper? Why is it that you grant several front page columns to the picture and story of a pretty girl poised on the steps of her sorority, but will allot nothing to the International Club meeting which includes several hundred, even after news items were submitted to your office? How can the community expect to be well-informed if you won't even list this club in your "Daily Bulletin" nor give coverage to its discussion last Saturday night on "The Future of Man," attended by some two hunderd persons and a panel of four distinguished professors? Your reporters were invited.
It happens that the International Club is a going concern, despite your efforts to censor the news. Its membership numbers four hundred, and it meets almost every week for movies, dancing, discussion, or socializing-without any announcement in your press. But the right of this organization to be represented in your paper should not be justified by its size or influence. The principle of representation alone should suffice. It is part of this community, and thus has the right to enjoy a listing in the "Daily Bulletin," and coverage in your news.
The community has the right to be informed; you have the obligation to protect this right, and to uphold your standards of truth and excellence.
Just what kind of a newspaper are you?
Alison Mckelvey
San Reno, Calif., graduate
Dailiīi Hāhsan
111 Flint Hall
111 Flint Hall University of Kansas student newspaper UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office brownhills 1904, twinkleok 1908 daily Jan
Founded 1889, 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 Lawrence,
Kansas.
LiteraryPrize Awarded to Professors
Page 3
Two KU professors will share a $1,250 award for their outstanding writing.
Charlton H.K. Hinman, professor of English, and Fritz Heider, professor of psychology, have been named co-winners of the Byron Caldwell Smith award, made every seven years for what is judged the best scholarly writing by a resident of Kansas or the Mississippi valley area.
Hinman is a Shakespearean scholar whose recent 2-volume book is a study of the printing and proof-reading of Shakespeare's first folio of plays.
HEIDER was cited for his book, "The Psychology of Interpersonal Relationships." It earlier won an award from the American Psychological Association.
The winners were also recently named two of the first four University Distinguished Professors appointed by the state Board of Regents.
The Byron Caldwell Smith award, named in honor of a KU professor of Greek in 1873 and 1874, is made annually from the estate of the late Kate Stephens, an alumna of KU and daughter of the University's first dean of the school of law.
THIS YEAR'S winners were selected by a committee composed of the KU director of libraries and deans of the Schools of Law and Medicine, the Graduate School and the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
Prof. Heider's book deals with the ways in which people perceive their own behavior and that of others.
Prof. Hinman's book is a detailed study of how early English printers assembled the first folio of Shakespeare's plays.
PROF. HINMAN is known for his invention of a collater, an optical machine with which printed texts can be compared. The machine was used in his research.
From careful studies of the printing, he discovered details of Shakespeare's "First Folio," as the pages were printed in groups of six and two printers worked side by side in the composition.
Page by page, even letter by letter, Hinman traced the printing of the folio. His book lists the use and re-use of hundreds of letters in the printer's typecase. It also notes some errors and omissions.
THIS DETAILED WORK shows how Shakespeare's plays may have been altered in the printing. To know exactly what Shakespeare wrote probably is impossible, some scholars say, but Prof. Hinman's book narrows the areas of uncertainty.
Prof. Heider, a native of Austria, came to the United States after a career in Europe. In the lean economic years following World War I he continued his study and reading. It was during this time he met the men who created Gestalt psychology, based on perception.
After teaching at the University of Hamburg, he came to the United States in 1930, and has been teaching at KU since 1947. It was here that work was completed in 1958 on his award-winning book.
Official Bulletin
Foreign Students: Students interested in participating in the Olathe, Kan.. Home Hospitality Week-End on Oct. 19-20 should sign up by Friday noon at the People-to-People office. 113 Kansas Union.
TODAY
Le Certeur Français se réunira mercredi
9 Octobre à quatre heures et demi dans
le Centre des Sciences de diapositives, sur l'Université américaine a Aix-en-Provence, par Jane Albrecht, Vicky Kimbrough, Joyce Voth.
Tous ces jours qui s'intersessent au français
timely Topics, 7 p.m. St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center, 1915 Stratford Road. "Fraud, Faith and Fear"—Rev. Brendan Downey, OSB.
Newman Executive Board, 8:30 p.m.
615 W. Kellogg Street Student Center,
1915 Straitford Road.
TOMORROW
Latter-Day Saints Institute of Religion.
3:30 p.m., Pan American Room, Union.
Der Deutche Verein trifft sich am Donnerstag, den 10 Oktober, um 5 Uhr in 562 Frankfurt. Die Deutche Landern kommen, werden über ihre Eindrucke und Erfahrungen in Amerika sprechen. Alle sind herzlich eingeladen. Erfrischungen.
Undergraduate Psychology Club; 7:30 p.m. Cottonwood Room, Union. "Preparation for Retirement"—Dr. Alastair Weir.
Quack Club, 7 p.m., 204 Robinson.
FALLS CITY, Neb.—(UPI)—Mrs.
C. E. Stone received a postal card from a sister who has been dead for several years.
Card From The Past Arrives 27 Years Late
Wednesday, Oct. 9, 1963 University Daily Kansan
The card was postmarked Feb. 25, 1936—27 years ago.
The sister, Mrs. Cora Lovewell,
mailed the card from her hometown
of Courtland, Kan., to Mrs. Stone
who at that time lived in Lincoln,
Neb.
It was forwarded Sept. 23 and arrived in Falls City Saturday. It carried a one cent stamp.
CAMERA SHOP
Portraits of Distinction
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October 12th-Saturday 7:00 to 11:00 Kansas Union
Get Your Tickets-85c-Today at Information Booth Games! Skits! Queens!
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, Oct. 9, 1963
Sociologist Stresses Property in Society
Private property maintains social order if its use is based on morality and public opinion.
This was the thesis of a speech by Prof. Horst Heller of the University of Hamburg, Germany, delivered yesterday in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Prof. Heller, a professor of business and sociology, studied at KU in 1957.
HE DEFINED property as "material value controlled by men," which he placed in two categories:
- Individual property, which can be bought and sold, such as stock in General Motors.
- Membership property, the individual's ownership of that which cannot be bought and sold, such as a church building or a post office.
In the case of the church or the post office, individual ownership rests on membership in a group—a religious faith or U.S. citizenship, Prof. Heller said.
IN A CHRISTIAN SOCIETY individual property serves as a visible sign of moral inequality, he said.
"Individual property should be something that society confers on someone for the strenuous task of being good."
"The poor will be content with their relative lack of individual property as long as they feel that the property group have gained their possessions because of their moral superiority."
A PERSON WITH PROPERTY has influence, he said, because he has power to select persons who desire to share the benefits of their property. He gave the example of a man who decided to give away $1,000.
"If he gave it as a scholarship to college, no one would object." "But if he gave a reward for the teen-age boy who fathered the most illegitimate children in one year he would cause tension in a society."
Prof. Heller said in an interview after his speech if you divorce individual property from morality you risk blowing up social order.
KARL MARX, Jean Rosseau and other scholars have argued that individual property has been the cause of inequality, he said.
"Some communist countries have completely abolished private property, but inequality has been expressed through prestige or other forms of social rewards.
Seniors Plan Graduate Study
Sixty-nine per cent of the KU liberal arts seniors surveyed this year plan further study after graduation. This represents an increase of 11 per cent over last fall's graduating class.
Twenty-six per cent of this semester's seniors plan to attend a professional school.
OFFICIALS OF the School of Liberal Arts are pleased with the results of the survey. But, they are not at all surprised.
Last year's figures showed an exception to the recent trend at KU Only 58 per cent of the seniors planned to continue school after getting their degrees.
Francis Heller, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts said, financial problems did not stop last year's seniors from continuing their studies.
"There is adequate support and aid for graduate study," he said. He attributed the lower 1962 figure to a difference in classes.
Both Dean Heller and George Waggoner, Dean of the College of Liberal Arts, said between 30 and 40 percent of liberal arts students ordinarily continue in liberal arts. Approximately 25 per cent enter professional schools.
The content of the survey, to be presented at the faculty meeting Tuesday, shows that 43 per cent of liberal arts seniors will do graduate study, 26 per cent will enter professional schools, six per cent will enter military service, 15 per cent will seek employment, and 10 per cent are undecided (twice as many as last year).
University of Kansas
UNIVERSITY THEATER
presents:
CLAYTON CORBIN
as
"THE EMPEROR JONES"
by Eugene O'Neil
- Wednesday through Saturday Oct.9-12
Football Star to Speak On 'Successful Athlete'
- Free Admission on Student I.D. exchange
Bill Krisher, former All-America football player from the University of Oklahoma, will speak at 9 p.m. tomorrow in the Meadowlark Room of the Kansas Union.
who did not register will not be admitted to the examination.
- Phone UN 4-3982 for 24-hr. Reservation Service
- Season Coupon Books Still Available
NEW CURTAIN TIME 8:15 P.M.
Krisher, invited to KU by the Campus Crusade for Christ, an inter-denominational student movement, will speak on "The Key to the Successful Athlete."
Of the total students taking the test, approximately one-fourth may fail and be required to take it again. The next examination will be Feb. 27. 1964.
Proficiency Exam Is Tomorrow
He has played professional football for the Pittsburgh Steelers of the National Football League and the Dallas Texans (now the Kansas City Chiefs) of the American Football League.
Krisher played his first varsity game in 1955 as the starting guard on OU's national championship team.
The English proficiency examination for KU junior and senior students will be at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow.
A mistake on the IBM cards at the first of the semester caused some mix-up on the date of the test, department officials said. The cards stated the test would be Oct. 1 instead of tomorrow.
Students are expected to bring an ink pen and a dictionary to the test. Paper will be furnished by the department. The student will be given approximately 10 topics, one of which he will choose for his theme.
All but two of the KU schools are required to take the examination in order to be graduated. The two schools excluded are law and engineering.
The themes are to be written in a two-hour period and will be graded on English grammar and expression of thought. A paper can be grammatically correct and not pass because of content.
ABOUT 1.500 students will take the examination. They will be placed in rooms according to cards given at registration. Those students
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Campus Beauty Shoppe
Come in soon and get acquainted.
The Classical Film Series
presents
"FORBIDDEN GAMES"
a French language film with English sub-titles
Directed by Rene Clement
F
\* \* \*
Wednesday—October 9th
Forum Room-Admission: $.60
E The servi team ship
Two Showings: 7:00 and 9:00
T of scor Dre the half the
P a to but was ing
University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Wednesday, Oct. 9, 1963
Betas Open With Victory
By Willis Henson
Beta Theta Pi defeated Phi Kappa Theta yesterday, 31 to 12, and served notice that they are still the team to beat in A Hill Championship competition.
The Betas, playing their first game of the season, wasted little time scoring their first touchdown. Guy Dresser, Leavenworth junior, put the Betas ahead 7-0 one and one-half minutes and five plays after the game started.
Phi Kappa Theta retaliated with a touchdown in the second quarter but trailed 19-6 at halftime. That was the extent of the Phi Kap scoring until the fourth quarter.
ager, said yesterday's game showed the team was weak on defense. He also said he would concentrate on the extra point. The Betas only made the extra point once out of five tries.
WILLIAM GEIGER. Beta man-
In other intramural action, a large cheering crowd looked on as Delta Tau Dela beat Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 20 to 13. The Delts employed an aerial attack in the game.
In A Independent action, Foster Hall lost to the Rum Runners, 20 to 0.
IN THE B TEAM games, you either scored or you didn't. Sigma Chi shut out Triangle, 44 to 0 and Delta Upsilon blanked Phi Gamma Delta, 27 to 0.
The B team scores were Phi Delta Theta, 20. Beta Theta Pi, 0. Phi Gamma Delta lost to Phi Kappa Sigma.
In fraternity A division Monday, Sigma Chi defeated Delta Upsilon, 13 to 12, while Kappa Sigma downed Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 14 to 0.
It was Stephenson Hall, 20 and Jolliffe, 0. in independent A division.
Individual intramural competition will resume play Monday, Oct. 14, according to Walter Mikols, intramurals director.
ATTENTION
STUDENT BLUE-CROSS BLUE-SHIELD MEMBERS
If you did not receive a new Blue-Cross ID card during fee payment time, please come to the lobby at Watkins Memorial Hospital on one of the following days:
October 9,10 or 11.
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified
SPEAKERS
SPEAKERS
SPEAKERS
Pratt Out for 4 Weeks
Need Hi-Fi Speakers for that dream system?
Need Extension Speakers for enjoyment everywhere?
Need a Replacement Speaker for that rattling TV or radio?
Left Tackle Richard Pratt, 252-pound sophomore, suffered a fractured wrist in KU's 25-21 victory over Wyoming Saturday, and will be out of action for at least four weeks.
Larry Ledford, No. 1 left guard is a doubtful starter for the Iowa State game because of an ankle injury he suffered in the game at Laramie.
WE HAVE SPEAKERS
To fill the gaps left by Pratt and Ledford, Tommy Thompson has been moved to the second team tackle spot, and Greg Roth has been promoted to the first team right guard position.
928 Mass.
AUDIOTRONICS
Ph. VI 3-8500
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FRATERNITY JEWELRY
The fine art of Roblee Handsewns
Soft . . . lightweight . . . gloriously lustrous. Every detail in the vamps of these Roblees has been painstakingly handsewn by master craftsmen. That's why they not only exude good taste, but become a powerful selling factor for your appearance. For proof, take a few minutes to observe our stock of handsewn shoes. It may mean time well saved . . . and money well spent.
M'Coy's SHOES
VI3-2091
813 Mass.
JEWELRY
A complete line, including,
• Lavailers • Fins • Rings • Mugs
• Crests
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
"JFK", No.1 Bestseller Is Critical, Anti-Kennedy
By Lyle C. Wilson
(UPI) Victor Lasky's book, "JFK, The Man and the Myth," has zoomed in two short weeks from last to first place on the metropolitan best-seller list of the New York Times.
The list is compiled on reports from more than 125 bookstores in 64 American communities.
"JKF" is frankly anti-Kennedy. Lasky wrote it as a challenge to John F. Kennedy's integrity and fitness for the Presidency
THE IMPORTANT QUESTION is whether the book will have substantial impact on the 1964 presidential election. It could be deadly to Kennedy's re-election chances if enough voters read it and were convinced that Kennedy is — as charged — a weather-vane politico who substitutes for political convictions and principles merely an obsessive need to win — to win at all costs.
The book is as political as a campaign speech and as one-sided as a Presidential platform. But campaign speeches and Presidential platforms have proved themselves to be enormously effective in influencing American voters. The fact Lasky has written consistently from an adversely critical point of view need not deprive the book of political impact. It could be a blockbuster. It is estimated that 40 to 50 newspapers are publishing "JFK" seri-
ally.
North American Newspaper Alliance, owner of the serial rights, is re-offering the book to newspapers because of its showing on the best-seller list. Most of the newspapers presenting the book serially are in the Mid-West. That is a moderately good break for Kennedy because he has less to lose in the Mid-West than in some other areas.
There are 20 chapters in "JFK". None is likely to soothe the young president after a tough day in the office. Chapter 2 is simply titled, "Joe." Chapter 5 is "Pol.", a derivation of politician. There are also "Courage," "Senate," "Change," "Why?" and "Gall."
The Greater University Fund (GUF) has reported a record high 12,501 contributors whose gifts total $367,352 for the 1962-63 year.
Record High in GUF Gift
H. Bernard Fink, Topeka, GUF advisory board chairman, also noted that 1,776 persons have a signed statement of intention to make annual donations to KU.
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe described as "not enough" the program that during the year provided 2,660 students with $1,139,000 in scholarships and loans from private support.
"We have been forced to deny scholarships, loans and places in scholarship halls to valedictorians and others who ranked in the upper three per cent of their high school graduating classes, and to students who ranked at the 97th and 98th percentiles in national scholarship examinations." Dr. Wescoe said.
MOTOR
"IN THE FACE of rising enrollments, increasing costs and students better prepared than ever before, the University needs to double its present student aid funds now and triple them by 1975," he added.
ALLAN EASUM LEROY HADL
ACE
STEERING AND RADIATOR SPECIALISTS
Rear Wheel Alignment Dynamic Wheel Balancing Brake & Frt. End Parts Auto Glass Installed
6th & Minn.
VI 3-1300
Yes, Students, You Save Time and Money When You Use The Excellent Facilities Of Independent All Service Center
- Coin-Operated Laundry Washers and Dryers
- Coin-Operated Dry Cleaning Big 8 Lb. Load
- Professional Laundry & Dry Cleaning
- Dollar Bill Changer
- Free Parking
For Your Convenience—Open 24 Hours a Day 7 Days a Week
DOGS
Independent LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 9th and Mississippi
Downtown Plant 740 Vermont
K
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The current year fees went up 20 per cent, cutting by one-fifth the number of cash fee scholarships available from the same funds.
Dr. Wescoe said capital gifts are now needed for at least two new scholarship halls. Other projects to be sought from private support include a graduate study center, a new art museum, special laboratories and libraries and an outdoor summer theater.
Jay SHOPPE DOWNTOWN 835 MASS
Open Till 8:30 Thursdays
Mina Makes.
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the cardigan
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Sizes 5-15. $25.00 as seen in SEVENTEEN
Robert Mitchum
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Jack Hawkins
RAMPAGE
Now! 7:00 & 9:00
Adults 90c
Children 50c
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Joseph E. Levine presents FEDERICIO FELLINI'S
1/2 1
AN EMBRASSY PICTURES RELEASE Now! 7:00 & 9:30 Adults Only $1.00 VARSITY ART Attractions
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THE PREMATURE
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Shows at 7:10 PLUS
HELL IS FOR HEROES.
Starring Steve McQueen Shows at 8:50 NOW SHOWING!
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THE BRITAIN'S ACADEMY AWARD WINNER BEST ACTRESS LESLIE CARON Sex is not a forbidden word!* SHAPED ROOM' THIS IS AN ADULT PICTURE A BROOKLYN PRODUCTION • A BROOKLYN PICTURE RELEASE
VARSITY
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If you harmo
PART
private equip freshm Fortres
Save o locker. lett Lo 6250.
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For sa extra cellent Call V
For sa
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For S new. nylon, evenir
For S
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For S bicycl John
For Sa
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New sheets 1005 M
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Classified Ads
N°
MISCELLANEOUS
If you would like to sing Barbershop harmony, call VI 3-8390. 10-10
PARTY TIME: School house available for private parties, dances, meetings, refreshment with piano, food, freshwater and cooler. VI S 748 - 431 Forrest.
en
5!
Save on food costs. Rent a frozen food locker. Meat for sale. Budget plan. Triplett Lockers, 6th and Miss. Call VI 3-6250. 10-11
FOR SALE
DAVID
LIVEN
ING
COLOR
ARD WINNER
ST ACTRESS
CARON
For sale — tux suit, white dinner jacket,
extra tux trousers, three tux shirts, ex-
cellent condition, size 39-long. $45.00.
Call VI S-0800. 10-14
1956 Ford Two door, V-8, automatic
1957 Ford Two door, automatic. Cal
Trachsel 2 V-9100 10-14
For sale: Electric guitar and amplifier for sale, dual pickup, tone and volume controls. Also, unamplified guitar. Call Pat Hardmen — VI 3-5770 at 6:00 p.m.
OOOM'
LIT PICTURES
n word!*
For Sale: Road and Track. Car and Driver and Motor magazine. Early issues —25c and 35c. Abington Book Shop —1015i$ Mass. 10-10
For Sale: Two snow tires practically new. White walls, size 800x14 tubeless, nylon, only $25.00 for two. Call VI 3-4196. evenings. 10-14
For Sale: Schwinn 27" 15 speed racing bicycle — demonstration model — Call John Carnahan or Jim Ash — VI 3-7922. 10-14
Owner leaving town -- attractive 3 bedroom room ranch in desirable neighborhood. Schools and shopping center. 2617 Belle Haven Drive. Phone VI 3-4364. 10-11
For Sale: 1960 VW clean, good condition
Fair offer will take. Call VI 2-4103-10-11
New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500
team - $85 Lawrence Outlook.
1005 Miss
1957 "98" Oldsmobile convertible; white;
excellent condition; power windows,
steering radio, seat, brakes. Four new
bill will take offer. Call: Bill Murdock
V 2-42883
Over 30 modern pistols, rifles and shot-
fowls would have a count of ammo. far belowounds璧山 iars invested in this collection. All must be seen now at 824 Ark. or call V13-
1110
General Psychology study notes. Excel-
book: Call VI-3-9378. sections: $4.00 per
call. Call VI-2-9378.
1957 MGA flierglass hardtop, hardwheel, new tires, luggage rack, R&H, wheels, new tires, luggage rack, R&H, screens, 48,000 miles. Will consider VW bus in trade, Jack Hibler. VI 2-1200. 10-11
Sure--Everything in the pet field at Grant's drive in pet center. Where your $$ have more cents. 1218 Conn. VI 3-2921.
ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLEANERS New electrolux and a limited number of rebuilt, fully guaranteed. All parts available. Equipment picked up for service and delivered. Frank V. Cox, Cox Manager -1904 Barker. Call VI 3-3277.
Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extensively comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per call. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outlining of course classes. Formerly known as the Theta notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50.
AUTO LIABILITY INSURANCE, also collision and comp. Most risks covered; under age drivers; scooters; motor bikes; motor cycles; rates avail. Brown Realty Co., Ph. VI 2-0179 — Realtors - 7291$%$ Mass.
Typewriters, new and used portables,
standards, electrics. Olympia, Olivetti,
Royal and Smith Corona portables. Type-
writer and adding machine service and
rental. Lawrence Typewriter, 730 Mass.
Call VI 3-3644. tf
To the sports minded and economy minded student—a beautiful macromouse, 1962 Jawa motorcycle. Has only 1400 actual miles. Must sacrifice—BIG SAVINGS TO YOU. Call VI 3-4137 and leave name and number. ff
LOST
Found: The party who left their elephant in the Gaslight tavern last Saturday night may claim it by contacting Don Ebeling at the Gaslight. 10-9
FOUND
Lost: black plastic notebook lost in Zone X driveway. Call VI 2-4289. 10-10
WANTED
Want one student to share furnished apartment Tom Prelock. I3-0444-10-10
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart, 1025 Mass. tf
BUSINESS SERVICES
Let your pre-schoolers join the morning
group in their group at 1707
Street, VI 2-12-8 10-14
Business Service: Tutor-Native German to give lessons in German. Call VI 210-354-9678. 10-11 AM
Complete line of soles and heels, laces,
cosmetics and polishes. Have new merchandise.
Shop with our purses from our store.
notes. Burgert's One Day Shoe Service — 1113 Mass. St.
Cutoring by English graduate students—will help with themes, grammar, punctuation or any other special requests. Call
Do you need a tutor for Chinese? If
you need a tutor for Chinese, 10-16
If not in leave name and number. 10-16
Will do paper hanging evenings—reasonable rates. Call VI 3-2906. 10-10
Johnny's Super Oil - Bay Products—23rd and Ousdahl. All work guaranteed. Free pick-up and delivery. Call VI 3-9691. Oil-Lube-Wash and Polish. 10-14
Dressmaking-alterations, formals and
exed gowns. Ola Smith, 939j. Mass A-
0-5863.
*or Rent: Free rent for couple or elderly*
*apartment with 2 bedrooms* 10-14
*VI 31-3824 evening*
FOR RENT
LEONARD'S
USINESS DIRECTORY
"the best in car care"
706 W. 9th VI 3-9830
Standard Service
616 West 9th
25c delivery VI 3-472
JOE'S BAKERY
new location at
Milliken's SOS
"the best professional service"
- Notary public
- General typing service
- Networking
- 24 hr. answering service
- Mimeograph & photo-copying
- pipes
$1021\frac{1}{2}$ Mass., VI 3-5920, 7a.m.-11p.m.
at George's Pipe Shop
DX Servicenter
6th D Michigan VI 2-9410
- complete accessories
- tobaccos
in
727 Mass. VI 3-7164
For The Best
New & Used Books
BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass.
"Smoking is our only Business"
SPEED QUEEN WASHERS OPEN 24 HRS.
365 day hospitalization
FREE PICK-UP & DELIVERY
DX
Kermit Hoffmeier special insurance agent VI 2-0266
LOW COST
$8-$20 daily benefit
$300 miscellaneous expense
$400 surgical expense
Across from the high school
NEW AND USED
PORTABLES STANDARDS
ELECTRICS
See Us Before You Buy
Sales - Rentals - Service
HONN'S COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY
TYPEWRITERS
19th & Louisiana VI 3-9631
TYPEWRITER
LAWRENCE
Pitchers----75c
TGIF at the Stables
TGIS too!
Thursday night at the Purple Pig 810 New Hampshire
411 W. 14th V1 3-1571
Fraternity Jewelry
Gene Bailey — Mark Patton
Balfour
735 Mass. VI 3-3644
Cups, Trophies, Medals
AL LAUTER
Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles
BRAKE ADJUSTMENTS ... $.98
STUDENTS
--many other of Eugene O'Neill's plays also on display
FREE—one quart of oil with each oil and filter change
LUBRICATION $1.00
Motor time-ups, wheel balancing
— all major brands —
Wednesday, Oct. 9, 1963
PAGE-CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE
1819 W 23rd VI 3-9694
For Rent: A spacious nicely furnished
Room. Call VI 2-8466, 1400 Teen.
VI 2-8466, 1400 Teen.
10-14
For rent: Two room furnished apartment for garage. Very nice. All utilities paid. $88, 1447 Vermont (15th and Vermont) VI 3-6328. 10-14
Two bedroom unfurnished duplex, wall to wall carpeting, dining area, fenced yard, heated garage, separate utility room, large storage area. No pets—one year lease, year lease available. Oct. Vicinity of KU. $5 per month. Oct VI 2-1028. 10-10
Furnished apartment for 1 with kitchenette. Private bath and entrance. All rooms lead to campus and dium. $40 per month. Inquire at 1005 Miss. Call V3-1-349-8. 10-10
First floor apartment. Nicely furnished.
Between KU and Town. Reasonable rent.
Off street parking. Married couple preferred.
Phone VI 2-0121 or VI 3-4445.
Available now for lease (12 months).
Two bedroom apartment, close to campus and downtown. $75. Santee Apartments, 1123 Indiana, VI 3-2116. tf
Ice cold beverages
HAVING A PARTY?
Chips, nuts, cookies
We are always happy to serve you with
Duplex 2 bedrooms, stove and refrigerator
cept electricity. Call VI3-2281. 10-10
Variety of grocery items
Vacancies in contemporary home with outside swimming pool for young man. Household attaches ballet pad, $45 per month. Home. Cooked dinner if desired.
Call Vi 3-9635. 10-15
TYPING
Crushed ice, candy
Ice cold 6 pacs - all kinds
1 bedroom house, completely furnished,
air-conditioner, near downtown, no pets.
For couple, near campus. Clean. Call
VI 3-0554 before 9 a.m. or after 7 p.m. t
LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY
OPEN TO 10 P.M.EVERY EVENING
616 Vt.
University Daily Kansan
Ph. VI 3-0350
Typing: Desertations, theses, manuscripts,
term papers typed. New Smith-Corona
machines; 35 special symbols, carbon
ribbon—if desired. Prompt, efficient service.
Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert V12-1546
or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI13-3057.
Txping, my home Experienced, electric
Lois Clark, Lois 1301 Verdi
C-1-1872 10-14
New electric typewriter. Reasonable rates for themes, term papers, dissertations, and theses. Mrs. Barta, 1955 Miller Drive, VI 3-6994. tf
Efficient and experienced typer would like to do work in home. Prompt and guaranteed work.Call at any time.VI 3-2651. 10-31
Typing: Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter with carbon ribbon (inked ribbon if required) and keyboard available. Call VI 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. or before 7:30 a.m. mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley. 408 West 13th Street. 10-11
Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale. VI 2-1648.
Typing: Dissertations theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines; 35 special symbols, carbon fibre machines; 35 service. Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI 2-1546 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI 3-3057. tf
Experienced typist for theses and term papers. Send resume to Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Miss. Mt. VI-05-06.
MILIKENLIS SOS—always first quality typing on LB M. Carbon ribbon machines.
tape transcriptions. Office hours: 7 a.m. to 12 p.m. {521-3920} Mass phone VI 3-5920
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will use type theses, term papers, memoirs. Reasonable rates. Electric Typewriter. Mrs. Elm Dewlnow, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8586f
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
Legal terms: Marsha Goff, VI 3-2577,
legal terms: Marsha Goff, VI 3-2577,
Prompt, neat and accurate work on wide carriage electric typewriter. Journalism, Business and Secretary experience. Charlotte Weber. VI 3-3495. tf
Thesis Typist. Electric typewriter.
English degree. Prairie Village, NI
WE HAVE
THE EMPEROR JONES
.95 — paperback
2. 45—hardbound
KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORE
8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Mon. - Fri.
8 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. Sat.
NEW
APARTMENTS
1
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 Air Conditioned. Carpeted and Have Disposals. Provincial Furniture Available.
PARK PLAZA SOUTH
SOUTH
Ph. V12-3416 1912 W. 25th Day or Night
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, Oct. 9, 1963
Hosting Committee Formed by Council
A hosting and hospitalities committee was created by the All Student Council last night as it turned down suggestions to allow a Student Union Activities group to do the work.
The new committee will act, when necessary, as an official host to parents, student groups, alumni, lecturers and other guests of the University.
THE VOTE on the measure was 14 to 10.
Larry Bast, Topeka sophomore, said the SUA has a committee with similar duties and told the council the chairman of the SUA group had agreed to expand the committee's realm to include the entire University if asked.
"The SUA committee is not bogged down at present." Bast said.
"I DONT THINK the SUA committee has proved it can do the job," replied Greg Turner, Seattle, Wash. senior. He said that Johnny and the Hurricanes, who played for the SUA Open House dance last week-end, were not given decent accommodations while in Lawrence.
Another opponent of the legislation was Mike Miner, Lawrence junior, who said the proposed ASC committee would duplicate many efforts of the SUA body.
"We're organizing a committee to step into the job of another committee," he said.
REUBEN McCORNACK, Abilene senior and student body president, disagreed with Miner's statement, pointing out SUA "is not the student government of KU."
"Whenever guests are on campus
Psychologist to Speak On Old-age Problems
Dr. Alastair Weir, Visiting Professor of Psychology from Glasgow University, Scotland, will speak to KU Psychology Club members on "Preparation for Retirement" at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Cottonwood Room of the Kansas Union.
"The man who works at his job twenty-four hours a day, and enjoys it, is the poorest prospect for a happy retirement," Dr. Weir said. Weir will explain to undergraduate psychology students why this is so, and point out how they can avoid the pitfalls of a miserable old-age.
Dr. Weir, 36, is vice-chairman of the Executive Association for Mental Health, and Chairman of the Research Committee of the Glasgow Retirement Council.
Following Weir's talk, the Psychology Club will elect officers during a coffee hour.
an official welcome needs to be extended," McCormack said. "The ASG has done this informally in the past, but it should be done on a more organized basis."
The ASC also:
- Approved amendments to the elections bill. The major change would give the Elections committee authority to eliminate primaries in spring elections if necessary.
- Agreed to investigate a proposal for chartering a jet to Europe next summer at reduced rates. Tom Woods, Arkansas City junior, was appointed to work on the project.
- Voted to inform Kansas Congressmen of student support of legislation which would increase funds of the National Defense Student Loan Program. Since the program was established in 1959, 2,709 KU students have received more than $1.5 million in grants
- Swore in Roberta Smith, Oskaloosa senior, as School of Fine Arts representative. She replaces Jan Pepper, who resigned.
- Heard a complaint from the International Club that the Kansan has not sufficiently reported the group's meetings this semester. Representative of the club agreed to meet with Kansan editors to discuss the problem.
Instruction in naval life will begin tomorrow night in the Military Science Building for 28 women who plan to marry naval officers.
Future Navy Wives To Begin Instruction
The classes will continue throughout the year covering everything from military weddings to moving from station to station.
During the year, the women will meet with wives of KU naval personnel.
KU Goal Is $10,000 For United Fund Drive
The KU phase of the Lawrence United Fund Campaign has officially begun.
The goal for KU is $10,000. The over-all goal for the Lawrence campaign is $72,900.
Capt. Richard Gruber, professor of military science, and University chairman for the campaign, said letters had been sent to the faculty and staff members.
Oct. 22 has been set for the eventual completion of the campaign, but it will run until the end of the month.
"Anybody who desires to make a contribution can send a check or money order to me at the Military Science Building, made out to the Lawrence United Fund Campaign, which will be acknowledged by a receipt," Capt. Gruber said.
Union Exhibit Displays 'Primitive' Eskimo Art
Fifty-three primitive carvings made by Twentieth Century Eskimos are on display in the south lounge of the Kansas Union.
TIME MAGAZINE has said "The Eskimo sculptures looked strikingly modern, yet where most moderns can only try to imitate the power of primitive art—the caricature-like simplification, the economic, almost childlike use of detail—the Eskimo
The exhibition, organized by Eskimo Art, Inc., of Ann Arbor, Mich., and circulated by the Smithsonian Institute traveling exhibition service, is sponsored by the Canadian Embassy.
sculptures show a force that set them apart from the most sophisticated studio products."
The 53 carvings are the work of Eskimos living on Baffin Island and along the shores of Hudson Bay in the Canadian Eastern Arctic.
The carvings represent the daily life, and animals of the area.
Accompanying the display is a 32-minute color film produced by the National Film Board of Canada entitled "The Living Stone." The movie explains the significance of the sculpture through the portrayal of an old Eskimo legend.
The exhibit will run through October 26.
LEARN TO BOX!!
Be a master in the art of self-defense.
Expert trainers' secrets can be yours!
No equipment needed. Form a campus
boxing club among your friends for
fun, self-confidence and real physical
experience. Send to: Physical
sons one dollar. Send to: Physical
Arts Gym, 363 Clinton Street, Hempstead,
Long Island, New York.
ATTENTION!!!
Contact lens boxes are now in stock
ELRING'S GIFTS 924 Massachusetts
by
Greet the shirt with an Oxford education by ARROW
Any scholar will appreciate this new Decton oxford shirt...the latest graduate to the world of wash-andwear by ARROW. A blend of 65% Dacron* polyester and 35% cotton...it outlasts all cotton shirts. From that famous button-down collar to the back button and back pleat, it's University Fashion at its best. Tapered to trim you down. "Sanforized-Plus" labeled to ensure a lasting fit, Decton oxford comes in white, colors and British stripes. Short sleeves as illustrated only $5.95
*DunPont T.M. for its polyester fiber
LIVE IT UP!
wed.
Fri.
& sat.
Funndoo
Adv. Co.
See a real
live band
TEE
PEE
Parties & Pinnings
VI 3.2942
AL HICKS,
Indian-keeper
LIVE BAND TONIGHT
"THE
HUSTLERS" GIRLS FREE!
WEDNESDAY
7:30 P.M.
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
© K
ALL-IN-ONE
RAIN-SHINE COAT
- FULLY WATER REPELLANT
- ZIP OUT LINING
- THREE COLORS
OYSTER NATURAL OLIVE
This is the bargain you have been looking for. Snug, warm ZIP-OUT lining changes this fall or spring raincoat to an allweather coat.
All popular sizes in shorts, regulars, and longs.
only
$1488
LAWRENCE SURPLUS
740 Massachusetts
VI 3-3933
Daily hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
61st Year, No.20
Thursday, Oct. 10, 1963
933
Ailing Macmillan Steps Down As Britain's Political Leader
BLACKPOOL, England—(UPI)—Prime Minister Harold Macmillan today surrendered leadership of the ruling Conservative Party for the coming general elections and said he could not hope to be Prime Minister "for any extended period."
He did not resign as Prime Minister, although that action was indicated for the future.
IN A LETTER issued from his bed in a London hospital where he underwent a successful prostate gland operation this morning. Macmillan urged the Conservative Party to choose a new leader.
Macmillan's decision was contained in a letter to foreign secretary Lord Home.
It was read to the 4,200 delegates to the annual Conservative Party meeting. They were stunned by the announcement.
Mamillan's letter said that even if the operation proved successful, "it is clear that I will need a considerable period of convalescence."
"I WOULD NOT be able to face all that is involved in a long electoral campaign," he said. "Nor could I hope to fulfill the tasks of Prime Minister for any extended period and I have so informed the Queen."
However, a Buckingham Palace spokesman said: "He has not resigned as Premier."
The effect of his action appeared to be that he was turning over the reigns of government to deputy prime minister R. A. (Rab) Butler.
The 69-year-old Prime Minister's letter was sent to Lord Home in the foreign secretary's capacity as president of the National Union of Conservative and Unionist Associations.
claions.
"It is now clear that, whatever might have been my previous feelings, it will not be possible for me
to carry the physical burden of leading the party at the next general election," the letter said.
MACMILLAN said that he now hoped that the regular processes to pick a new leader for the Conservative Party would go into effect.
"In these circumstances, I hope that it will soon be possible for the customary processes of consultation to be carried on within the party about its future leadership," Macmillan added.
Macmillan successfully underwent a prostate gland operation in a London hospital this morning. A medical bulletin issued afterwards said the prostate gland was removed, there were no complications and conditions throughout the operation were "excellent."
Angus Maude, the man who replaced disgraced John Profumo as war minister, told the conference the leadership question must be settled.
"We must have certainty about the leadership—and soon." Maude said during a debate on a resolution calling for the election of a conservative government.
He said the party must put an end to "rumors" in the press concerning successors for the 69-year-old Macmillan.
ANOTHER delegate, John Lochran, sounded a similar warning.
"We can't have our leader out of action in the coming eight months,' he said.
Macmillan's leadership has been under attack by some rank-and-file Conservatives since the Profumo sex-and-security scandal first rocked the government last June.
He has since said repeatedly that he would announce his future plans when he had decided what was best "for the party and the nation." He
Jet-Propelled GEM Winds Its Way Across the South
By Fred Frailey
y Fred and
and Tom Moore
A jet-propelled contraption bearing the unassuming name GEM III is inching its way toward KU, despite the State of Missouri.
THE MACHINE is designed to float above the ground on a cushion of compressed air provided with a powerful blower.
GEM, a "ground effects machine," is to be studied by the Department of Mechanics and Aerospace Engineering under a research grant from the Office of Naval Research.
powerful blows.
The biggest problem encountered in tran-porting the machine has been its width-over ten feet. Most states require a special permit for loads over eight feet wide. Permits had been obtained from the necessary states for transportation of GEM III on a Marine Corps flatbed truck when it was learned that Missouri would not allow it to come across the state.
was to have addressed the conference Saturday.
Missouri's refusal to allow the lieutenant through has forced the Marine Corps to reroute it south through Tennessee, Arkansas and Oklahoma and then north to Lawrence.
GEM III was to leave Langley Field, Va., Oct. 1 for Lawrence and be presented to the University Oct. 15 by Gen. W. K. Jones of the U.S. Marine Corps, a 1939 KU graduate whose career did not leave
The announcement Tuesday that Macmillan was going to have to undergo a prostate operation increased doubts about his political future.
Weather
But the machine did not leave
The weather will remain clear to partly cloudy this afternoon through Friday.
Warm temperatures will continue with the high reaching the upper 80's, and the low tonight in the mid 50's.
REPORTS from the conference said acting Prime Minister Butler had a slight edge among possible successors to Maemillan if he does decide to step down, but a number of other possibilities were being considered.
Langley until yesterday, a week later.
AMMON ANDES, professor of mechanics and aerospace engineering, said yesterday that the department may consider postponing the Oct. 15 presentation because of the delay and because the research workers would like to make adjustments on it prior to the ceremony.
Conservative parliamentary leaders Iain Macleod got a roaring response from the conference today with a "fight" speech predicting a Conservative victory in the next parliamentary election despite the party's poor showing in recent public opinion polls.
The GEM can travel over water, mud and snow, but it has its drawbacks. KU researchers headed by C. J. Choliasmenos, assistant professor of mechanics and aerospace engineering, will try to correct GEM's instability when operated over water and its difficulty in clearing obstacles several feet high.
The next election must be held within a year, and current speculation is that it probably will come in May or June.
Italian Flood Death Toll Over 3,000
LONGARONE, Italy — (UPI) — More than 3,000 persons were feared today to have been swept to their deaths when a massive landslide poured a 300 foot-high wall of water over a dam onto the sleeping villages of an Alpine valley.
Millions of tons of water spilled over the lip of the dam last night, poured into the valley, wiped out villages, and caught thousands in their beds. The effect of the landslide into the reservoir behind the dam was like that of a stone dropped into a teacup.
THE DAM itself was not collapsed by the rushing water, but a part of its crest on the right side crumbled under the shock of the wave. The concrete structure, highest arch dam in the world, held firm except for the minor damage along the top, although officials first had believed that it had collapsed and hurled the water into the valley.
Dam at 10.45 pm.
Rescue officials estimated that more than 3,000 persons died in half a dozen shattered villages.
The disaster was triggered by the landslide that plopped into the reservoir behind the 860-foot Vajont Dam at 10:43 p.m. yesterday.
WITH A tremendous roar, the 300-foot wall of water swept down the ravine in front of the dam and into the Piave Valley.
Movement Started ToInviteMme.Nhu
A movement was launched yesterday to invite Madame Ngo Dinh Nhu, controversial "first lady" of Viet Nam, to visit KU during her tour of the United States.
By Tom Coffman
Klaus Pringsheim, instructor in East Asian area studies, speaking yesterday at the KU-Y current events forum, said he is discontented with American policy in Viet Nam and with what he considers to be the lack of information on the situation there.
tack of information on the situation he FOLLOWING PRINGSHEIM'S speech, Jerry Wald, Topeka senior, moved that Madame Nhu be invited to the campus. A committee was formed, headed by Steve Long, Mission senior, to investigate the possibilities.
Long said 17 people volunteered for the ad hoc committee.
would accept. "I am thinking about calling the South Vietnamese consulate in New York," Long said, "in order to extend the invitation as soon as possible."
Long, in an interview after the meeting, predicted that Madame Nhu would be invited and that she would accept.
MADAME NHU would accept the invitation because she wants the publicity and the opportunity to air her views before the American public. Long said, "She claims she has been misunderstood."
An official campus organization recognized by the administration, has to sponsor a guest speaker. The ad hoc committee formed after yesterday's speech is not an official organization.
beeth misunderstood. Madame Nhu is speaking at the University of Texas Oct. 24, and Long said he hopes she can be persuaded to come to KU sometime around that date.
Long believes that the SUA minority opinion forum or some other campus organization will be willing to sponsor a Madame Nhu visit.
Long spoke with Chancellor Wescoe this morning, and described the chancellor's reaction as "favorable."
John Underwood, Parsons senior and chairman of ASC current events committee, and Breon Mitchell, Salina senior and president of SUA, also met with Chancellor Wescoe to discuss the invitation.
LAIRD WILCOX, Pasegoula,
Miss, freshman and chairman of the
SUA minority opinion formum, said
his group would sponsor such a visit,
if they could meet the expenses
should a need for funds arise.
THEY SAID their groups are willing to sponsor the invitation.
"This is the only way it can be handled if it is to be handled effectively." Mitchell said, "because of the all-inclusive student representation of SUA and ASC."
Mitchell said ASC and SUA have been considering the invitation since Tuesday, but have been waiting to confer with the chancellor, who has been out of town.
Chancellor Wescoe said this morning, "We have no objection to Madame Nhu coming. The possibility that she would accept is probably quite good. I imagine she wants to scatter her speeches over the United States."
THE EAST ASIAN area committee, of which Pringsheim is a member will meet this afternoon and will vote on whether to support sponsor-
(Continued on page 12)
U.S. Policy In Viet Nam Criticized
A KU faculty member accused the Kennedy administration of not developing a consistent policy of communist containment in South Viet Nam.
"Make no mistake about it. We are responsible for the Diem Regime being in power today," Klaus Pringsheim, instructor of political science and east Asian areas, told the KU-Y Current Events Discussion Group at a luncheon yesterday.
Drawing his background from sources available to ordinary Americans—newspaper and magazine reports—Pringsheim outlined the alternate policies open to the United States.
State:
- The Diem regime in South Viet Nam is seriously threatened by guerilla warfare instigated by the Vietnamese in the north. The people of South Viet Nam have little sympathy for the Diem government, and do not willingly defend it.
- THE UNITED STATES alone has stood behind South Viet Nam since 1954 when France dissolved her colonial ties with Viet Nam. At that time Viet Nam was divided into two states—one free and the other communist. Shortly afterwards thousands of north Vietnamese migrated to the south, most of the migrants being Buddists with a sprinkling of Catholics.
■ EIGHT YEARS ago the U.S. was asked to assist South Viet Nam in its struggle with the Viet Com, the communist underground. Today we have 15,000 Americans in South Viet Nam fulfilling various roles. Of the 120 Americans killed there, only 59 were military personnels.
- Arms stored in villages so that
(Continued on page 12)
Inge Verifies Lawrence Visit
In a letter to the University Daily Kansan William Inge, playwright, said he is coming to Lawrence soon.
said. He veriied the purchase of the land and barn on Avalon Road, but said he "has no definite plans" about living in Lawrence right now.
Reports are that he plans to come to Lawrence to live.
DARF-6017-ME
Too wide, too heavy and too big, the GEM III was refused passage on Missouri highways. It is being rerouted through the South.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Oct. 10, 1963
Attitudes Are Wrong
One of the biggest stumbling-blocks to receiving a full education in college is also one of the basic building-blocks of any collegiate structure—grades.
The arbitrary letter designation is often crucial in deciding membership in social organizations, honor organizations and, in some instances, an invitation to return to school.
What earthly good do grades serve? None.
THE RATIONALIZATION for grades is that they measure a student's knowledge. They don't. It is not too difficult to pass most courses at KU without doing more than committing the book and lecture notes to memory the night before the examination. This might be satisfactory, except that no one retains this crammed knowledge long after the examination.
Grades also have some hindering effects on a student's pursuit of knowledge.
First, the student is held within the bounds of assigned work, simply because the assigned work will be on the examinations. Much information stored in magazines and good books never makes it on the required reading lists, and it comes down to a matter of time. The reading material which will be on the examination usually wins out over the outside material, no matter how desirable.
THE GRADING SYSTEM encourages cribbing and leaning on others for work which the student should do himself. Granted, this is the fault of the student, and points up a basic character shortcoming, but it is helped by a grading system which puts the symbol above the knowledge.
THIS CAN BE POINTED up by the dependence of students on printed study notes. It is quite possible to pass examinations—the Western Civilization test is a good example—by studying the skeleton outlines prepared by enterprising students. But it is quite impossible to understand the message of most great works without understanding the context and atmosphere in which they were written. Yet with the emphasis on grades, students often feel that study notes are enough.
The problem of the grading system is not simply a problem of the college campus. The grade system is an outgrowth of an American characteristic—the search for tangible evidence of an effort exerted.
Unless he is able to inform others of his accomplishments, man is unable to enjoy those accomplishments. He must have his status symbols.
Few individuals are content to labor for a cause, be it academic or social, without the idea of recognition in the back of his mind. This recognition might come in the form of a letter grade, a plaque, or a feeling of importance.
THE PERSONAL FEELING of accomplishment seems to have been filed in the archives of time, along with the pride a cobbler gets from a perfectly crafted pair of shoes.
The solution to all this is not as simple as abolishing the grading system—this would accomplish nothing but chaos.
Basically, the solution is scrapping the American search for public recognition. It is substituting a feeling of personal pride in accomplishment for a feeling of accomplishment for its own sake—something like trying better to understand a history topic simply because it is satisfying to do the work involved.
The Europeans seem to have come up with a rational solution—the use of comprehensive examinations. The examinations are given immediately before graduation, and test what students have learned in four years—not just what he crammed in the night before the exam.
This system would eliminate the scramble for grades and the attendant disadvantages, and substitute a system in which a student's success in achieving the real goal of college—attaining an education—could be judged.
THE FIRST ARGUMENT against this system is the probable overcrowded conditions. No one would be flunked out of the program.
A way out of that problem would be stiff entrance requirements. But while this would work well in a private college, it would be impossible in a state-supported school.
The solution returns to a question of attitudes.
Only through an emphasis on learning and a feeling that knowledge is more important than grades can this problem be solved. The goals of college must be redefined with an emphasis on knowledge.
Or perhaps a new grading system could be evolved which would accomplish essentially the same thing.
If the "A" through "F" grades were cut down to either pass or fail, the dog-eat-dog fight for grades would be minimized. To make this at all fair, passing would be "C" or above. A "D" or an "F" would be failing.
The outstanding student still will be recognizable.
Under the pass or fail system, students would still be challenged to study enough to make the equivalent of a "C" but would be given freedom for outside study.
This puts great confidence in a student's ability to discipline himself, but perhaps a little confidence and a little less regulation would condition to American college student for his place in American life.
After all, what is college for?
Mike Miller
Exchange of Freedoms?
With the Omnibus Civil Rights Bill pending in Congress, it is time to examine the controversial Title II, public accommodations. We hope it will be defeated, not because we disagree with the spirit or intent of the section, but because it is unconstitutional.
THE SECTION explores the interstate commerce implications of discrimination in hotels and eating accommodations, and finds that such discrimination burdens traveling Negroes, the interstate entertainment industry and fraternal, religious and scientific conventions.
The bill claims federal jurisdiction under the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment because these businesses are licensed by the states in which they operate.
This is obviously a strained interpretation of the meaning of the Constitution. Private businesses should not be forced by the federal government to accept customers simply because they import their mustard or business envelopes from another state. Congress has been stretching the meaning of its jurisdiction over interstate commerce a long time, but this is the most dangerous abuse so far.
WE LIKE A COUNTRY where the federal government cannot wrest powers for itself. We would like a country even better where it did not try to do so, no matter how lofty the issue. There remains the point that once the government has won this power to dictate to private business, it will have such power even when the issue involved is not so lofty and the customers forced on shopowners do not have such a meaningful claim to service.
-In the Minnesota (University) Daily
The People Say...
Mr. King last Friday in your editorial section you wrote an article criticizing the Hootenanny that SUA is presenting to the campus this Friday night. The decision to have the Hootenanny was made by the fifteen students of the SUA Board reinforced by a student questionnaire that showed the campus wanted a concert of this nature. You criticized this Hootenanny, but you didn't mention that
Hootenanny Hoot OK
you have ever seen a Hootenanny or that you know anything about music especially folk music According to Webster there is not a necessary connection, as you imply, between folk music and hillbilly music. Even if there was, what gives you the right to speak contemptiously. The reason I am writing this letter is to show the students that anything they see on this editorial page they should read only for the humor in it.
It is a sad state of affairs when someone can in a position in a newspaper where they can put their own sometimes uninformed warped opinions in the editorial page where it may affect the minds of other people.
Bob Moutrie
St. Louis, Mo., senior
Bob Moutrie
St. Louis, Mo., senior
(Editor's note: The above letter was printed exactly as Mr. Moutrie submitted it.)
review
Guest Actor Corbin Powerful in 'Emperor'
Clayton Corbin was the Emperor Jones last night, giving a most convincing performance in the opening production of Eugene O'Neill's suspenseful drama.
"The Emperor Jones" is a compact story of an American chain-gang refugee who, in two years, became "emperor" of a West Indies island. Threatened with a revolution of his native subjects, Brutus Jones flees into the jungle, attempting to escape from the island.
In the jungle, the pursued Jones meets several "haints." products of his own imagined fears. These apparitions represent episodes of his personal past and of his racial heritage. In the continuous scenes of the one-act play, the powerful Negro envisions a man he killed, his chain gang, a slave auction, prisoners in a slave ship, and the dance of a primitive witch doctor.
1
More important than any message of the play is the sheer dramatic impact, implemented by the cumulative suspense of the plot and by theatrically impressive sound and lighting effects. Unfortunately, neither of these two elements was quite carried through in last night's performance.
THE MESSAGE of "The Emperor Jones," if there really is one, is that civilized man is in reality a ferocious, fearful savage. In each scene, Jones is progressively stripped of part of his costume and even more of his worldliness. Finally he is killed by the silver bullet which symbolizes materialism and the white man's civilization.
The audience was partly to blame for the breakdown of the growing suspense, as there was strained applause during the act and a general giggling, tittering, and restlessness between scenes. In "The Emperor Jones," the action takes place in eight continuous scenes, bridged by sound effects. Thanks to the audience-supplied sound effects, the suspenseful atmosphere lost a great deal of its gripping effect during the hour-and-a-half performance.
ANOTHER PROBLEM was that the play had a slow beginning and an anti-climatic ending. In the first scene, the dialogue was difficult to understand. It may have been O'Neill's intention, however, to convey the absurdity of "civilized" conversation. The last scene dribbled away after the death of Jones.
Corbin's part—and Clayton Corbin himself—dwarfs the other characters, both in O'Neill's focus on the character and in the professional actor's superb interpretation of the part. Corbin, a Broadway actor who has portrayed "de Emperor" many times, played the physically-demanding role with a high degree of conviction and skill.
The sound effect of the tom-toms was poorly done. O'Neill's intention was that the drum beat should start at the rate of the average human pulse, 72 per minute, and rise gradually to the pitch of a frenzied, fevered pulse. Last night's tom-toms began too fast, increased too rapidly, and then simply got louder.
"The Emperor Jones," directed by William R. Reardon, was the season's first University Theatre production. The play will be given tonight, Friday, and Saturday at 8:15 in the University Theatre of Murphy Hall.
The "ghosts" sometimes had trouble communicating the stiff, marionettish movements which O'Neill intended, and some of the scenes were not as dreamlike and unreal as necessary. And the masquerade-party "crocodile god" was completely grotesque.
ALTHOUGH THE FIRST setting did not convey the grand "audience chamber" of the Emperor, the yellow and whiteness of the bright afternoon was effective. Truly impressive, however, were the jungle scenes. Massive black tree trunks and the filtered moon-light created a setting of reality.
On the whole, last night's performance was quite impressive, effectively demonstrating and unrivaled dramaturgy of Eugene O'Neill and the splendid acting ability of Clayton Corbin.
Henry Smithers, a Cockney trader, was portrayed adequately if not always convincingly by James P. Coulson, Tucson, Ariz., graduate student. His was the only major speaking part besides Corbin's.
— Margaret Hughes
Daily Transan
111 Flint Hall
University of Kansas student newspaper UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office
Founded 1889, 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 Lawrence, Kansas.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Mike Miller Managing Editor
Terry Ostmeyer, Trudy Meserve, Jackie Stern, Rose Osborne, Assistant
Managing Editors: Kay Jarvis, City Editor; Linda Machin, Society Editor:
Roy Miller, Sports Editor; Dennis Bowers, Picture Editor.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Blaine King ... Editorial Editor
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Bob Brooks Business Manager Joanne Zabornik. Advertising Mgr.; Alice Rueschhoff. Circulation Mgr.; Brooks Harrison, Classified Adv. Mgr.; Jim Evilsizer, National Adv. Mgr.; Donald Dugan, Promotion Mgr.; Jerry Schroepfer, Merchandising Mgr.
Page 3
Thursday, Oct. 10, 1963 University Daily Kansam
Nassar's Hope Is To Double Income
CAIRO—(UPI)—The goal of President Gamal Abdel Nasser's development program for the United Arab Republic is the doubling of the national income every ten years. The key to the plan is the limiting of land ownership and the distributing of excess holdings among the peasants, the nationalizing of big business, industry and commerce, and the levying of a progressive tax on income.
income. Eleven years and two months after Nasser's overthrow of King Farouk the national income has more than doubled. The greater part of one-million acres, one sixth of Egypt arable land, has been turned over in small holdings to new owners. About 90 percent of private business has been nationalized.
The amount of progress made under Nasser's program is difficult to measure because only officiallypublished figures are available, and they sometimes are suspect. Because newspapers in the U.A.R. are government organs and because there is no organized opposition to the government, there has been no public questioning of Nassar's move toward socialism. Some American economists have expressed concern over the development of a near-communist style economy.
AN INVESTMENT guaranty agreement between the United States and the U.A.R. was signed last June as a move to encourage American firms to establish factories here, but the additional nationalization of 270 business firms in August has caused several American companies to revise their investment plans.
The nationalization program, with its nationalization of business and property of well-to-do Egyptians, has led many of them to leave the country, cutting into an already short supply of skilled administrators and workers. One effect, according to Western economists, has been a decline in the quality of such important Egyptian products as textiles.
The new security granted to
workers has had a major drawback from the standpoint of management. Labor laws virtually preclude the firing of an employee because of incompetence or automation.
NASSER SPELLED out his theory on socialism in the national charter adopted in June last year. "Socialism is the way to social freedom," he said. "Social freedom cannot be realized except by affording an equal opportunity for every citizen to obtain a fair share of the national wealth.
"This is not confined to the mere re-distribution of the national wealth among the citizens, but above all it requires the expansion of the base of this national wealth to meet the lawful rights of the working masses.
Nasser's application of Socialism started in earnest in the summer of 1961 with a major nationalization drive that put the state in control of about 4,000 business concerns worth $1.15 billion but the program had its roots in the revolution.
IN SEPTEMBER 1952, less than two months after the revolution, land ownership in this primarily agricultural country was limited to 200 acres per person. At the time, 50 per cent of the country's cultivated land was in the hands of half of one per cent of the population.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Oct. 10, 1963
NAACP Leader Outlines Action
By Clare Casey
Hartzell Whyte, NAACP regional attorney, last night urged the Civil Rights Council (CRC) to participate with other civil rights organizations in the Lawrence area.
The suggestion was made when Whyte, state membership chairman for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, spoke to the CRC in the Kansas Union.
"I urge you to join local branches in the civil rights field." Whyte said.
T
"Not only join,but work as active members of these groups."
WHYTE SAID higher education in the Lawrence area was valuable for a successful civil rights group.
Members of the CRC asked Whyte what the proper procedure would be if they found that employers in the Lawrence area were discriminating.
Whyte suggested working with the local labor and industry committee of the NAACP. The next step would be to take a survey and to find out definitely if there were any discrimination practices among the employers. When discrimination has been found the group should send a committee to talk to the manager of the store.
WHYTE SAID if the store was part of a national chain, the committee should write to the chain's headquarters, informing them of the discrimination policy in the local store.
Kansas law states that if an employer employs more than eight persons he must practice equal employment.
According to Whyte, if the group did not get any action after writing to the chain's headquarters, the next step is to contact the state civil rights commission. This group will send a field representative to talk to the manager and legally enforce the state's equal employment laws.
"THE KANASS CITY chapter of the NAACP is endorsing the present civil rights bill which is now coming to the floor of Congress. We have sent delegates to Washington to talk to our Congressmen, and also have begun a letter-writing campaign to have residents of Kansas write their Congressmen urging endorsement of the civil rights bill."
Whyte said the NAACP also seeks to eliminate discrimination in the field of public accommodations throughout the country.
George Ragsdale, Kansas City senior and president of the CRC, told the group what the council would be doing about discrimination in Lawrence taverns.
"I feel that we should not drop the tavern issue, but that we should de-emphasize it," Ragsdale said.
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RAGSDALE told the 56 persons present that the council would have to make the decisions on what it would do this year. He said that he hoped to have an active group with everyone taking a creative part.
"We must work collectively," said Ragsdale. "We should not have any on-lookers in the group."
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"THE COLLEGE JEWELER"
Formerly Gustafson's
809 Mass.
Page 5
ALEXANDRA LATACHEVSKY
ESKIMO ART—Cathy Colman, Wichita freshman, looks at a carving of an Eskimo man cleaning a fish in the Eskimo art display in the south lounge of the Student Union. It is one of the 53 carvings in the exhibit. The carvings are circulated as a traveling exhibition by the Smithsonian Institute and sponsored by the Canadian Embassy. They represent the daily life, and animals of the area.
Student Court Hears Appeals
The KU Student Court heard 16 traffic appeals last night in its first session of the fall school term.
All of the cases were parking violations issued by the KU police department for campus violations.
The Student Court is the judiciary branch of the All Student Council. It hears cases of dispute between individual students and between groups of students besides traffic violations.
Chief Justice James Daugherty, Lamar, Mo., third year law student, said that he had heard of only one issue before the court that was not a traffic violation. The incident occurred last semester and concerned the school election.
THE OTHER justices on the threeman board are Tom Clark, Bonner Springs, Kan., and Tom Thompson, Atchison. Both are third year law students.
Daugherty explained that if a student did not accept the court's decision, he can make an appeal to the Court En Banc, a seven-man court.
If the student does not accept the decision of the Court En Banc, he may make an appeal to the Disciplinary Committee of the ASC, the highest of the student judicial organizations.
Chess Club Wins Over Topeka YMCA
Five attorneys from the law school handle each individual case. The attorneys have short consultation periods with the students shortly before presenting the case in court.
The KU chess club, sponsored by Student Union Activities (SUA), beat the Topea YMCA chess club in a six-board match here Sunday.
Participating for the KU team were: Tamanan Salaty, Lawrence graduate student; Larry Mason, Wyandotte, Mich., graduate student; Jim Dukelow, Prairie Village graduate student; Charles Gish, Lawrence graduate student; Paul Holt, Caney senior; and Jim Nickum, Wichita sophomore.
--presents
EATON PAPERS ARE AVAILABLE AT THE KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORE
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Oct. 10, 1963
--presents
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
Fulbright applications are to be turned in to 206 Fraser by Oct.19.
TODAY
Official Bulletin
Der Deutsche Verein trifft sich am Donnerstag, den 10. Oktober, um 5 Uhr in 162 Fraser. Studenten, die aus detachsprehenden Ländern auf Arbeitsumgebungen im Abtreffen sprechen. Alle sind herzlich eingeladen. Erfrischung.
Quack Club, 7 p.m., 204 Robinson.
Undergraduate Psychology Club. 7:20
Presentation for Retirement. Dr. Alasbari
Wetr.
Christian Science Organization, 7:30
p. Duncanftl
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m. 5 p.m. St.
St. John's Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road.
IVUC 'Squash', 7:30 p.m. 1213 Kentucky. Informal Discussion -bring a
new perspective.
Newman Married Couples, 8:30 p.m.
1915 Stuffard Road. Student Center,
1915 Stuffard Road.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
We all make mistakes...
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PITTSFIELD, MASS.
FRIDAY FLICKS
TONIGHT
"The Mouse That Roared"
also special short "Beaver Valley"
Fraser Auditorium
Admission 35c
Shows 7-9:30
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Oct. 10, 1963
Modern Folk Quartet to Perform Tomorrow
One of the new folk singing groups that did not start singing together in a coffee house or on a college campus is the Modern Folk Quartet (MFQ).
The group, made up of four young men from Iran, California, Hawaii and the world' will be an attraction of the Traveling Hootenanny at 8:00 p.m. tomorrow in Hoch Auditorium.
ALL FOUR singers have had previous experience in night clubs and with other singing groups.
Cyrus Faryar, from Teheran, Iran, was formerly the manager of the Greensleeves Coffeehouse in Honolulu. Before that he sang with The Whiskeyhill Singers and Dave Guard, formerly of the Kingston Trio.
The much traveled member of the group, Tad Diltz, spent a decade in Japan, Thailand, Europe and sang
Assemblyman Helpful In Solving Situation
MADISON, WIS., (UPI) — When Mrs. John Meshua, New Berlin, Wis., bought a car with regrooved tires and was told nothing could be done about it, she replied, "We'll see about that."
Mrs. Mesha brought her case to Assemblyman Vincent Mathews, who introduced a bill banning re-grooving of tires. The bill was signed into law yesterday by Gov. John Reynolds.
in the West Point Choir. He plays the banjo and sings tenor for the group. He arrived in Honolulu at the time Faryar was at the Greensleeves and later got a job there.
THE THIRD member of the group, Chip Douglas, was raised on a plantation in Hawaii. He plays eight instruments and sings baritone for the MFQ. He has done a number of shows in Hawaii and he had a folk group of his own before joining Faryar and Diltz in the MFQ. A native of Joshua Tree, California, Jerry Yester, is from a musical family and has played an instrument since childhood. He has performed with such groups as The New Christy Minstrels, Les Baxter's Balladeers and the Easy Riders. He joined the MFQ during a trip to Hawaii.
The MFQ will appear tomorrow evening as a featured act of the Traveling Hootenanny with Lynn Gold, the Knob Lick Upper 10,000, and Bessie Griffin and the Gospel Pearls. Lou Gottlieb of the Limeliters will be master of ceremonies for the event.
ATTENTION STUDENT BLUE-CROSS BLUE-SHIELD MEMBERS
If you did not receive a new Blue-Cross ID card during fee payment time, please come to the lobby at Watkins Memorial Hospital on one of the following days:
October 9,10 or 11.
Yes, Students, You Save Time and Money When You Use The Excellent Facilities Of Independent All Service Center
- Coin-Operated Laundry Washers and Dryers
- Coin-Operated Dry Cleaning Big 8 Lb. Load
- Professional Laundry & Dry Cleaning
- Dollar Bill Changer
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Thursday, Oct. 10, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Weavers
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designer handbags now 1/3 off
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Page 8
University Daily Kansas
Thursday, Oct. 10, 1963
Track Team Tries to Run String to 19
By Russ Corbitt Assistant Sports Editor
Fresh from an impressive 15-49 victory over Southern Illinois here last weekend, the KU cross country team will be trying for its 19th consecutive dual meet victory at Chicago Saturday morning.
The KU team will meet Chicago Track club in a three-mile meet.
LAST WEEK'S meet was the season opener for KU, and indicated that Coach Bill Easton's squad is destined for another profitable year.
Adding to the importance of the meet is the fact that the Chicago team was the last to defeat KU in dual competition.
Jayhawks captured the first five places in the meet, with veteran Paul Acevedo pacing the field with a time of 14:55.6.
Acevedo was followed by Chick Fero, George Cabrera, Herald Hadley, Ken Holm and John Donner before the first Southern Illinois runner crossed the finish line.
KUS JOHN LAWSON finished third behind Acevedo and Fero, but was not one of the seven runners who composed the KU team Saturday. Easton had not named Lawson to the team because of a knee injury which had been bothering the sophomore runner.
Lawson and veteran Tonnie Coane will replace Paul Donner and Lowell Paul on the KU seven-man team at the Chicago meet. Easton made the promotions on the basis of last week's finishes.
KU will have dual meets with Drake and Oklahoma before the State Federation meet and the Big Eight meet, both of which will be held in Lawrence on the first two Saturdays in November.
RAY SCHALK OF THE CHICAGO White Sox led American League catchers in fielding eight different seasons.
Wanted: 20 Soccer Players
Things are looking up for KU's soccer team—except for one minor deficiency, that is.
the team has a good schedule (eight matches, including a homecoming affair with St. Benedict's College) and an enthusiastic coach (Tom Hedrick, director of the KU Sports Network).
The only thing lacking is manpower. There are supposed to be 11 players on a soccer team. At the moment, KU's participants total two persons.
Hedrick, who had to ask someone else how many players there are on a soccer team,says he wants enough players for two teams. He said KU will not have a soccer team unless his forces increase this week.
"If storming up and down the sideline making a lot of noise is the indication of a good coach, I should be great," the vocal Hedrick said. "However, with my limited one-year experience playing soccer in high school and with only two players on the horizon, it could be a long season."
Hedrick suggests prospective soccer players should contact him or Henry Shenk, chairman of the physical education department.
THERE ARE SEVEN CUPIT brothers in all and five of them are golf professionals. Buster is the oldest and is responsible for getting his four "kid brother" interested in the game.
DON CHERRY IS KNOWN TO millions of record fans as a fine popular song writer, but along the professional golf circuit he is regarded as a solid player who gets better all the time.
WE HAVE
THE EMPEROR JONES
.95 — paperback
2. 45 — hardbound
many other of Eugene O'Neill's plays also on display
KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORE
8 a.m. - 5 p.m. Mon.- Fri. 8 a.m. - 1:30 p.m. Sat.
FIRST BASEMAN JIM BOTTOMLEY established an American League record by making eight unassisted double plays with the St. Louis Cardinals during the 1936 season.
PAUL BONDESON. A HUSKY 6-foot, 195-pounder who learned the game as a youngster in grade school, is one of the longest hitters off the tee on the professional golf circuit.
RAY CULP, THE PHILADELPHIA Phillies' fireballing righthander, was touched for three first-inning home runs in his professional debut with Johnson City (Tenn.) in 1959.
IF YOU THINK JOHN CZUMczyk's name is hard to pronounce, try tackling his birth place. The Chicago Bears' rookie halfback was born in Niescierowicz, Poland, and came to this country with his parents at the age of eight.
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 Air Conditioned. Carpeted and Have Disposals. Provincial Furniture Available.
PARK PLAZA SOUTH
Ph. VI2-3416 1912 W. 25th Day or Night
Hawk's Nest Special
Free Juke Box Selections
Come One—Come All
Every Friday Night
5:30-10:30
Kansas Union Food Service
University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Adolescent Program Needs Students
By Charles Corcoran
The KU-Y Adolescent Guidance program is seeking student volunteers who are interested in helping children with pre-delinquent tendencies.
Tom Greer, Westchester, Pa., junior and program chairman, asked for volunteers last night at the program's first meeting.
"The program offers a KU student as a friend to the Lawrence youngster of elementary or junior-high-school age to help him adapt to his environment." Greer said.
THIRTY-TWO VOLUNTEERS worked as big brothers or sisters to Lawrence youngsters last year, and about 50 have volunteered this semester. Green said.
Participating in a panel discussion of the guidance program at last night's meeting were Mrs. June N, Smith, director of special education for Lawrence public schools; Myrlene Eklund, Genesee junior and program steering committee member; Robert Nash, staff member at the Bert Nash Mental Health Clinic in lawrence; Prof. Dan Hopson of the KU School of Law, and Greer.
MRS. SMITH said that the Lawrence children are picked for the program through their teachers' and principals' knowledge of the student's problems and home environment.
Mrs. Smith said that the program has gained the enthusiasm of local school principals and teachers. All that remains now, she said, is for the demand for student volunteers to be met by KU students.
Greer said that Coach Dick Harp has helped the program by supplying free tickets to KU athletic events.
Couldn't Have Milked It
WATERTOWN, N.Y., (UPI) — Stanley C. Peer, who runs a northern New York dairy farm, is more cautious today about bringing his cows into the barn.
In the semi-darkness early yesterday, Peer spotted a form near a fence line and thinking it was a cow went up to it. Five feet away he found it was a black bear.
Peer said the bear apparently was as scared as he was because they both ran — in opposite directions.
Ardyss Boston, Salina junior, said that she treated the little girl she was assigned to last year to her first ice cream soda.
"It was quite an experience. It was hard to believe that she had never had one before."
MISS EKLUND said interested students must fill out an application form in the KU-Y office. Applicants will be interviewed by the program's central committee so it can get to know the volunteer's reasons for joining and preferences for the type of child he would like to help. When a child on the list matches the general preferences of a KU student, arrangements are made for the two to meet. Then it is up to the KU student to see that the child is helped.
Greer pointed out that no child is assigned without the parents' consent.
PROF. HOPSON said volunteers and an adult adviser meet to discuss their successes and failures.
"A student can tell all about the child and the problem he's causing, and ask for help," he said. "In this way everyone can hear about what's going on with the others and offer suggestions.
"You may not turn the pre-delinquent youth into a class president or even into an outgoing person, but if he can be kept from going to the bottom of the heap, you'll be doing a great deal," Prof. Hopson said.
LEARN TO BOX!!
Be a master in the art of self-defense.
Expert trainers' secrets can be yours!
No equipment needed. Form a campus
boxing club among your friends for
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Compete in our current ones
one dollar. Send to: Physical
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initiative:
If you had the time-you could do the computations which the biggest data processing systems do. But they do them at electronic speed and without tiring. It calls for constant initiative to make them work better for us. You needn't know anything about them to start with. IBM has an education program for continued training.
Ask your college placement officer for our brochures—and for an appointment when the IBM representative is interviewing on campus. IBM is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
If you cannot attend the interview, write:
Manager of College Relations,
IBM Corp.,
590 Madison Avenue, New York 22, N. Y.
IBM
MOVE AHEAD: SEE IBM OCT.31,NOV.1
Thursday, Oct. 10, 1963
Kelly Kelly-Confusing? Soldier Re-enlists at 60
FORT DODGE, Iowa—(UPI)— Kelly Fitzgerald married Patrick Kelly, so now her name is Kelly Kelly.
HONITON, England—(UPI)—The British Army's oldest old soldier, Lance Cpl. Tom Hooper, celebrated his 60th birthday yesterday by signing on for another year in uniform.
ALBERT GROSSMAN PRESENTS
IN PERSON
Peter, Paul and Mary
EXCLUSIVELY ON © Warner Brothers Records
KANSAS CITY MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM FRIDAY, OCT.18 8:30 p.m.
Enclose stamped self-addressed envelope to Municipal Auditorium Box Office, Kansas City, Missouri.
Tickets: $2.00, $3.00, $3.50, $4.00
A TRIO CONCERTS PRODUCTION
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified
“T.V.Jee Bees”
Tickets on sale now at the “Info” booth 85c
S.U.A. Carnival
OCT 12th
7:00 to 11:00
...in the Kansas Union
M
Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Oct. 10, 1963
KU Catholic Chaplain Praises Council Ruling
By Leta Cathcart
The use of English in the "foreMass" is perfectly logical, according to the Rev. Father Brendan Downey, chaplain of the KU Catholic Student Center.
The "fore-Mass" is that part of the Mass preceding the Canon, the most sacred part of the service. In it the priest reenacts the sacrifice of Christ on Calvary. The "fore-Mass" contains instruction in the form of the Epistle and Gospel. Father Downey said that instruction would obviously be better understood if it were given in English.
"THE USE of English in the Mass is an attempt to bring the laity closer to the Sacrifice," Father Downey said.
In the early Christian church, use of the native language was taken for granted. The contact was lost as the Church spread and more languages developed.
The contemporary liturgical movement was begun by Pope Pius X. He lowered the age for the initial reception of the Eucharist to seven years, and encouraged all Catholics to receive the Eucharist frequently, Father Downey said.
PCPE PIUS XII continued the movement when he clarified and shortened the Holy Week services.
Perhaps the most well-known advocate of the liturgical movement and the Ecumenical movement was Pope John XXIII. He urged participation in many parts of the Mass. Also, he began the Ecumenical Council, which is striving to create better relations with all denominations. Pope Paul VI has continued the movement.
m movement Father Downey said there was one
distinct advantage to retaining the Latin dialogue now used. This is that a Catholic can understand the Mass anywhere in the world.
FATHER Downey added that because of the tremendous interest in the proposal, he felt reasonably sure that bishops in the U.S. would favor the proposal. He said a meeting of American bishops would probably be necessary before any concrete program could be organized.
The Rev, Paul Davis, pastor of the Plymouth Congregational Church, said the development at the Ecuimenical Council might lead to more inter-denominational services.
Also, he thought it would aid the ecumenical movement, because now "there is an opening" through which Protestants and Catholics can discuss their traditions.
THE REV. Davis said the use of English in the "fore-Mass" was an indication of a certain "new openness in the Catholic Church." He stressed that this would liven the interest among both the Catholic and Protestant laity concerning the meaning and tradition of the Mass.
He said there was a similar attempt toward unity between clergy and laity in the Protestant churches. He called it the "development of the laity."
Another issue that might be taken up at this session of the Ecuenical Council includes a revision of the Index, a list of banned books. There have been slight revisions made in the past, but nothing very extensive.
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
PublicRelations Positions Open
Applications are now being taken for county chairman and home town correspondents for Statewide Activities.
Applications are due in the alumni office, 127 Strong Hall, by Tuesday. Interviews will be scheduled after this date.
Statewide Activities carries out public relations for the University of Kansas with high schools, alumni, and citizens of the state Members of Statewide are responsible for keeping KU's activities before the public.
Statewide Activities is carrying out Dr. Wescoe's new program of telling people about KU and the quality of the university, and thus attract outstanding students to KU.
Souses to be Soaked
BUDAPEST, (UPI) — Hungarians arrested for drunkness are to be put into a bathtub filled with "fresh, cold water," the newspaper Nepszava said today.
C. K. Baber, Webster Groves, Mo. senior, has been named chairman of the Homecoming Dance committee.
Dance Committee Selected
Following recent interviews with the Homecoming committee, the following appointments have been announced: publicity—Richard Shaefer; Lakewood, Colo., sophomore; Ernest Chambers, Wichita sophomore; arrangements—Jean Burgart, Des Moines, Ia., freshman; Rudolph Reissig, Great Bend freshman; decorations—Karen Darby, Kansas City
Contralto from Canada To Appear October 14
Maureen Forrester, Canadian contralto, will open the 61st annual Concert Course at KU on Oct. 14 in the University Theater.
Other performers in the Concert Course will include the Goldovsky Grand Opera Theater in "Tosca," Nov. 3; Minneapolis Symphony Orchestra, Stanisław Skrowaczewski, directing, Feb. 8; the Robert Joffrey Ballet, Feb. 25; and Ralph Votapek, a pianist who won the 1962 Van Cliburn International Competition, March 6.
March 6.
The concert will start at 8:20 p.m.
The opera, Tosca, will start at 3:30 p.m.
55 DAYS OF TITANIC ADVENTURE!
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Jackets ... 7.5 Medium Coats ... 1.25
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senior; tickets—Carol Nelson, Webster Groves, Mo. junior.
The dance will be held in the Kansas Union Ballroom on the evening of Nov. 2.
SUA Friday Flick To Play Thursday
"The Mouse That Roared", with Peter Sellers, will be shown at 7 and 9:30 p.m. Thursday evening in Fraser Theater.
"The Mouse That Roared" is the second in the Friday Flicks series, sponsored by SUA.
Robert Mitchum
Elsa Martinelli
Jack Hawkins
RAMPAGE
Now! 7:00 & 9:00
Adults 90c
Children 50c
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788
Joseph E.
Levine
presents
FEDERIC
FELLINT
1/2 08
EMBASSY PICTURES RELEASE
Now! 7:00 & 9:30
Adults Only $1.00
VARSITY ART Attractions
Edgar Allan Poe's "Premature Burial"
IN COLOR!
Shows at 7:10
PLUS
Steve McQueen "Hell Is For Heroes" Shows at 8:50
NOW SHOWING!
Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 44
BRITAIN'S ACADEMY AWARD WINNER
BEST ACTRESS
LESLIE CAROM
Sex is not a forbidden word!*
SHAPED ROOM!
THIS IS AN ADULT PICTURE
A ROWALS PRODUCTION • A COLUMBIA PICTURE LICENSE
Next at the
VARSITY
VARSITY ART Attractions
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
FOR SALE
For Sale; Stereo and Hi-Fi Diamond needles. ½ price until Nov. 10—Reg. $9.95 now $4.98. Pettengill-Davis, 725 Mass. 10-16
For Sale: Used Telefonken AM-FM, four band radio—like new. Also. Bogen turn-table and preamp. See at Pettengill Davis—725 Mass. 10-16
For Sale: 1963 RCA portable stereo HiFi
Fidelity sold new at $139.95—used 6 mo.
Sony's RCA, the '98 Model 2000,
Ray Stoneback's, $29 Mass, (also $149.95
Motorola demonstrator cut to $79.97).
For Sale: 1959 Builek Electra 2-dr., very sharp—$1,000.00, would consider trade for small car. 1523 W. 22nd St. Terr. Call VI 3-5139. 10-16
For sale or trade - 1960 Comet—excellent
condition, many extras, phone VI
10-16
For Sale; Classic guitar and case. Fine sounding instrument, all frets true; Purchased last May. Call VI 2-1328 after 6:00 p.m. 10-14
For sale — tux suit, white dinner jacket,
extra tux trousers, three tux shirts, excellent condition, size 39-long, $45.00.
Call VI 3-0800. 10-14
1556 Ford Two door, V-8; automatic
Trucksel 10-2010 Call Cal
Trachsel 11-2100 10-14
For sale: Electric guitar and amplifier for sale, dual pickup, tone and volume controls. Also, unamplified guitar. Call Pat Hardmen — VI 3-5770 at 6:00 to 10:44
For Sale: Two snow tires practically new. White walls, size 800x14 tubeless, nylon, only $25.00 for two. Call VI 3-4196, evenings. 10-14
For Sale; Road and Track, Car and Driver and Motor magazine. Early issues —25c and 35c. Abington Book Shop —1015¹⁵ Mass. 10-1P
For Sale: Schwinn 27" 15 speed racing bicycle — demonstration model — Call John Carnahan or Jim Ash — VI 3-7922. 10-14
Owner leaving town — attractive 3 bedroom ranch in desirable neighborhood. Gate garage, garage towers, ward schoolers and sniping center. 2017 Haven Drive. Phone VI 3-4364. 10-11
For Sale: 1960 VW clean, good condition.
Fair offer will take. Call VI 2-4103. 10-13
New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500
teams. Feam-$85 Lawrence Outlook.
1005 Mass WS
1957 "88" Oldsmobile convertible; white;
excellent condition; power windows.
steering radio, seat, brakes. Four new
car radio will take offer. Call: Bill Murdoco
I 2-42882
Over 30 modern pistols, rifles and shotguns left. Hundreds of rounds of ammo far below wholesale. Thousands of dollars invested in this collection. All must go! See now at 824 Ark. or call VI3-1110. tf
General Psychology study notes, Excel-
card, and sections. $4.00 per
copy. Call VI2-9378.
1957 MGA figgerlass hardtop, hardwheel wheels, new tires, luggage rack, R&H, new tires, new tires screens, 48,000 miles. Will consider VW bus in trade, Jack Hibler. VI 2-102. 10-11
Sure--Everything in the pet field at Grant's drive in pet center. Where your $$ have more cents. 1218 Conn. VI 3-2921.
ft
ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLEANERS New electroux and a limited number of rebuilts, fully guaranteed. All parts available. Equipment picked up for service and delivered. Frank W. Cox. Local Manager-1904 Barker. Call V13 577-8650.
Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. if
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline of topics covered in biology classes. Formerly known as the Theta Notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50.
AUTO LIABILITY INSURANCE, also collision and comp. Most risks covered; under age drivers; scooters; motor bikes; motor cycles; rates avail. Brown Realty Co., Ph. VI 2-0179 — Realtors — $729^{1}$ Mass. if
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FOR RENT
For Rent: Available Nov. 1. furnished
sleeping room for boys. Linens furnished
and laundered. $25 per month. 1328 Ohm.
Mrs. Tipton. 10-16
For Rent or Sale: 35' x 8' one bedroom trailer. Call VI 3-9453 after 130 p.m.
For Rent: Furnished 2 bedroom apartment — air-conditioned, washer — 1147
apartment $65.00 per month, other apartments $65.00 and up. T. A. Hemphill VI 3-3902. 10-16
For Rent: Furnished apartment with
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sident room in a large campus and stadium—$50 per month. Inquire at 1005 Miss. Call VI 3-4349. 10-16
For Rent. Free rent for couple or elderly
for apartment.
Call VI 3-9848 evenings. 10-44
For rent: Two room furnished apartment with garage. Very nice. All utilities paid. $88.144 Vermont (15th and Vermont) VI 3-6328. 10-14
Available now for lease (12 months).
Two bedroom apartment, close to campus and downtown. $75. Santee Apartments, 1123 Indiana, VI 3-2116. tf
For Rent: A spacious nicely furnished
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Two bedroom unfurnished duplex, wall to wall carpeting, dining area, fenced yard, heated garage, separate utility room, large storage area. No pets—one child. 1 unit lease available. Oct Vicinity of KU, $5 per month. VI 2-1028. 10-10
Furnished apartment for 1 with kitchenette. Private bath and entrance. All rooms to campus and dium. $40 per month. Inquire at 1005 Miss. Call VI 3-4349. 10-10
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results
First floor apartment. Nicely furnished.
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Vacancies in contemporary home with outside swimming pool for young man. Make entrance, utilities paid, $45.00 per month. Cooked dinner if offered. Call VI 3-9635. 10-15
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Kansan Classified Ads Get Results
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Business Service: Tutor-Native German to give lessons in German. Call VI 715-248-6300 10-11
Complete line of soles and heels, laces cosmetics and polishes. Have new merchandise available such purses, chiffon toles, Burgert's Day Shoe Service — 1113 Mass. St. 11-1
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First National Travel Agency
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Tutoring by English graduate students—will help with themes, grammar, punctuation or any other special requests. Call VI 3-8175. tf
Do you need a tutor for Chinese? If
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apartment. Tom Prelock. I3-0044. 10-10
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart, 1025 Mass. tf
MISCELLANEOUS
West Side Presbyterian Church, 6th and Mass. welcome you to attend Sunday services at 11 a.m. and Sunday classes at 9:45 a.m. 10-23
Page 11
PARTY TIME: School house available for private parties, dances, meetings, equipped with piano, tables, chairs, restroom bar and coolers. V13-7453--431 Forrest.
If you would like to sing Barbershop harmony, call VI 3-8389. 10-10
Save on food costs. Rent a frozen food locker. Meat for sale. Budget plan. Triplett Lockers, 6th and Miss. Call VI 3-6250
10-11
University Daily Kansan
TYPING
Txping, my home. Experienced, electric
Lois Clark, Llars 1301 Venetian
W 2-18725 10-14
Typing: Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter with carbon ribbon (inked ribbon if required), available. Call VI 3-6048 at 5:00 p.m. or before 7:30 a.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley 408 West 13th Street. 10-11
Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1648.
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Oct. 10, 1963
Movement—
(Continued from page 1) ing an invitation to Madame Nhu to speak at KU, Pringsheim said.
Jim Fields, Lawrence senior and co-president of KU-Y, said he thought the proposed invitation was a good idea, but said he could not commit KU-Y to participate in sponsoring the project without KU-Y approval. KU-Y will also meet this afternoon.
The KU policy on campus speakers, defined by a Senate Advisory Committee report of last May 14, states: "Only the speaker who would use the free expression of ideas in such a manner as to incite to immediate riot or rebellion could reasonably be excluded."
Both Pringsheim and Long, in separate interviews, expressed a belief that KU has a responsibility to serve as a forum for ideas and discussion.
LONG. WHEN asked for his opinion of the Diem regime, replied: "It is despicable, dictatorial, and tyrannical—hardly better than the communist government of Ho Chi Minh in North Viet Nam.
An invitation to Madame Nhu would not necessarily indicate approval of the South Vienamese government headed by her brother-in-law, Ngo Dinh Diem, Pringsheim said.
"She is a cooly clever and cruel woman." Long said.
Asian students on campus and American liberals could be expected to picket Madame Nhu, if she were to come to KU, Long said.
"If I were not involved in her invitation, I would probably demonstrate against her if I had the chance." Long said, "but if she were to come I would feel obligated to see that she is treated with courtesy."
PRINGSHEIM, commenting on the Diem government, said: Something is definitely wrong; I find it hard to believe that the monks who are barbecuing themselves are communists."
He referred to the Diems as "opressive" and said the war in Viet Nam is "not going nearly as well as the report of Robert McNamara (Secretary of Defense) and General Maxwell Taylor indicated, because the Diem regime is out of touch with the people."
"If we accept their report we are deluding ourselves, overlooking the political and economic situation there," Pringsheim said. "Attempts have been made to overthrow the regime, and there is no popular enthusiasm for the war against the communists. The people have so little to gain by fighting; they will not risk their lives for an oppressive regime."
Pringsheim says he favors Madame Nhu's being allowed to speak on campus because it would give her a chance to express her viewpoint and focus the student's attention on Vietnamese affairs.
FALLS CITY. Neb — (UFI)—The stranger placed an order in Bob Alton's Northville Cafe and then asked, "Do you know who I am?"
"Who Dat?"
"I don't know as I do," Bob said. "I'm your brother," the stranger said.
217
It was the first time in 46 years that Alton had seen his brother, Albert Timmons, 58, Burnside, Ill. The mother of the two men died when Alton was four years old and the family became separated.
A
Students without watches will again be able to mark time until the end of their classes.
Campanile Ringing On Time
the end of their classes. The bells in the Campanile are fixed and are ringing on the hour, half hour, and quarter hour.
Harry M. Buchholtz, superintendent of the Buildings and Grounds Department, described the problem as a cog which slipped every now and then causing the timing to be thrown off. The bells were running a few minutes fast or slow.
A KU electrician analysed the problem and Buildings and Grounds wrote to the John Taylor Bell Foundry in England to check out the analysis. A representative of the company who was in the country came to KU and checked the bells, Buchholtz said.
24
IT'S TIME
FOR A
PIT
STOP
If you haven't had your "Pit Stop" yet this week, come in over the week-end.
The Southern Pit
1834 Mass.
VI 3-9481
U.S. Viet Nam Policy—
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from p. 231) villagers could defend themselves, were seized by guerrillas. Thus, U.S. in fact, supplied arms to the enemy.
ing for a popular Vietnamese leader to emerge, or applying decisive pressure upon the Diem government.
- Alternatives open to the U.S. included withdrawal from South Viet Nam, making a complete U.S. take-over of the country and wait-
WITHDRAWAL has been rejected because that would allow the communities to take over the country within a week. U.S. takeover offends our democratic ideals and would abrogate the Geneva Accord.
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SUA
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8:30 to 5:30 Wed., Oct. 16
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200 frame prints can be rented for 50c each per semester or $1.00 for both semesters.
Friday, Oct. 11, 1963
0
NALOLE KUBE
CLAYTON CORBIN RELAXES before a strenuous performance as star of "The Emperor Jones." Approximately 1,352 persons have seen the University Theatre's season opener, which will run through tomorrow night.
Vatican II Continues Marriage Discussion
VATICAN CITY, (UPI) -- The Ecumenical Council Fathers today confronted a problem very familiar to Protestants but brand new to Roman Catholics — insuring that clergymen have the right kind of wives.
The question arose as the Council wound up its second full week of debate on a document which deals with the nature of the church and the place of various ordained orders and laymen in it.
ONE CONTROVERSIAL portion of the document would revive the ancient order of deacons as a permanent rank of ordained clergy just below the priests, and would permit them to be married men.
Bishop Corrado De Vito of Lucknow, India, warned today that it would be "very difficult" to find the right kind of wife for a deacon.
Echoing a sentiment which is often expressed by the governing bodies of Protestant churches when they are searching for a new minister. De Vito pointed out that a clergyman's wife is "very much in the public eye" and that her husband's effectiveness may be affected by such things as her choice of clothes and friends and how she raises her children.
A MEXICAN BISHOP. Msgr. Manuel Talamas Tasamandri of Juarez, speaking on behalf of eight Latin American bishops, strongly endorsed the idea of married deacons. Eut he said no man should be ordained until he has been married for several years. He said this "period of marital probation" would be a good safeguard against scandal which might result from an unstable or broken marriage.
He also emphasized that married deacons who earn their own livelihood working at regular jobs in their communities would ease the burden on the church.
Bishop Vittorio Costantini of Sessa Aurnca. Italy, said he saw no need to restore the diaconate. All of the tasks proposed for deacons, he said, could better be performed by lay brothers in religious orders.
Giacomo Cardinal Lercaro, of Bologna, Italy, one of the four moderators had considered, but rejected the idea of cutting off debate on the second chapter of the document on the church which deals with ordained clergy and which the Fathers have been discussing for more than a week.
BECAUSE OF the delicacy of the subject and the strong feelings it has aroused, he said, the debate will be allowed to continue into next week. But he asked future speakers to be very careful not to repeat what has already been said.
This plea was greeted with loud applause from the 'athers.
Most of today's speakers re-hash now-familiar arguments over the portion of the pending document which asserts that all Bishops together constitute a sacred "college" which shares with the Pope responsibility for the teaching and government of the whole Church.
With one notable exception, the speakers divided along familiar lines with conservatives from Spain and Italy questioning the doctrine of Episcopal collegiality which they tend to regard as a threat to the primacy of the Pope, while liberal Bishops from Northern Europe and other areas strongly supported the concept.
Bettazzi said he wanted to make it clear as an Italian he did not share the suspicion that the doctrine of collegiality is a "foreign idea" which has been "brought over the mountains" to undermine the primacy of the Pope.
THE CONSPICUOUS exception was a youthful Italian Bishop, Msgr. Giuseppe Bettazzi, auxiliary to Cardinal Lercaro.
Another speaker in favor of collegiality, who seemed to make a big impression on the Fathers, was Bishop Fierre Bouillon of Verdun, France. He painstakingly traced incidents from the history of the early Church in the second and third centuries to show that Church Fathers of that era regarded a Bishop as having pastoral responsibilities far beyond the immediate limits of his own diocese.
AN ARGUMENT against the collegiality concept which is known to carry weight with a number of American Bishops was presented by Archbishop Marcel Lefevbre, superior general of the Congregation of the Holy Spirit.
He voiced concern that the idea of Bishops having joint responsibilities for the whole church — if pressed too far — might have the effect of weakening the present strong emphasis on the personal responsibility of each Bishop for the faithful of his own diocese.
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
Daily hansan
61st Year. No.21
Macmillan Resignation Causes Party Struggle
BLACKPOOL, England—(UPI)—The ruling Conservative party, outwardly ignoring the bitter leadership struggle launched by Prime Minister Harold Macmillan's announced resignation, pledged today a foreign policy based on a strong Anglo-American alliance.
Foreign secretary Lord Home told 4,200 delegates attending the party's annual conference that Britain must be firmly allied to power to maintain her influence in the world.
"In plain words, that meant and means keeping the United States on our side in a relationship or partnership." Home said.
"Without the closest alliance between the U.S. and Britain there is no balance of power and no security."
THE FOREIGN policy resolution proposed by Home was adopted by unanimous acclamation.
Home spoke against a background of moves and counter moves aimed at solving the leadership problem which has split the party from top to bottom.
Deputy Prime Minister R. A. Butler, who has run the government since Macmillan entered a London hospital Tuesday night for the removal of a prostatic obstruction, apparently has the backing of many of his cabinet colleagues.
But the issue was thrown into confusion last night only hours after Home told the conference Macmillan would step down. Science Minister Lord Hailsham told a cheering rally he would give up his title and seek election to the House of Commons as plain Mr. Quentin Hogg.
"He has split the party right down the middle," one official said in commenting on Hailsham's announcement. "There's no certainty now what will happen."
It appeared, however, that Butler was taking a lead over Hailsham. Sources said he had the firm backing of a majority of his cabinet colleagues.
One influential group favored naming a successor to Macmillan before parliament reconvenes Oct. 24. Other sources said Macmillan may not step down until he can advise the Queen about a new Prime Minister in person.
Doctors who removed the 39-year-old leader's prostate gland yesterday said the Premier would have to remain in hospital at least three weeks and then convalesce further.
Observers said Hailsham's announcement that he would seek to return to Commons could hurt the Conservatives in the general election that must take place within the next 12 months if it actually divides the party.
HE ANNOUNCED only Monday that he was ill and would be absent from political ranks two to three months. Lord Home, standing grim faced before the conference read Macmillan's letter, which he said was giving up the party leadership and expected to retire as Prime Minister.
Mme. Nhu to Reply Today
Madame Ngo Dinh Nhu, "first lady" of Viet Nam who is currently on a speaking tour of the United States, has been invited to speak at KU.
She has not indicated whether she will accept or reject.
John Stuckey, Pittsburgh senior and president of All Student Council, extended the invitation by telephone and telegram.
STUCKEY ACTED for the ASC and the SUA, which are co-sponsoring the invitation.
A staff member in Madam Nhu's suite in the Barclay Hotel in New York took Stuckey's message and promised to call back as soon as Madame Nhu could make a decision.
The staff member said Madame Nhu is "swamped" with invitations from colleges and universities, Stucky said.
STUCKKEY said he suspects Madame Nhu will be passing through the Midwest by air and will have to stop at Kansas City. "She could
make a speech here by taking only three or four hours out of her schedule." he said.
Madame Nhu is scheduled to speak at the University of Texas in Houston Oct. 24.
Hoch auditorium would be filled if she were to speak here, Stuckey predicted.
REFERRING to the ASC-SUA co-sponsorship of the invitation, Stuckey said, "Chancellor Wescoe's recommendation to us was that the two large groups sponsor it."
The two groups would split the expenses of the program, Stuckey said.
An ad hoc committee formed after the KU-Y current events forum Wednesday had planned on tendering the invitation, but was unable to do so because it was not an official campus organization.
University regulations require that any guest speaker be sponsored by an organization recognized by the university.
About 5000 to Attend SUA Carnival
About 5.000 people are expected to attend the SUA Carnival which opens tomorrow evening.
According to Jim Johnston, general chairman of the carnival, it will be expanded this year with several skits being given in the cafeteria.
THERE WILL be twenty boots in the carnival this year and ten skits. Last year there were seven skits.
The frames for booths used are provided by the carnival committee and all decorations are made by individual groups participating. Decorating by each group will begin tonight in the ballroom.
A new feature of the carnival is the blinking neon sign that now hangs on the front of the Kansas Union building.
LIVING GROUPS participating in the carnival have been practicing in reserved rooms in the Union since the early part of the week. The booths and skits will be satirizing various television shows on the air and those defunct.
The SUA Queen will be chosen at the carnival by student voting. Photographs of the candidates have been on display in the Union since last Saturday. Everyone who attends will be given a ballot and is entitled to vote.
The admission charge is 85 cents and charges for various booths will be 10 or 15 cents.
The carnival will be open from 7:00 to 11:00 p.m.
Weather
Fair weather for football is promised to hold through Saturday.
Cooler temperatures are expected tonight with the low in the upper 40's.
SLU
THREE SUA "JESTERS," Jan Gates, Jaci Babcock, and Barb Collins, all Shawnee-Mission freshmen, call attention to the SUA carnival which will be Saturday night. They are part of a group of 24 freshmen girls who dress in costumes, and stand on top of the information booth to publicize the SUA carnival.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Oct. 11, 1963
Valachi versus Boredom
Governments always seem to know when the public is becoming bored.
In Latin America, the thing to do is to have an exciting military coup, except this has become so commonplace, that the spectators have stopped buying programs to see who may be living in the presidential palace next.
Other governments try to confuse the people by pretending to make friends with governments who have been long-time enemies. This doesn't fool even the bystanders. Some governments go so far as to declare war on each other, but this just makes the people want to be bored again.
THE NEWEST REMEDY for public boredom today is for a government to produce and direct a question and answer show in which some previously unknown citizen pours his or her life right into the nation's lap. This will inevitably create a good, sordid scandal.
Great Britain had a great contestant recently in Christine Keeler. Now the United States has one who brought his own script. Joseph Valachi.
Valachi may lack Christine's finesse (for lack of a better word) and doesn't look as good on television, but he is making just as many people cringe as she did and he definitely remembers more faces to point at.
Valachi has been entertaining America and probably many other countries with his inside story of crime in the U.S. The show is sponsored by the Senate Investigating Subcommittee. The senators evidently had been bored, also.
VALACII IS a member of the Mafia, or Cosa Nostra, to use the organization's vernacular. He has agreed to tell the subcommittee, and everyone else listening, all about Cosa Nostra — who, what, when, where, why and how. These
questions are particularly interesting when they are concerned with murder, robbery and dope peddling, and that's what Cosa Nostra is all about.
But what is Joseph Valachi all about? He is many things — convicted killer, dope peddler and, of course, stool pigeon. He is also a "doomed man," he says, because of what he is doing. Why, then, is he doing it? Why is the Senate bothering with all this? Certainly not for want of something better to do. To be sure, Valachi is unique so far as an investigating committee is concerned, because he answers questions,
However, many anti-crime officials don't believe all of what Valachi says. Many say he wasn't high enough in the organization to really know enough important information. Others say he has yet to tell them anything they didn't already know. Even the subcommittee says Valachi isn't allowed to tell everything. Still, Joseph Valachi sits before the nation and tells his story of crime.
GRANTED, VALACHIS testimony will result in some important arrests, but most of them will be premature because Joe has let the cat out of the bag. Whatever Valachi's story accomplishes seems unnecessary because the arrests probably would have been done anyway.
As it is now, the story has become something to splash on the front page of a newspaper or on a television screen, and consequently, does nothing for the U.S. which already has enough play-by-play accounts of problems within its borders.
At least one thing may result from the Valachi affair. People now will know what "families" mean, how to spell Girolamo Santuccio and what to do if you get the "buckwheats."
TV Debates Useless
—Terry Ostmever
The Senate recently passed a bill to clear the way for television debates by the Democratic and Republican candidates.
The effect of the action is to permit broadcasters to give or sell time to the major party candidates without obligating themselves to provide it also for a possible host of minor candidates.
Some senators hailed the bill as a tremendous contribution to the welfare of the American system of government, pointing out the measure is a boon to the general understanding of the issues and personalities of those in the presidential race.
But look at the 1960 Kennedy-Nixon debate.
VOTERS FORGOT the issues of the election and concentrated on the appearance of the two political opponents for the presidency. Glued before their television sets, Americans saw a nervous, tongue-tied Nixon against a polished, verbose Kennedy.
The earlier discussions of Quemoy, the Chinese strait and Matsu were shoved down the drain. In their place, Nixon's fidgety behavior, washed-out facial color and Kennedy's confidence and neat appearance reigned.
Nixon was doomed. Kennedy was elected.
Similar appeals to the public have been just as successful.
The American people don't have to reach too far back into history to recall Franklin D. Roosevelt's chummy Fireside Chats on the radio.
Here was one of the greatest propaganda techniques in history. Our nation's leader was coming into millions of homes for a heart-toheart explanation of his policies and plans.
AND WHO CAN forget the barnstorming speeches former President Truman made from the back platforms of trains across the country. Dewey tried the same psychological technique of winning votes, but he was too late and failed miserably. Everyman's friend from Independence, Mo., had won the hearts and votes of too many.
Television debates among the two top contenders for President of the United States become a battle of wits. Who is the more clever? Which one is the good guy?
Actually there is no possible debate. Both platforms of the two candidates are what they and their supporting political parties think would benefit the United States. The voter, in most cases, chooses the man whose plans are most in line with his own.
And so the value of televised debates is reduced to almost a contest of beauty and poise.
Informed voters know the issues involved and much of the political and personal histories of both candidates.
They don't need the debates.
Uninformed voters don't know the issues or the political or personal pasts of the two presidential competitors.
They don't deserve the debates.
Memories, Memories
The People Say...
Editor:
I am moved, Mr. Coffman. Deeply moved, And I am sure your sentimental plea ("Watching Farms Die Like Looking in Coffin", Kansan, Oct. 8, 1963) stirred the hearts of many. As for me, I broke down completely in the paragraph that told of the Bryson's farm going under water: "My aunt called them Grandma and Grandpa Bryson because of their extreme old age." Touching.
Yes, progress is an evil thing.
I suppose I may have been gripped somewhat more than others, because I, too, have felt the terrible emptiness one experiences when the "crush of man's machines" destroys an edifice one loves. In my
case, it was my grandfather's outhouse — completely destroyed, every hand-hewn shingle and board, by an inane highway project. When I think of the many pleasant hours of meditation, I—Oh. I am moved to tears!
What good is the conservation of soil; what good is the fortification of our economy; what good is the construction of better flood-control systems; what good is the expansion of industry; what good is the creation of recreational areas, when to achieve these things we must destroy something as dear to us all as frightened Mr. Neill's "well-kept barnyard."
Yes, Mr. Goldwate . . . ah, Mr.
Coffman, an progress is evil!
Larry Shawhan Belton, Mo., senior
111 Flint Hall
Daily Hansan
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904,
triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
University of Kansas student newspaper
UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom
UNiversity 4-1198, business office
Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service. 18 East 50 Street, United States International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University's executive excursion to Lawrence, University's holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas
NEWS DEPARTMENT Mike Miller Managing Editor
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Blaine King Editorial Editor
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Bob Brooks Business Manager
CIVIL RIGHTS BYRD
HERBLOCK
© 1973 THE WASHINGTON POST
"Harry, I Don't Think You're Going To Like This One Any Better"
best wishes
Football Forecast, Or What to do at the Game
Jack Mitchell has done his little bit now. He has released to the press a long list of injured players who won't be in top form for the Iowa State game tomorrow.
This way, if we lose, everyone has an alibi. If we win, wonderful.
The automatic alibi bit is a standard game play by all the major football coaches in the country, and you can't really blame them.
HERE AT KU WE have an opportunity to watch one of the alltime greats at the alibi game. It comes from Coach Mitchell having such a good teacher. You see, Jack played his collegiate football under Bud Wilkinson of the professional team to the south, and Bud never says anything which could be called optimistic even if he were misquoted.
Now don't get me wrong. I had some dealings with Coach Mitchell three years ago and he and I got along fine. Still do, as a matter of fact. I don't know enough about football to second guess even the K-State coach, and Coach Mitchell lets me write editorials any way I want.
That wav. everybody is happy except SUA.
But all the maneuverings before the game are just part of the show anyway.
Speaking of shows, we ought to make some plans for tomorrow's game. Tomorrow is Parent's Day, and the students of the University of Kansas have a duty to make this game, in particular, a stand-out example of the typical college game.
In the first quarter, two freshmen seated down about the oneyard line must start fighting, and everybody else stand up and cheer. Remember to boo the cops.
THEREFORE, here is the schedule for tomorrow.
In the third quarter, two seniors should finish getting drunk and throw the cops out.
If KU scores, someone in the stands must remember to throw a cup of Coke into the air. But be careful which way the wind is blowing. Don't get yourself wet.
To help the parents understand how the seating plan works, nobody may sit in their own seats tomorrow. Move at least one section, and preferably two. Under no circumstances sit in the same row.
AS FOR PROVISIONS:
Dormitories—you bring the "bathroom tissue" to throw when KU scores. Bring about six rolls apiece from the janitor's closets. Even if we don't officially need any we can always shell the Coke vendors or a parent or two or maybe a wheel-chaired fan. A good man might even be able to drop a roll into one of the tubas.
Fraternities—Somehow, sneak in a machine gun and a couple of belts of ammo. Meet me at the KU flag on the horseshoe during halftime, and we'll get to that damn airplane which flies over every now and again. Unless it is trailing the TNE banner. I've always wanted to be a member of the Club, and if we shoot down the plane they might black-ball me again.
Sororities—you bring the booze. You have plenty of places to hide it, and the Pinkertons are as chicken about frisking women as they are about frisking alumni. If you don't want to buy the stuff, just go to the west side of the stadium and start making eyes at some of these alums. Don't pick one with a wife, though.
at some of these authors.
The only other thing we might need would be a victory. But what with the team all bunged up nobody knows about that. So bring an extra bottle just in case.—Blaine King
Page 3
All Governments Receive Power By People's Consent, Harris Says
Friday. Oct. 11, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Errol E. Harris, professor of philosophy, said last night all governments, whether democracies, dictatorships, monarchies, or tyrances, receive their power to govern from the people.
Prof. Harris spoke in a lecture at Dyche Auditorium on "The Philosophy of War and Peace." The lecture was the fourth in a series.
"NO SINGLE MAN CAN, by virtue merely of his own physical strength, bend an entire community to his will." Prof. Harris said. "If he is to enforce his pleasure he must have a following, who accept and approve, not just his wishes and interests, but his authority."
Force alone is not sufficient to make people obey laws, Prof. Harris said. The government must command authority; it must have the respect and approval of the people.
"If fear is the only motive for conformity, the law will be broken by any and all who can break it with any reasonable prospect of escaping detection. If force alone supports it, the effectiveness of law is most precarious," he said.
Habit, custom, religion, formal education, and social influences are far more effective and of much greater importance than fear of punishment. "Law-enforcement serves in very large measure only as a subsidiary function in support of these other motives," he added.
But
t. So
PROF. HARRIS called the fear of penalties "a necessary evil and only a minimal expedient." Good governments are characterized by the use of penalties in this way, he said.
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"For this reason," he added, "individuals who exercise power can never afford wholly to disregard the wishes and ideas of their subjects."
by themselves exercise political power, Prof. Harris said. "Those who submit to the power of a government always themselves, either consciously or inadvertently, help to maintain it.
PROF. HARRIS said justification for the exercise of power by a government depend on its policies toward the common will and conscience of the people.
"Evidence in favor of my thesis is the fact that extremist politicians, as soon as they become candidates for national election, moderate their views," he said.
Prof. Harris will discuss sovereignty in international law at 7:30 p.m., Thursday, Oct. 17, in Dyche Auditorium.
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WELCOME PARENTS
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Page 4 University Daily Kansan Friday, Oct.11, 1963
YOU
KNOW
ABOUT THE
JAYHAWK BUFFET?
Before every home game from 10:30 to 1:00 p.m. Enjoy express service and good food in the ballroom at the Student Union. Music provided by the KU band.
Open to the public.
$1.55
JUST RIGHT FOR
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KANSAS UNION FOOD SERVICE
University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Republican Leaders To Meet in Oregon
EUGENE, Ore.—(UPI) -Nationa Republican leaders began assembling here today for the four-day Western Republican Conference which opens tonight with an Oregon reception.
Attention will be foued on Saturday's scheduled speeches by New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller and Arizona Sen. Barry Goldwater.
THE TWO, among the front runners for the GOP presidential nomination, will speak in the 10,000-seat MacArthur court basketball pavilion —Rockefeller at noon, Goldwater at 7 p.m.
Rockefeller is expected to arrive here tomorrow night, Goldwater Saturday afternoon.
Oregon Gov. Mark Hatfield will keynote the conference tomorrow
KU Raises $1,500 For United Fund
The first two days of KU's part in the Lawrence United Fund Campaign shows receipts slightly over $1,500, according to Captain Richard Gruber, professor of Naval Science and chairman of the campus drive. The KU goal is $10,000.
The final date of the campaign when the $72,900 goal is expected to be in Oct. 22. Last year's goal of $68,000 was reached, but only after extensions of the date set for the end of the campaign.
Thirteen participating agencies will receive various portions of the $72, 900, allocated on the basis of their budgets.
Drill Team to March In American Royal
The exhibition drill team of Company E-7 of the National Society of Pershing Rifles, the Tri-Service National Military Fraternity for basic ROTC cadets and Midshipmen, has been invited to participate in the American Royal parade in Kansas City this Saturday. October 12.
This will be the third consecutive year that this unit has participated in the parade. It is the only military unit to be included in the parade since WW II. Company E-7 is noted for its exhibition drill with fixed bayonets.
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ELRING'S GIFTS
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morning. Hatfield has been mentioned as a vice presidential possibility, and as a GOP presidential dark horse.
Other governors participating include Henry Bellmon of Oklahoma, Robert Smylje of Idaho, Paul Fannin of Arizona. John Love of Colorado, Clifford Hansen of Wyoming, and Tim Babcock of Montana.
Republican National Chairman Rep. William Miller, New York, and Assistant Chairman Mrs. Calre Williams, will be honored at the conference.
FRANK REYNOLDS, field man for the Republican Congressional Committee, said other governors may also attend.
Among U.S. senators expected, in addition to Goldwater, are John Tower of Texas, Len Jordan of Idaho, Milward Simpson of Wyoming, Gordon Allott of Colorado, and former Sen. William Knowland of California.
REYNOLDS SAID state chairmen and vice chairmen from throughout the West would be on hand. He said between 700 and 1,000 registrants were expected.
Some of the governors will leave late Saturday on a state department tour of the orient. It will mark the first time Rockefeller and Goldwater have appeared in the same town the same day, to speak in the same auditorium, since their unannounced campaigns for the 1964 GOP Presidential nomination were launched.
The conference is the last major republican regional meeting to be held before next summer's GOP national convention in San Francisco.
Friday, Oct 11, 1963
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1101 Mass.
Priest to Give Talk At Newman Club Forum
Rev. Columbian Clinch, Order of St. Benedict's, will speak about the Ecumenical Council and its issues to a Newman Club Forum Sunday night at 8 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Father Columban, a KU graduate, now teaches history at St. Benedict's College in Atchison, Kan. He also serves as faculty moderator of the Interracial Justice Commission, an undergraduate unit on St. Benedict's campus.
Father Columban received a Rockefeller grant to return to KU teaching at Morris Brown College where he was also Dean.
He later received his doctorate in history from KU after a three and one-half years in the Army Air Corps.
Sets Backwards Mark
MACCLESFIELD. England — (UPI) — Tony Gerrity, 20, set a world speed record of sports Saturday when he walked backwards from Macclesfield to Buxton — a distance of 12 miles — in two hours, $47_{12}$ minutes.
HAPPY HAL'S STEAKHOUSE WELCOMES
Parents and Students
1
We serve
Choice Steaks Seafood Bar-B-Q'd Ribs Golden Fried Chicken
1100 East 23rd (Highway 10 East)
---
Tom Thomsen wanted challenging work
He found it at Western Electric
T. R. Thomsen, B.S.M.E., University of Nebraska, '58, came to Western Electric for several reasons. Important to him was the fact that our young engineers play vital roles right from the start, working on exciting engineering projects in communications including: electronic switching, thin film circuitry, microwave systems and optical masers.
Western Electric's wide variety of challenging assignments appealed to Tom, as did the idea of advanced study through full-time graduate engineering training, numerous management courses and a company-paid Tuition Refund Plan.
Tom knows, too, that we'll need thousands of experienced engineers for supervisory positions within the next few years. And he's getting the solid experience necessary to qualify. Right now, Tom is developing new and improved inspection
and process control techniques to reduce manufacturing costs of telephone switching equipment. Tom is sure that Western Electric is the right place for him. What about you?
If you set the highest standards for yourself, enjoy a challenge, and have the qualifications we're looking for—we want to talk to you! Opportunities for fast-moving careers exist now for electrical, mechanical and industrial engineers, and also for physical science, liberal arts and business majors. For more detailed information, get your copy of the Western Electric Career Opportunities booklet from your Placement Officer. Or write: Western Electric Company, Room 6405, 222 Broadway, New York 38, N. Y. And be sure to arrange for a personal interview when the Bell System recruiting team visits your campus.
Western Electric MANUFACTURING AND, SUPPLY UNIT OF THE BELL SYSTEM
AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
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Principal manufacturing locations in 13 cities. *O*: Operating centers in, many of these same cities plus 36 others throughout the U.S.
Engineering Research Center, Princeton, N. J.; Teletype公司, Skokie, Ill.; Little Rock, Ark.; Gen. Hg; 195 Broadway, New York
6 University Daily Kansan Friday, Oct. 11, 1963
Welcome Parents
We're happy to see you whenever you visit the KU campus.
BIG BUY DRIVE-IN 23rd & Iowa
KU
ALLISON-THOMAS FLOWER SHOP "Flowers of Distinction" 941 Mass.
STANLEY PONTIAC-CADILLAC 1040 Vermont
M. R. GILL AGENCY Real Estate-Insurance 901 Tenn.
THE CASTLE TEA ROOM
1307 Mass.
Serving KU students and their parents throughout the year.
LAWRENCE LAUNDERERS AND DRY CLEANERS 10th & N.H.
AUTO GLASS CO.
720 E. 9th
HILLCREST BOWL AND RESTAURANT 9th & Iowa
FIRST NATIONAL BANK 746 Mass.
BELL MUSIC CO.
925 Mass.
Friday, Oct. 11, 1963
University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Injured Hawks Open League Play
By Willis Henson
The Jay hawks open their Big Eight season play here Saturday against Iowa State with their first serious injury of the season. Even without injuries, however, Coach Jack Mitchell has nothing but respect for the Cyclones.
Injured in last Saturday's comeback victory over Wyoming was alternate left tackle Richard Pratt. Pratt is suffering from a wrist fracture, and is expected to be out of play for four weeks.
ALTHOUGH happy to salvage Saturday's 25-21 victory, Mitchell summarized the Jayhawk's performance as "the most consistently poor football game I can remember. We cannot expect to play like that and manage to win another one."
Starting left guard Larry Ledford is listed as a doubtful starter for Saturday's game because of an ankle injury.
The Jayhawks are leading the league in pass offense on 259 vards through the first three games. Steve Renko sets the aerial pace with 16 completions of 32 passes for 240 vards.
Gale Sayers maintained his lead in rushing with his 70 yards on 13 carries at Laramie.
BUT STILL Kansas scout Jack Scotfield, who observed the Cyclones' 7-21 loss to Nebraska, makes this observation.
"Iowa State has a sound, well-disciplined, well-conditioned football team. It was 93 degrees at Lincoln and they (Iowa State) simply ran out of gas. They're going to beat somebody they're not supposed to beat this year and I just hope it isn't us."
The Jayhawks will be playing Iowa State for the 43rd time. KU is riding a five-game winning streak in the series, although the last two games here have been especially rugged.
engineered a 60-yard drive for a touchdown.
THE '61 meeting was deadlocked 7-7 with nine minutes left when coach Mitchell called on two-time all-American John Hadl. Hadl then
The '59 affair was even tougher. The two clubs fought a scoreless tie into the final seven minutes when Curtis McClinton turned left end for 15 vards with a Duane Morris pitchout for a 7-0 victory.
The series now stands 24-13-5. Last year, Kansas won 29-8 at Ames. The Cyclones are 1-2-0 for the season. The Jayhawks are 2-1-0. Iowa State fought the Nebraska Cornhuskers to a 7-7 halftime score Saturday before bowing.
More Gymnasts Needed For New Varsity Team
By John Sharp
All men interested in performing on the KU gymnastics team should contact coach Bob Lockwood at Robinson Gymnasium. "We need twice as many men as we now have for the team. Experience is not necessary," explained Coach Lockwood. He especially stressed the need for men experienced on the trampoline and in tumbling. He will be at the gym at 4:30 p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday, and at 10:30 a.m. Saturday.
"THE SPORT of gymnastics is one of the best developers of four forms of fitness: coordination, balance, flexibility and strength," said Coach Lockwood.
He picked Bill Maness, team captain, and Kent Dobbins as two probable stand-outs in the coming season.
"Bill has great potential in the still rings. He is one of the strongest men competing in Big Eight gymnastics. Kent, a sophomore, is one of the top all-around gymnasts in the conference.
JIM BODIN and Dick Richardson are the only seniors on the squad, and Maness is the only junior. Other varsity members are Ron Ashley, Dobbins, D. Gerstenberger, Jim Goodwin, John Krug, Bob Livesay, Art Lorenz, John Petterson, Wayne Preston, Bill Roe and David Stine.
EXCEPTIONAL TYPISTS, $3-$4 HOUR
Men or women, college students preferred, up to $140 week plus some overtime if desired. 12 positions open, three shifts. Most class schedules can be accommodated. Work involves re-typing high school yearbooks on an electric typewriter keyboard with certain additional functions, some to do with manual operations at the keyboard and others with slight editing and following of pre-set styles. High school journalism or yearbook experience helpful. Must be exceptional in spelling. Only the very brightest and fastest students should apply.
Most weeks will run from 20 hours up to 35, with possible 40 hours during peak of season January through March. An 80 w.p.m. typist should make at least $3.65 per hour, more if exceptionally accurate. Work starts Nov. 1.
Write P.O. Box 64, Shawnee-Mission, Kansas, for interview and testing appointment. Will give typing, spelling, and intelligence quotient tests. Able students should make around $2500 between Nov. 1 and April 1 without interfering with studies. Plant located in Mission, Kansas, within driving distance of KU campus.
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds
Parent's Day
Treat Mom and Dad
to our
Post Game Buffet
5:00 — 8:30
Eldridge Hotel
Bar-B-Q Ribs, Chicken, Roast Beef, Ham Many taste-tempting dishes
Adults $2.25 Children $1.25 Listen to the Eldridge Scoreboard, Station KLWN after the game
If your hair does NOTHING for you- We'll style it for you! Be confident that your hair looks right.
Marinello Beauty Salon
1119 Mass.
VI 3-3330
Yes, Students, You Save Time and Money When You Use The Excellent Facilities Of Independent All Service Center
- Coin-Operated Laundry Washers and Dryers
- Coin-Operated Dry Cleaning Big 8 Lb. Load
- Professional Laundry & Dry Cleaning
- Dollar Bill Changer
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For Your Convenience Open 24 Hours a Day 7 Days a Week
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---
Page 8 University Daily Kansan Friday. Oct. 11, 1963
DUCK'S SEAFOOD 814 Mass.
ELDRIDGE HOTEL 7th & Mass.
KU
KU Parent Daily
DILLON'S 1800 Mass.
CHARLTON INSURANCE AGENCY Insurance Building — Across from Post Office
JIM CLARK MOTORS
621 Mass.
LITTLE BANQUET Malls Shopping Center — 23rd & La.
UNION CAB CO.
VI 3-2800
Welcome 'The
The merchants of Lawrence join KU in hosting Parents this weekend.
MARGARET'S CAFE Serving Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner 1104 W.23rd
INDEPENDENT LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 9th Miss. — 740 Vermont — 1903 Mass.
BRIEN PLUMBING CO.
304 W. 6th
Friday, Oct. 11, 1963 University Daily Kansan Page 9
ents' '63
come to
me to Hill'
BRITISH MOTORS Also Your Rambler Dealer 1116 W.23rd
HIXON'S STUDIO 721 Mass.
BLUE HILLS DRIVE-IN RESTAURANT 1601 E.23rd
ACME LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 1111 Mass.
PARK PLAZA SOUTH APARTMENTS 1912 W.25th
EARL'S PIZZA PALACE 729 Mass.
DOUGLAS COUNTY STATE BANK 9th & Ky.
DRAKE'S BAKERY 907 Mass.
ELRING'S GIFT SHOP
924 Mass.
HAPPY HAL'S STEAK HOUSE 1100 E.23rd (E.Highway 10)
We extend an invitation to visit Lawrence often.
Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Fridav. Oct.11, 1963
Rivals to Get Together For Seminar
A few days after the Jayhawks and Wildcats battle on the football field, other KU and K-State students will get together to re-establish friendly relations.
A group of KU Honors program students will travel to Manhattan on Nov. 12 for a trial-run joint seminar in biology.
Dr. Tracy Sonneborn, distinguished service professor at Indiana University, will lead the seminar.
Francis Heller, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, said that six or eight students majoring in biological sciences would be chosen for the seminar. The session will include a luncheon and an all-afternoon meeting with Dr. Soneborn and a similar number of Kansas State University Honors students.
Dr. Sonneborn's son, Dr. Lee M. Sonneborn, is a member of the KU mathematics faculty.
A similar exchange at Lawrence is being tentatively planned for next spring, with the same biology students participating.
Dean Heller and George R. Waggoner, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, planned the exchange seminars last spring with Dr. Marjorie Adams, director of the honors program at Kansas State.
Octogenarians Elope
HOUSTON, (UPI) — Mr. and Mrs. Henry T. Scott today settled down to a normal married life following their elopement marriage. She is 82 and he is 87.
"The wedding was exciting," she said. "We even had to get blood tests just like 16-year-olds."
Mrs. Scott, the former Mrs. Laura Gibson, said they eloped because some other widows had designs on the new bridegroom.
Welcome Parents!
We hope you enjoy your weekend
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International Club Postpones Meeting
The International Club meeting planned for Saturday, has been cancelled because of the SUA Carnival. For the next meeting, on Oct.19, a program of square dancing has been planned.
SONJA HENIE. THE MOST Famous ice skater in history, made more money at her specialty than any figure in any other sport. Miss Henie's Hollywood ice Revue alone grossed nearly $50 million and she made an estimated $3 or $4 million more from motion pictures and television.
Dates for the University Party interviews will be discussed at a meeting of the Campus Council Sunday.
Vox Populi will begin interviewing prospective candidates Sunday for the Nov. 13-14 living district election of the All-Student Council.
Tom Bornholdt, Topeka senior and Vox president, said last night that nine persons will be interviewed at the Kansas Union Sunday afternoon.
Several additional interviews are set for Sunday night. Others will be held prior to the announcement of candidates Oct.24.
InterviewsSundayForASCSeats
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
DON'T FORGET TO ATTEND THE SUA Carnival "T.V.Jee Bees"
TOMORROW NIGHT 7:00 to 11:00
Tickets still on sale at the INFORMATION BOOTH . . . 85c
OH YEAH! YEAH!
Tickets will be on sale AT THE DOOR for the TRAVELING HOOTENANNY
Tonight
8:00 p.m.
Hoch Auditorium
★ Modern Folk Quartet
★ Bessie Griffen & the Gospel Pearls
Lynn Gold Knob lick upper 10,000
and featuring
Dr. Louis Gottlieb of the "slightly fabulous" Limelighters
stars of ABC TV's "HOOTENANNY"
Friday, Oct. 11, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 11
Parent's Day!
1963
Enjoy your lunch and dinner
Hawk's Nest
The Hawk's Nest offers good food throughout the day, whether you desire a full meal, snack, or a cold drink after the game.
7:00 a.m. - 11:15 p.m.
Kansas Union Cafeteria
The Kansas Union Cafeteria offers a wide selection of foods for a good meal before and after the game.
10:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m.
5:00 p.m. - 6:30 p.m.
Prairie Room
The Prairie Room serves the very best in charcoal broiled steaks, shish kebabs, and seafood. A special luncheon menu is available.
10:30 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.
5:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m.
Kansas Union Food Service
Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Friday. Oct. 11, 1963
Visiting Professor Cites Change Toward old Age
A visiting professor of psychology from Glasgow University, Scotland, said last night that facts about growing old haven't changed, but the attitudes toward it have.
Prof. Alastair Weir, in a speech to the psychology club, said that youth is highly emphasized. In western Europe and the United States, the attitude prevails that it is great to be young, and undesirable to be old.
PROF. WEIR then explained what
All American Credits Success To Religion
Too many students on the campuses across the country today are existing, but they are not living.
This is the opinion of former All-American Bill Krisher, who spoke to students last night in the Kansas Union.
Krisher, who is now working for the Fellowship of Christian Athletes at its headquarters in Kansas City, Mo., told the audience that he believes too many young people, not only in colleges, but in every walk of life, are neglecting their duty as Christians.
THE OKLAHOMA UNIVERSITY graduate spoke at the request of the Campus Crusade.
"Just because a person goes to church on Sundays." Krisher said. "he is not necessarily a Christian."
A ONE-TIME professional football player with the Pittsburgh Steelers, and captain of the old Dallas Texans, Krisher credited his accomplishments to his belief in Christianity.
"Many people feel that talk like this is something that would come from a sissy, Krisher said. But if these same people consider sissies Rafer Johnson (Olympic gold medal winner), Bobby Richardson (second baseman of the New York Yankees) and Francis Tarkington (quarterback for the Minnesota Vikings), then they are talking about the type of sissy I would like to be."
was being done in one area of Scotland to help retreived people of a community gain respect during their retirement years.
"The problem is that the family structure today is a two-generation family," he said. "The older group is left out of this structure and isolated."
Prof. Weir said that these problems have caused many people to look forward to retirement with great apprehension. These people felt left out because there was nothing useful for them to do.
As an example of what is being done to correct this problem, Prof. Weir told about the Glasgow Retirement Council.
"DANIEL GRANT, a factory director, saw the need for helping retired people, and almost singlehandedly set up this retirement council."
Prof. Weir said Grant wanted to set up a hobby and crafts shop to occupy their spare time, and a sheltered workshop where they could work and earn a small wage. These two projects were designed to help the elderly people feel that they were again a useful part of the community.
"The hobby and crafts shop proved very successful, but the sheltered workshop ran into stiff opposition from labor unions," Prof. Weir said.
THE GLASGOW Retirement Council also set up a school for people who were approaching retirement age.
"Co-operating with both labor and management in the area, the council has set up a pre-retirement training course," Prof. Weir said.
He said the course, which is taught on seven consecutive Fridays at a nearby jr. college is attended by people who are within two years of retirement. The companies they work for pay them full wages for attending these classes.
PROF. WEIR said that he felt "senior citizen" settlements do more harm than good.
"These places are good in that they build a sense of interdependency," he said, "but they also isolate these people from a normal community."
Students have until tomorrow to drop a course without it showing on university records according to James K. Hitt, registrar.
Tomorrow Final Day For Dropping Course
The student must go to the Dean of the School in which he is enrolled to drop a course.
If a student drops a course after Oct. 12, a record of whether he is passing or failing the course will appear on his transcript. If the student is passing at the time of the drop, a WD or withdrawal will be recorded. If he is failing, the student will receive an F in the course.
GrantsBoostStu ForKUProjects
KU has received $824,850 in grants and contracts for research-related graduate training programs on the campus during the months of July, August, and September, William J. Argersinger, associate dean of faculties for research, announced today.
The funds will support 42 different projects in 19 different departments ranging from aerospace engineering to zoology. Three of the projects have been undertaken for private industry by the KU center for research in engineering science.
One grant to the English department will finance an experiment in the teaching of English composition to college freshmen by a "Correspondence-tutorial" method. Others will make possible studies in botany, child research, chemistry, entomology, geography, electrical engineering, mathematics, meteorology, microbiology, pharamaceutical chemistry, psychology, radiation biophysics, social work, sociology, and speech.
Motorist's Complaint Illustrated by Collision
CHAMPAIGN, Ill.—(UPI)—A motorist stopped yesterday and told state trooper Carl Young, who was clocking drivers with a radar unit, that he had passed a car that was weaving along the road.
The warning did not come soon enough. The car approached, swerved off the road and slammed into the rear of Young's parked auto.
The driver, John N. Norwod, Urbana, Ill., was charged with driving while intoxicated.
exclusively at
diebolt's
the new
K.U.
Booster Cap
843 Mass.
RAW
TOM HEDRICK "The voice of the Kansas Jayhawks" shown wearing the new K.U. Booster Cap now on display at the Kansas Union. SOLD ONLY AT DIEBOLT'S Downtown only $2.95
Jack n'Jill sundae
Snowy marshmallow and dusky chocolate over freshly-frozen Dairy Queen goodness. Start Fall right with Jack n' Jill at . . .
© 1956, NATIONAL DAIRY QUEEN DEVELOPMENT CO.
DAIRY QUEEN
1835 Massachusetts
sundae
DAIRY QUEEN
ARE CATHOLICS CHRISTIANS?
Are the basic tenets of Catholicism the same or different from those of other Christians? Are Catholics logical? Why can't Catholies eat meat on Fridays? Or can they? Why do Catholics drink and smoke? Why isn't drinking or smoking necessarily a sin for Catholics? Are Catholics really different? Was Christ a Catholic?
In an effort to inform those interested in learning about the Catholic Church and what it means, an Inquiry Forum has been set up. The forum consists mainly of a question-answer and discussion session. It is held every Tuesday night at 7:00 at the St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center, 1915 Stratford Road or call Brendan Downey, O.S.B. at VI 3-0357.
---
Schools are
high of thought hard knocks
Only Capezios® are Capezio®
Learn the incomparable lore of Capezios. Cherishing their dance background, they skip back to school with the wittiest, prettiest fashion curriculum.
Black leather $18.95
Royal College Shop
837 Mass. VI 3-4255
e t d / e a - y e - d -
Friday, Oct. 11, 1963 University Daily Kansan
4255
Page 13
S.U.A.
FOLK SINGING FORUM
featuring ..
MODERN FOLK QUARTET
4:30 . . . . today
in the Forum Room of the Union
Refreshments ... free!
Page 14
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Oct. 11, 1963
Official Bulletin
Fulbright Application are to be turned in to 306, Fraser by Oct. 9.
Foreign Students interested in the Olathe Hospitality trip and industrial tour on Oct. 19-20 should sign up today in People-to-People office Kansas Union.
TODAY
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Church, 1010 West Broad Road
IVCF 'Squash', 7:30 p.m., 1213 Kentucky, to the New Testament docu-
torial.
Newman Married Couples 8:30 p.m.
1915 Stratford Road. Student Center.
2115 Stratford Road.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth
SATURDAY
Catholic Mass, 6:45 a.m. St. Lawrence Catholic Church, 6:30 a.m. St. Lawrence Conversions, Spanish at 6:45 a.m.; before the 5 p.m. mass and at 8 p.m.; in English before mass, 4-5 p.m. and 7-8
Parent's Day Open House, 4:30-6:30
St. Lucie High School Student Center,
1915 Strafford Road
Columbus Day Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
SUNDAY
Catholic Masses, 8 a.m. St. Lawrence
Capeel; 9:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. at Fraser
Hall
---
Ends Tonight! Shows at 7:00 & 9:00
Robert Mitchum Elsa Martinelli Jack Hawkins
RAMPAGE
IN COLOR!
Adults 90c Children 50c
BRITAIN'S ACADEMY AWARD WINNER
REFERENCE ACTREPORTS
Now! Ends Sat.
Shows 7:00 & 9:30
Sat. Mat. at 2:00
Joseph E. Levine
presented
FEDERICO
FELLINI'S
1/2
Adults Only $1.00
---
Tonight & Sat.
RAYMILIAND
STARRING IN
EDGAR ALLAN POES
THE PREMATURE
BURIAL
IN COLOR AND PANAVISION
Shows at 7:10
— PLUS —
HELL IS FOR HEROES.
Steve McQueen in
Shows at 8:50 — BONUS —
"INVASION of the STAR CREATURES"
Open 6:30—Start 7:00
LISTEN TO
KANSAS
IOWA STATE
AM1320
- WITH TOM HEDRICK ON -
KLWN
1:15 p.m.
FM105.9
SPONSORED BY
STATE FARM INSURANCE & IGA
M. R. Carlson Bill Hogle Paul Hodgeson
Stay tuned for the Jack Mitchell Show and the Scoreboard after the game Broadcast.
Rusty's Hillcrest
Rusty's IGA
Rusty's Northside
BRITAIN'S ACADEMY AWARD WINNER
BEST ACTRESS
Starts Sunday!
LESLIE
CARON
VARSITY ART Attractions
"Sex is not a forbidden word!"
A SHAPED ROOM'
with TOM BELL
BERNARD BROCK CICELY PATRICIA EMLYN & WILLIAMS
THIS IS AN ADULT PICTURE
VARSITY ART Attractions
One or Two Bedrooms
NEW APARTMENTS
$75.00 and $85.00
We are presently decorating these units. Tenants renting now may select wall colors. .drapes. .etc.
All Units Air Conditioned. Carpeted and Have Disposals. Provincial Furniture Available.
PARK PLAZA SOUTH Ph. VI2-3416 1912 W.25th Day or Night
CINEMASCOPE
COLOR IN DELUXE
20
PENCE PER MILE
20th Century Fox
DEBBIE
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STEVE
Amy
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PRODUCTION
THE SECOND
TIME AROUND
COLOR by DE LUXE • CINEMASCOPE
Sunset DRIVE IN THEATRE · West on Highway 40
Starts Sunday
MERVYN LEROY'S production of
Wake Me
When It's Over
CINEMASCOPE
COLOR IN DELUXE
20
ERNIE
KOVACS • MOORE • WARDEN • McCARTHY
and introducing
DICK
screenplay by
RICHARD BREEN
SALVATORE FERRARI
55 DAYS of FLAMING ACTION! HIGH ADVENTURE!
SAMUEL BRONSTON presents
CHARLTON
HESTON
AVA
GARDNER
DAVID
NIVEN
55 DAYS AT PEKING
SUPER TECHNIRAMA $ ^{*} $ TECHNICOLOR $ ^{*} $
FLORA BLOARE-JOHN IRELAND-HARRY ANDREW-LEO GENN-ROBERT HELPMANN-KURT KASNZAR
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PHILIP YORDAN-BERNARD GORDON-VINIERO COLASANTJJOHN MOORE
NICHOLAS RAY-SAMUEL BRONTSTON-ALLIED ARTISTS
Note Times!
Sat. 2:00 - 6:45 - 9:30
Sunday at
2:00 - 4:45 - 7:30
Starts
Adults $1.00
Children 50c
Tomorrow!
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone VI 3-5788
Classified Ads
5788
WANTED
Buy, sell or trade rare American anc
Foreign coins, military equipment,
medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American
Coin Mart, 1025 Mass. tf
FOR SALE
Page 15
Fender Stratocaster guitar and or Fender super amplifier like new. Can be seen at Richardson Music Co. Larry Breeden, 1602 La. VI 3-8544. 10-17
Must sell -1960 Simca 514 sedam -delux
model, Good gas mileage Dr. Call VI
10-17
Late model Edition volleewriter dictating
records for a client call. Call VI 2-3999 after 6 p.m. 10-15
Garage Sale: Desks, book cases, beds,
amps, books, dishes miscellaneous,
and several antiques. Open daily from 1 to
7 p.m. 1240 Ohio. 10-17
HOOOTENANNY. Guitar Music—have fun playing this set of lessons self-taught loose leaf lessons for only $3.00, payment in full with order. Oahu Paching Co. Box 511G, Chelsea. 10-11
For Sale; Stereo and Hi-Fi Diamond needles $1/2 price until Nov. 10—Reg. $9.95 now $4.98. Pettengill-Davis, 725 Mass. 10-16
For Sale: Used Telefunken AM-FM, four band radio—like new. Also, Bogen turntable and preamp. See at Pettengil Davis—725 Mass. 10-16
For Sale: 1963 RCA portable stereo Hi-
Fidelity selen new at $2,500. Guaranteed perfect at
Ray Stoneback's, $29 Mass. (also $149.95
Motorola demonstrator cut to $79.97.
For Sale: 1959 Buick Electra 2-dr., very sharp-$1,000.00, would consider trade for small car. 1523 W. 22nd St. Terr. Call VI .3-5139. 10-16
For sale or trade - 1860 Comet—excellent condition, many extras, phone VI 3-346
For Sale; Classic guitar and case. Fine
sounding instrument, all frets true; Purchased last May. Call VI 2-1328 after 6:00
p.m. 10-14
1956 Ford Two door, V-8; automatic transmission; good condition. Call Ron Trachsel . . . VI 2-9100. 10-14
For sale: Electric guitar and amplifier for sale; dual pickup, tone and volume controls. Also, unamplified guitar. Pat Hardmen - VI 3-5770 at 6:00 p.m.
10-14.
Fox sale — tux suit, white dinner jacket,
extra tux trousers, three tuxirts, ex-
cellent condition, size 39-long, $45.00.
Call VI 3-0800. 10-14
For Sale; Two snow tires practically new. White walls, size 80x14 tubeless, nylon, only $25.00 for two. Call VI 3-4196. evenings. 10-14
For Sale: 1960 WV clean, good condition.
Fair offer will take. Call VI 2-1403. 10-13
For Sale: Schwinn 27" 15 speed racing bicycle - demonstration model - Call John Carnahan or Jim Ash - VI 3-7922. 10-14
New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500 sheets to ream—$.85. Lawrence Outlook. 1005 Mass. tf
Owner leaving town – attractive 3 bedroom ranch in desirable neighborhood. Attached garage, elevator, shipping center. 2617 Belle Haven Drive. Phone VI 3-4364. 10-11
Over 30 modern pistols, riffles and shotguns left. Hundreds of rounds of ammo far below wholesale. Thousands of dollars invested in this collection. All must get See now at 824 Ark. or call VI 3-1110. tf
1657 '98 "98" Oldsmobile convertible; white;
excellent condition; power windows,
steering radio, seat, seat. Catt: Bill Murdoch.
V12-4282. fc
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and review material; formerly known as the Theta calls. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50.
General Psychology study notes. Excellent study aid for all sections. $4.00 per copy. Call VI2-9378. tf
1957 MGA frictgass hardtop, wire wheels, new tires, luggage rack high side screens, 48,000 miles. Will consider VW bus in trade. Jack Hibler. VI2-1200. 10-11
Sure= Everything in the net field at 428.113.176.50 $ have more cents, 1218 Comm. VT 3-2921;
ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLEANERS New Electrolux and a limited number of rebuilts, fully guaranteed. All parts available. Equipment picked up for service and delivered. Frank W Cox Manager-1804 Barker. Call MI 3-2377-12-13
AUTO IABILITY INSURANCE, also collision and comp. Most risks covered; under age drivers; scooters; motor bikes; motor cycles; rates avail. Brown Realty Co. Ph. VI 2-0179 — Realtors · 7291/2 Mass. tf
Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
West Side Presbyterian Church, 6th and Mass., welcomes you to attend Sunday services at 11 a.m. and Sunday classes at 9:45 a.m. 10-23
MISCELLANEOUS
PARTY TIME: School house available for private parties, dances, meetings, prepared with piano, tables, chairs, freshened bar and coolers. V1-743-431 Forrest.
Save on food costs. Rent a frozen food
ecker. Meat for sale. Budget plan. Trippett
Lockers, 6th and Miss. Call VI 3-
3250. 10-11
FOR RENT
Large apartment freshly decorated. Suitable for 3 or 4 boys. Also, furnished duplex apartment for boys. Call VI 3-6661. VI 3-1181 or VI 3-8562. 10-17
Large clean, sleeping room. Share kitchen with two girl graduate students.
Large screened porch to hang laundry.
Private telephone extension. 940 Miss.
For Rent: Available Nov. 1. furnished
sleeping room for boys. Linens furnished
and laundered. $25 per month. 1328 Ohio.
Mrs. Tipton. 10-16
Student to room in 6 room apartment
annually. Valid until December 31,
month, utilities paid. VI 2-3008. JCFT
For rent: Two room furnished apartment with garage. Very nice. All utilities paid. $58. 144 Vermont (15th and Vermont) VI 3-6328. 10-14
For Rent: Free rent for couple or elderly apartment
Calif Vt 3-1842 evenings. 10-14
University Daily Kansan
For Rent: Furnished apartment with shower for two KU men or couple. Pri- nate room in the campus and stadium—$50 per month. Inquire at 1005 Miss. Call VI 3-4349. 10-6
For Rent: Furnished 2 bedroom apartment — air-conditioned, washer — 1147
meals $65.00 per month, other amenities $65.00 and up. T. A. Hemphill.
VI 3-3902. 10-16
For Rent: One spacious nicely furnished room, single or double. Call VI 2-2996 or VI 2-9466, 1400 Tenn. 10-1⁴
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results!
Available now for lease (12 months).
Two bedroom apartment, close to campus and downtown. $75. Santee Apartments, 1123 Indiana, VI 3-2161. tf
Vacancies in contemporary home with outside swimming pool for young man. Vacancy includes patio, $45.00 per month. Home.ooked dinner. If Call VI 3-9835. 10-15
1 bedroom house, completely furnished,
air-conditioner, near downtown, no pet!
booking required for couple, and campus. Clean.
Call VI 3-0554 before 9 a.m. or after 7 p.m. tf
BUSINESS SERVICES
Tutoring by English graduate students—will help with themes, grammar, punctuation or any other special requests. Call VI 3-8175. tf
Typing: Profesional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter with carbon ribbon (inked ribbon) questions vocabulary symbols and call Sign V1 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. or before 7:30 a.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley 408 West 13 Street. 10-11
Let your pre-schoolers join the morning
Street. VI 2-388s. 10-14
Business Service: Tutor - Native German to give lessons in German. Call VI 253-6900, email tutor@businessservice.com
10-11
MILKIENKS SOS—always first quality typing on LB.M. Carbon ribbon machines, also also for tape transcriptions, hours 7 a.m. 12 p.m. ~1021! Mass. Phone VI-3-5920. **tt**
Experienced typist for theses and term
assignments. Mail resume to:
Mrs. Fulcher, 103 Miss. VI-3588. iff
Efficient and experienced typer would like to do work in home. Prompt and guaranteed work. Call at any time VI3-2651. 10-31
Typing: Dissertations theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines; 35 special symbols, carbon ribbon instruments and service. Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI2-1584 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI3-1584 tf
Typing; Desertations, theses, manuscripts,
term papers typed. New Smith-Corona
machines; 35 special symbols, carbon
ribbon—if desired. Prompt, efficient service.
Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI 2-1546
or Mrs. Dorothy MOI VI 3-3057.
Friday, Oct 11, 1963
Do you need a tutor for Chinese? If
you are in high school or college, if
If not in leave name and number. 10-16
Johnny's Super Oil - Bay Products - 23rd and Ousdahl. All work guaranteed. Free pick-up and delivery. Call VI 3-9691. Oil-Lube-Wash and Polish. 10-14
Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 2017 Yale, VI 2-1648.
Dressmaking-alterations, *formals* and
gowns. Ola Smith, 939$\frac{1}{2}$ Manf
VI 3-5283
TYPING
Typing, my home. Experienced, electric
V2-18728. Lois Clark, 1301 Vermont
V2-18728. 10-14
New electric typewriter. Reasonable rates for themes, term papers, dissertations, and theses. Mrs. Barta, 1955 Miller Drive, VI 3-6994. tf
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, reports, presentations. Electric Typewriter. Mrs McEldowney. 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 38528- tf8
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
JOE'S BAKERY
new location at
616 West 9th
25c delivery VI 3-4720
Daniel's
- Watch Repair
- Engraving
- Jewelry Repair
Reasonable Prices
Prompt Service
features
Your Service Jeweler is at
BRAKE ADJUSTMENTS ... $.98
STUDENTS
914 Mass. VI 3-2572
LUBRICATION $1.00
Tune-ups use wheel balancing
Motor tune-ups, wheel balancing
**FREE**—one quart of oil with each oil and filter change
-all major brands-
PAGE-CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE
WAGE-CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE
1819 W 23rd VI 3-9684
LEONARD'S
Milliken's SOS
- complete accessories
"the best professional service"
- pipes
- "Smoking is our only Business"
- tobaccos
- General typing service
- 24 hr. answering service
Standard Service
"the best in car care"
706 W. 9th
VI 3-9830
TGIF at the Stables
TGIS too!
Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals
at George's Pipe Shop
Fraternity Jewelry
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER
1021 $ _{1/2} $ Mass., VI 3-5920, 7a.m.-11p.m.
Balfour
- Mimeograph & photo-copying
- Notary public
$8-$20 daily benefit
$300 miscellaneous expense
$400 surgical expense
365 day hospitalization
Kermit Hoffmeier special insurance agent VI 2-0266
LOW COST
727 Mass. VI 3-7164
Pitchers----75c Thursday night at the Purple Pig 810 New Hampshire
Gene Bailey — Mark Patton
HONN'S COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY
ALLAN EASUM LEROY HADL
SPEED QUEEN WASHERS OPEN 24 HRS.
-
JEWELERS
IT'S OK TO OWE RAY
809 Mass.
TYPEWRITERS
NEW AND USED PORTABLES STANDARDS ELECTRICS
Sales — Rentals — Service
See Us Before You Buy
Across from the high school 19th & Louisiana VI 3-9631
Ray Christian
JEWELERS
LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER
725 Mass VL 3-3644
735 Mass. VI 3-3644
A complete line, including,
● Lavaliers ● Guards
● Pins ● Mugs
● Rings ● Crests
FRATERNITY JEWELRY
ACE
STEERING AND RADIATOR SPECIALISTS
Rear Wheel Alignment Dynamic Wheel Balancing Brake & Frt. End Parts Auto Glass Installed
---●---
VI 3-1300
5th & Minn.
HAVING A PARTY?
Ice cold beverages
We are always happy to serve you with
Chips, nuts, cookies
Variety of grocery items
Crushed ice, candy
Ice cold 6 pacs — all kinds
OPEN TO 10 P.M. EVERY EVENING
LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY
516 Vt.
Ph. VI 3-0350
COBWEB the antique shop at the
THERE ARE 3,000 ITEMS caught in the
BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass. VI 3-1044
Fast Car Wash
Minor Tune up
Brake Work
Mufflers & Tail Pipes
DX
FREE PICK-UP & DELIVERY
DX Servicenter
6th & Michigan VI 2-9410
Portraits of Distinction
"A Perfect Christmas Gift"
Portraits of
HIXON STUDIO
Photographer
Bob Blank, Photographer 721 Mass. VI 3-0330
912 Mass. — VI 3-0151
912 Mass. — VI 3-0151
PORTABLES - $49.50 up
SERVICE SALES RENTALS
All Kinds Office Equipment Printing, Mimeographing and Duplicating
Pick up — Delivery
One Stop Service
★ Engine Tune Up
Generator & Starter Repair
Brake Repair
★ Lubrication & Oil Change
WRECKER & ROAD SERVICE
JACK & GUNN'S
SKELLY SERVICE
300 W. 6th
SKELLY
V1 3-9271
Page 16
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Oct. 11, 1963
SUA to Start Lectures On 'Absolutely Anything'
The Student Union Activities (SUA) announced the organization of a new weekly lecture series last night.
The series is entitled the Philosophical Bases of Absolutely Everything (PBOAE) and will deal with how the student and educated person can keep abreast of developments in his own area of study as well as trends in other fields.
ACCORDING TO DON Igelesrud, Minneapolis, Minn., senior, and chairman of the series, the idea for the Lectures began with the observation that most lecture series are too specific. He said the material is of a technical nature and it is difficult for many students outside of that field to understand and relate the lectures to their own areas of study.
These lectures are designed to help the student acquire a basic background in a field and a pattern for learning more about that area. For example, the student may be shown methods of obtaining an understanding of fundamental concepts in the field under discussion and be shown the most practical means of adding to this knowledge and keeping up with new trends in that area.
The need for this type of program, said Igelesrud, is attributed to the "knowledge explosion." This "explosion" is the sudden growth of many complex and varied fields of study. This complexity and variety make it difficult for students to understand any field but their own. Many students simply do not have the time to investigate many subjects extensively, he said.
THE AIM OF THE program is help the student obtain, by careful planning, a well-rounded liberal education.
Lectures will be given by faculty members on diverse fields of human activity.
The first lecture will be at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 22 in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. A topic and speaker have not yet been selected.
O
You don't have to move an inch to get those delicious HOT doughnuts from
THEY DELIVER! 25c charge, $1.00 minimum order.
JOE'S BAKERY
NEW LOCATION
616 W. 9th VI 3-4720
francis sporting goods 731 Massachusetts VI 3-4191
- Elastic cuffs
SKI PARKA
Royal - white - black
$495
- Draw string at waist and head
- Hooded
- SIZES small, medium, large and extra-large
"Everything for the Outdoorsman"
The Faculty Club will sponsor a speech by Richard DeGeorge, professor of philosophy, this Sunday at 5.
Philosophy Professor To Talk at Faculty Club
A buffet supper will follow Prof. DeGeorge's talk. The hosts for the event are Prof. and Mrs. Charles Landesman.
KU has renamed six buildings because their old names are outdated. Others have been renamed in the interest of clarity.
KU Buildings Have New Names
The following names are official:
The Engineering Experiment Station,
known as the Mud Hut, will be called Broadcasting Hall; the Aero
Quonset Hut now is Marvin Annex; the Electronics Research Laboratory and the Electrical Engineering Laboratory have become the Mechanical Engineering Laboratories, North and South; the Fowler Shops are now Fowler Hall, and the Electronics Research Laboratory is the Low Temperature Laboratory.
WEEKEND SPECIAL
NOW
$3.99
PRESS FLATS
DRESS FLATS
Regular price to $6.99
BLACK BROWN MULTI COLORS
Lots of styles and colors
These shoes are tabled for your convenience.
REDMAN'S SHOES
815 Mass. "Where people shop for quality at a price." VI 3-5016
PATRONIZE YOUR KANSAN ADVERTISERS
PETER
PETER, PAUL AND
THE MARY GRANT AT
Catacombs
HOWEVER
The Fabulous
"MISS ANN BREWER"
AND
The FLAMES ARE.
644 Mass. EVERY FRI. & SAT.
es
Sing With the Singers, Clap With the Singers
SINGING
See Story on Page 3
Daily hansan
61st Year, No. 22
Mme. Nhu Blasts US; Cites Liberal Trend
NEW YORK—(UPI)—Mme. Ngo Dinh Nhu, defending the policies of her family in South Viet Nam, has charged that the Kennedy administration apparently "is following the new fashion of liberalism which is much closer to communism than we are."
Mme. Nhu, speaking in a television interview (Meet The Press, NBC) yesterday, said she was led to this conclusion by recent trends in United States policies in her troubled country.
IN FACT, she blamed the present tension between the regime of her brother-in-law, Vietnamese President Ngo Dinh Diem, and the U.S. government on the fact that "we are more strongly anti-communist than you are."
Mme. Nhu, 38, began the second week of her U.S. lecture tour today with three scheduled appearances. She is to have lunch at the New York Times, and later fly to Boston for talks at Radcliffe College and Harvard University in Cambridge.
Trans Van Chuong Will Speak at KU
Trans Van Chuong, father of South Vietnamese first lady Madame Ngo Dinh Nhu, will speak Nov. 11 at KU. Chuong is a strong critic of the Diem regime.
A member of Madame Nhu's staff in New York Friday rejected a joint All Student Council (ASC)-Student Union Activities (SUA) invitation to speak here.
Chuong, like Madame Nhu, is on a speaking tour in the United States. He says that he is trying to counteract the publicity given Madame Nhu's views on the Vietnamese situation.
CHUONG RESIGNED as ambassador to the United States from South Viet Nam in August, presumably in protest against Diem policy toward Buddhists. Madame Nhu and the Diem family are Roman Catholics. Chuong is a Buddhist.
The Wide World Lecture Bureau is charting Chuong's speaking tour. Its midwest representative, Mrs. Ardon Cornwell of Kansas City, called John Stuckey, ASC president, last Friday.
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
During the TV interview, she accused U.S. government agents of making "unofficial" requests to Diem that she be exiled from South Viet Nam. She stressed the fact that they were "unofficial" and was vague about how the alleged requests were relayed to Diem's government.
Monday, Oct. 14, 1963
MME. NIU, in commenting about the religious crisis in her country claimed that contrary to widespread belief Confucianism, not Buddhism is the major faith in South Viet Nam
Buddhist leaders have charged that Diem's family, which is Roman Catholic, discriminates against them. Several Buddhist priests have burned themselves to death in protest.
She said that during her forthcoming trip to Washington she did not plan to see President Kennedy, though it should not be assumed she was "bovocoting" him.
The ambassador, who will leave soon on a nation-wide speaking tour, disagreed with critics who have charged U.S. correspondents with reporting a one-sided picture of the situation in his country.
THE ADMINISTRATION has maintained an official silence about her U.S. visit, which began last Monday night and was scheduled to end in California later this month.
Tran Van Chuong, former South Vietnamese Ambassador to the United States, said in a television interview (Face the Nation) he sees no possibility of victory in the war with the Communists in his country until the Diem regime is overthrown.
"I want to be on record," he said, "that there is no possibility at all of victory against the Communists under the present regime in South Viet Nam."
He said the Diem government must be "changed completely" because it has become "the greatest asset of the Communists."
CHUONG, FATHER of Mme, Dinh Nhu, resigned his post over differences with the policies of President Ngo Dinh Diem.
"I can say that the reporters on a whole have done a very good job of reporting under such circumstances." he said. "I am absolutely sure that the picture is a little darker—little darker is an understatement—is much darker than they could have seen."
UP To Hold Interviews For ASC Candidates
University Party's Campus Council will interview prospective candidates for the All Student Council from 2 until 5 p.m. next Sunday.
The Campus Council, meeting yesterday afternoon, also said that the party's platform for the Nov. 13-14 living district election will be released by Oct.25.
Forum Speaker Explains Council
Changes that could come from the current Ecumenical Council were discussed last night by the Rev. Columban Clinch at a Newman Club Forum.
Father Columban, a KU graduate and currently a teacher at St. Benedict's College in Atchison, gave a brief history of the Ecumenical Council of Nicea to the 21st council opened by Pope John XXIII in October 1963.
Those church officials who are entitled to attend a council are cardinals, patriarchs, primates, archbishops, abbots and bishops, he said.
THE PONTIFF presides over the Council and has the privileges of dissolving the Council at any time.
The decrees of the Council are binding on all Christians but must first be ratified by the Pope before they go into effect, he said.
The universality of the Church was discussed when the floor was opened for discussion. Changing the Mass to the vernacular was one of the proposals. This would mean that the Mass would be given in the language of the country where it is spoken.
POPE PAUL VI has initiated a program of sharing some of the jurisdiction of his office with other members of the church.
Father Columban approved the change to the vernacular because it would further understanding of the Mass by the people.
Father Columban said that the Vatican Council has a duty to promote unity and a closer understanding among all Christians.
Weather
It will be mostly fair today with highs in the upper 80s turning partly cloudy and cooler tonight and Tuesday. Lows tonight are expected to be in the upper 40s to mid 50s.
Carnival-Goers Name Miss Schaberg Queen
By Leta Cathcart
Julianel Schaberg, Topeka junior,
was crowned 1963 SUA Carnival
Queen at the annual SUA Carnival.
Julianel represented Gamma Phi
Beta sorority.
Deborah Galbraith, Wichita junior, was first attendant. Deborah represented Delta Delta Delta sorority.
Mimi Frink, Lawrence sophmore and Kristine Bergman, Webster Groves, Mo., sophomore, tied for second attendant. Mimi represented Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. Kristine represented Delta Gamma sorority.
Triangle fraternity won first place in men's boots with their "Test Your Pill Skill." Phi Kappa Tau won second place with their parody on the "Ben Casey" television show.
The Disciples, a student band, played for about 15 minutes before the presentation of the queen.
Delta Delta Delta sorority won first place in the women's booths with "The Price Is Right." Sigma Kappa sorority's "She Hunt" won second place.
ALPHA KAPPA LAMBDA fraternity won first place in men's skirt division with their presentation of the "Emily Awards." Phi Kappa Psi won second place with "Capun Kangwo'h."
Alpha Omicron Phi won first place in women's skirts with their "Supersurgeon" skit. Their skirt was a take-off on "Ben Casey," "Superman," "The Nurses" and "The Lone Ranger" television shows. Delta Gamma won second place in womens skirts with "Where Are I?" commenting on the demolition of Fraser Hall.
Milling crowds, shot glasses in hand and signs around their necks, shifted from one booth, laughing and playing the games.
Catsup-splattered Phi Kappa Paus on stretches advertised their booth, the parody on the "Ben Casey" television show. A surgeon accompanied the screaming patient, equipped with a fake scalpel.
SIGNS ADVERTISING the booths lined the stairway walls up to the Union Ballroom, where most of the booths were set up. A few of the skits were presented in the Union cafeteria.
This year's "TV Jeebees" main-
ta.ns a 43-year-old tradition of Student Union Activities carnivals. The first carnival was in Robinson Gymnasium in 1920 with the theme of patriotism. The country was then in the midst of the loyalty movement. The booths and skits drew a crowd of about 1,500 persons.
THE CARNIVAL has been shifted from building to building throughout the years. In 1930 it was moved from Robinson to the Union. In 1931 the booths were in Memorial Stadium and the skits were performed in Fraser.
An intramural tourney was combined with booths and skits in the stadium in 1935. After 1935, the carnival was discontinued until 1940 when the the SUA and YWCA joined forces and presented it in Hoch auditorium.
In 1944, the carnival was moved to the Military Science Building where it stayed until 1953 when SUA moved the carnival to the Union.
HOLLYWOOD
WESTERN HOLLYWOOD ATHLETICS
PRESENTED BY THE BOXING CLUB OF NEWCASTLE
Julianel Schaberg
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Oct. 14, 1963
Pick Up Diamonds
"I believe that this nation should commit itself to achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to Earth."
— President John F. Kennedy
May 25,1961
With these words, the President launched the nation on its last remaining frontier. America found another goal; somewhere else to explore; an unknown region to be mapped and tamed. In short, America found another dream.
This nation has decided to spend about $40 billion to see what's out there and it's a good investment. America and Americans have found somewhere to go, and that place is space.
America is a strange nation on this planet. It seems to have a constant, driving need for some sort of material goal. There just has to be a place where an American can go and do what no other human has ever done before. Then the whole nation can feel enormously proud and then set out to do something even better.
AMERICA THRIVES on competition. Without it, we just aren't interested. Everything we do must have the thrill of the chase. If one takes X number of Americans and says, "Okay, guys, let's go to the moon!" reactions will vary from minor enthusiasm to absolute apathy. But take the same group of Americans and say, "Okay, guys, let's beat the Russians to the moon!" and then you have something. You have an entire nation ready to do a job and do it now.
America has several other little quirks, too, about her new frontiers. She won't settle for sending a machine out to do a man's job. Most authorities agree it would cost us considerably less to put a machine on the moon and settle for that. However, we won't settle for that. We have to send a man just so a man will be there, and then come back and tell us what it was like.
Finally, America likes to do it herself. Somehow, the edge is taken off if we have help from anyone else. Somehow, the pride is mostly gone.
Two years ago, America embarked upon her last frontier and she loved it. It was her hardest frontier and she could not know what lay ahead. These two years have brought us our money's worth in all of our fabulous successes and heartbreaking defeats. They have brought us our money's worth in the knowledge that we started
out behind and have since steadily gained on and even surpassed the competition. Add to that, the fact that we did it ourselves. Here you have no small source of pride to the American people. It's a badly needed source of pride, too.
LAST WEEK, ALL the pride, thrill, fun, and excitement came crumbling down when Kennedy decided it might be nice to take the Russians along.
I would be the last to deny that a program of this sort would not be beneficial to the world at large. There might be a thaw in the cold war and it would open a new era in world cooperation, perhaps. But, somehow, the whole thing seems to be a little less fun. There isn't quite as much in what we have accomplished in the past two years. Personally, I'm disappointed.
Kennedy succeeded in reversing himself last week. In the process, he may have brought a dream down around our ears. Already, the process has set in.
The House Appropriations Subcommittee already has pared the proposed budget for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration in the aftermath of the speech. And further slashes may be in prospect. (Since this was written, the House forbade a joint moon-shot.-Ed.)
ONE FRANK SPACE scientist sums up the current state of mind of many Americans since that speech. Time magazine quotes him as saying, "This winning stuff, this getting there first, has lost its edge. The grandstands are emptying. Now the time has come to ask who did the most sophisticated thing. Not who went to Africa first, but who picked up the diamonds."
In that speech last week, Mr. Kennedy asked, "Why should man's first flight to the moon be a matter of national competition?"
Why, Mr. Kennedy? Because the American people would like to get there first. We have a long history of getting there first, and now, for the first time in years, we have someplace to go. We think we've done rather well in only two short years, but we've been second. Second to orbit a satellite. Second to orbit a man. The second longest flights. It gets a little tiring, but it makes us work harder.
Let's get there first,Mr. Kennedy. Just for the fun of it, let's go AND pick up the diamonds.
The People Say...
Enlightened Criticism
Editor:
It was my pleasure (at long last) to read the review of "Emperor Jones" in Thursday's Oct. 10, Kansan. I have been waiting on what would seem to have been "bated breath" for three and a half years to read, just once, your "reviews" and find something other than a list of credits and a slightly altered version of the original plot line in them.
The young lady who wrote the review of "Emperor Jones" is to be most highly commended for an honest and forthright comment. Whether or not her remarks are valid is neither here nor there, although it seems that her insight into and acquaintance with O'Neill's works certainly increased her ability to write an intelligent critique of the show. That someone on the Kansan staff actually stuck their neck out is the one thing that defends all the shortcomings of inexperienced reviewers.
Heretofore, a Kansan review was one of two things. It was, on the one hand, completely negative and dogmatic (and it seems that it is so much easier for the Kansan to be completely something), in which case our roving reviewer could feel free to lash out at anything up to and including the length of intermissions.
Or, on the other hand, our ace reviewer "liked" the show he had seen, and because he had liked it so much, he thought it might be fun to share the story with us, his devoted readers, and so he would retell the story to us—the whole story from the beginning to the end of the 14th act, and then would add, discerningly, that the music
was sure "good," and the costumes were sure "nice," and how in the world all those people got on one stage, he didn't know, but just so we would know how many there were, why, heck, he'd list all the people in the show and all their home towns and ages and classifications at KU and their alpha numbers, ad infinitum, until shucks, there wasn't any more room to write his own views about the show.
Three long cheers for the Kansas's first attempt at enlightened criticism.
Sylvia Anderson
Chicago, Ill., junior
* * *
Information or Headlines?
Editor:
After hearing Prof. Pringsheim's courageous and humane talk on the conditions in South Viet Nam on Wednesday of this week, at the Current Events Discussion meeting, I was more than amazed to note today that a large number of the people who attended this meeting, and who seemed moved by the dilemma in that particular area, were utterly enthusiastic about the invitation extended to Madame Nhu by this University.
As is generally known, the Diem regime is oppressive and corrupt and upholds all those ideals which are in direct contrast to the American creed. Furthermore, the position of the U.S. government has become extremely difficult. Because of the lack of other South Vietnamese leaders, the U.S. is forced to continue supporting the Diem regime, which is so hated by the population that about 300,000 South Vietnamese secretly cooperate with the Communists.
"But we do not sympatize with her." may be the argument. "We want to question her fiercely which is our right." This is true, we have the right to do so, but will the advantage, the personal satisfaction we derive from seeing her, outweigh the disadvantage which will be the result of this invitation?
What is our real motivation? This I think we should ask ourselves more often, not only in connection with this particular invitation, but more frequently when loyal citizens are forced (hopefully by their conscience) to make an evaluation on matters which are vital to the national interest as well as to humanity at large.
Furthermore, is Madame Nu really wanted for interrogation? Are we so anxious to see her take a stand or are we so excited because she makes the headlines now as frequently as did Christine Keeler?
How can the U.S.A. win the support of the population? This is the main problem concerning the intended defeat of the Communists. Surely this effort on the part of the American government, on the part of American soldiers and special missions will not prosper by letting the South Vietnamese know that American universities invite Madame Nhu.
The South Vietnamese are Buddhist; the Diems are Catholic. The South Vietnamese are poor; the Diems made them so and are rich.
If this brief personal opinion should result in just a few fruitful arguments wherever students meet, I will have achieved my purpose: to call attention to the necessity of responsible living.
Annemarie Hoffman Germany junior
JOHN BIRCHERS ARE THE KIND OF PEOPLE WE NEED IN POLITICS
BUT I'VE NOW AGREED WITH AN ANTI-BIRCH SPEECH
WELL, SORT-OF PARTLY THAT IS
RS.-IN A MANNER OF SPEAKING
RIGHT-WING EXTREMISTS
©1963 HERBLOCK
THE WASHINGTON POST
Carrying Goldwater On Both Shoulders
BOOK REVIEWS
NICHOLAS NICKLEBY, by Charles Dickens (Everyman's Library); BARNABY RUDGE, by Charles Dickens (Everyman's); MARTIN CHUZZLEWIT, by Charles Dickens (Everyman's).
Three lesser-known novels by Dickens still have not achieved that fame known as "being in paperback." But in the excellent Everyman's format they are available in inexpensive hardback.
There is no reason why these should be classed as lesser-known, actually. Each has its special merit. "Nicholas Nickleby" is a long, somewhat involved tale in the picaresque tradition, with enough episodes that one critic suggests it could have appeared as another set of "sketches." (Bear in mind, of course, that Dickens' novels originally appeared serially.)
Nicholas is the son of a poor but respectable country gentleman, and his adventures, in Copperfieldian tradition, take him to boy's school, to a theatrical troupe, to life as a clerk and merchant and to a successful marriage. The book was early Dickens, and it is good Dickens.
"Barnaby Rudge" is one of two historical novels by Dickens, and, like the other, "A Tale of Two Cities," it deals with the 18th century revolution, specifically the Gordon Riots. Its hero is scarcely in the proper tradition, for he is a halfwit youth of 23 or so who has a pet raven. It also is an early novel, and it reflects the author's youthful zest (as "Our Mutual Friend" reflects old age and disillusionment).
For Americans, perhaps "Martin Chuzzlewit" is of greatest interest, and perhaps it should be. Martin is an emitre to America, and his America is almost as weird as the lands to which Gulliver traveled. The book reflects Dickens' own disgust and annoyance with that new thing called America, and one should note that part of the story takes place in a swamp called Eden.
This book is more savage, more satirical, more gloomy, perhaps, than most other books by this frequently savage, satirical, and gloomy man. It is a document that belongs in the tradition of works by European travelers to the rough land across the seas.
Dailij 11ahsan
111 Flint Hall
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Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
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University Daily Kansan
Page. 3
Hootenanny Audience Beats Seats While Performers Play the Music
Hoch Auditorium seats became bongo drums as the Hootenanny began Friday night.
And while the audience of about 3300 listened in Hoch Auditorium, demonstrating students held their own Hootenanny on the steps of Snow Hall and at the Campanile.
Monday, Oct. 14, 1963
Enthusiasm for the show increased as the performances proceeded. One member of the audience said "the show never got off the ground." However, others were very enthusiastic.
KNOB LICK Upper 10,000, the first group to perform, played Train 45, an instrumental imitating the increasing momentum of a train. To gain this effect, Peter Childs, one of the members, used a "dobro," a guitar that gives the sound of an electric guitar. Dwain Story, the spokesman of the group, said the dobro was popular in the 1920's, "but Pete still has one."
The Modern Folk Quartet, who does its own four-part arranging, collects songs from everywhere, Tad Diltz said in an interview after the show.
Lynn Gold was the second performer. Although she had trouble tuning her guitar, she received somewhat enthusiastic response for her songs. Among others, she sang "Bonnie Lad" and a Yiddish song about a rabbi. The audience clapped to the rhythm of the latter song.
Some of The Knob Lick's other numbers consisted of a medley of songs about women, and "Pretty Polly."
IMMEDIATELY before the intermission, the audience joined in on "Michael. Row Your Boat Ashore."
CHIP DOUGLAS, another member of the Modern Folk Quartet, said this performance was not tiring because they only performed twenty minutes.
Cyrus Faryar, spokesman for the group, said the KU audience was very responsive, and therefore stimulating to the group.
Bessie Griffin and the Gospel Pearls began their performance with "Got the Whole World in His Hands." Their other numbers included "I Believe" and "As the Saints Go Marching In." Bessie Griffin, the leader, presented a striking appearance in a bright orange gown.
Dr. Louis Gottlieb, member of the Limelighters, was master of ceremonies for the Hootenanny. He directed the group singing at the close of the program. 'The audience sang "Keep Your Hand on the Plow," several improvised verses of "Hey, li, li, li," and "We Shall Overcome," the song usually connected with the civil rights movement in the United States.
The demonstrating students numbered about 40. After the Campus Police discovered the impromptu performers, they retired to the Campanile and continued singing.
Quartet Guests Of SUA Forum
The Modern Folk Quartet sings what it likes to sing, but thinks that it is representative of what the vast majority of their audiences also like.
The Modern Folk Quartet, who performed at the Hootenanny Friday night, were guests at the Folk Singing Forum Friday afternoon. The Forum was sponsored by SUA.
Members of the audience were encouraged to ask questions. Many of the questions were concerned with the "blacklisting" of Peter Seegers from the ABC Hootenanny show because of his allegedly leftist leanings.
MANY OF THE questions were concerned with whether "Republican" folk songs had ever been written. Many members of the audience felt that folk singing was social protest in nature.
The MFQ emphasized that they were entertainers and musicians, not politicians.
The MFQ made passing comment on the editorial riding Hootenannies and folk music. This editorial appeared in the University Daily Kansas prior to the performance.
Cyrus Faryer, spokesman for the group, said the writer was inadecquately informed. He added, however, that if the writer only intended to be funny, he "succeeded beyond his wildest dreams."
THE GUITAR TROLLS
THE MODERN FOLK QUARTET—(left to right) Cyrus Faryar, Jerry Yester, Chip Douglas and Tad Ditlz, sang in Friday night's Hootenanny in Hoch Auditorium. Also appearing were Bessie Griffin and the Gospel Pearls, Lynn Gold, The Knob Lick Upper 10,000 and Louis Gottlieb.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Oct. 14, 1963
Alpha Gamma Delta Anticipates Establishing New Chapter Here
A new sorority may be established on the KU campus.
Emily Taylor, dean of women, said that two national officers of Alpha Gamma Delta have been invited by the Panhellenic Council to visit Lawrence some time in November. They will meet with administrators, the Dean of Women's staff, and the Panhellenic Council to discuss "planning, arrangements, and timing."
JO LYNNE TALBOTT, Overland Park senior and Panhellenic rush chairman, said that no provisions had been made for a new sorority to participate in rush this February. "There is a possibility that a new sorority could be established next year," she said.
Dean Taylor said that it would be at least two years before a new sorority could be started.
Mrs. J. B. Stroup, assistant dean of women and adviser of the Panhellenic Council, said that Alpha Gamma Delta alumnus have been in contact with the Dean of Women's office for some time. "With the increasing enrollment, there is a definite need for expansion of the Greek system," she said. "We have certainly not discouraged any sorority interested in establishing a chapter here."
MRS. STROUP said she thought the sorority has taken an option on land near the Tau Kappa Epsilon and Lambda Chi Alpha houses.
Canadian Contralto Begins Concert Series
A Canadian contralto will appear tonight as the first in a series of five performances sponsored by the University Concert Course.
Miss Maureen Forrester is the guest singer. The program will start at 8:20 in the University Theatre.
Students will be admitted free upon presentation of student identification cards at the box office, according to Thomas Gorton, dean of the School of Fine Arts.
According to Dean Taylor, Alpha Gamma Delta had a chapter at KU which closed in the 1930's, probably due to the depression. Preference for a new chapter would be given to a sorority which has previously been established here.
Dean Taylor said that there are no Alpha Gamma Delta chapters
presently on Kansas college campuses.
One of the main problems in establishing a new sorority would be rushing. There are several methods which could be used: rushing by alumnus, by sorority members from other campuses, or by members of other KU sororities.
Epic Poem Dramatization To Run for Three Nights
A dramatization of the narrative poem "John Brown's Body" will open the KU Experimental Theatre series Thursday, Oct. 17.
The Pulitzer Price winning poem by Stephen Vincent Benet will feature four principal actors: Richard Kelton, Miami, Oklahoma, junior; George Bradley, Pittsburg, Kansas, graduate student; Marcia Dalen, Minneapolis, Minn., graduate student, and Nancy Vunovich.
"John Brown's Body" is an epic poem, and like others of its type, is a series of poems dealing with many aspects of life, set against the background of the Civil War.
Benet uses the character of John Brown, the raging abolitionist who became a martyred symbol of a cause, as a stepping stone to an account the war times.
Other symbols, in the form of the four principal characters, are used to reveal this clouded moment in American history.
THE POEM BEGINS it's account of the Civil War with Brown's attack on Harper's Ferry and continues telling the story through the eyes of two families, the aristocratic Wingates, who are determined to preserve their way of life on their southern plantation are contrasted with the Jack Ellyats, who are equally determined about the Northern cause.
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Tickets for the production are on sale at the University Theatre box office in Murphy Hall.
The play will be presented in Swarthout Recital Hall Thursday through Saturday nights.
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Page 5
Funeral Atmosphere in Dressing Room Mitchell Blames Preparation
A funeral home is not a very happy place. And neither was the KU dressing room after the Jayhawks suffered a 14-17 defeat at the hands of the Iowa State Cyclones here Saturday.
Iowa State broke a 7-7 tie early in the fourth quarter, going ahead, 14-7. KU quarterback Steve Renko then directed a 64-yard drive to the Cyclone goal line, with fullback Ken Coleman carrying the final seven yards into the end zone on the 12th play of the series. Gary Duff's kick again tied the game.
"WE DID A very, very poor job of preparation for this game." Coach Jack Mitchell said in the gloomy KU dressing room after the game.
A 65-vard pass play from Renko to Ron Oelschlager carried to the ISU eight-yard line, but the threat stopped there as three passes and a field goal attempt failed.
"Their option play and the running pass were the two deciding factors, and we were not prepared to stop them," Mitchell said. "We had worked on them all week, but evidently not hard enough or long enough."
An Iowa State field goal with 1:20 to go in the game put the Cyclones ahead to stay.
The Cyclones completed nine of 15 passing attempts for 133 yards. This included a four-for-four passing performance by halfback Dave Hoover. Three of Hoover's passes helped set up the winning field goal, and the other went 11 yards for the second Iowa State touchdown.
"They did everything we expected them to do. They are a sound, well-coached team, and they beat us, soundly and capably. We didn't deserve to win.
"I WAS QUITE disappointed with our pass defense," Mitchell said. "We just couldn't seem to contain their passing game."
"They (I-State) felt they could win, and we were completely inadecute.
I don't think the boys were flat. They were up for the game. Maybe we are just no better than that.
"OUR OFFENSIVE maneuvers looked ordinary and unimaginative," he said. "They (iowa State) were committing themselves on the outside, and we couldn't take advantage of it."
"Everytime we were in position to do anything, we couldn't do it."
"My biggest mistake was not driving the ball in after that interception. It was my mistake."
Mitchell was referring to George Worley's fourth-quarter interception and runback to the Cyclone 10-yard line following the second KU touchdown.
ON THE FIRST play, Mitchell called for a pass which was intercepted by Hoover. Iowa State then marched downfield to score the winning field goal.
The Renko-to-Oelschlager 65-yard pass with 33 seconds remaining in the game put the Jayhawks in position to tie or go ahead.
"We wanted to try the fake field goal pass and then the bootlegs," Mitchell said.
Loud boos arose from the crowd when Duff and Renko took their positions for the attempted field goal fake and a five-yard illegal procedure penalty was charged against the Jayhawks before the play was executed.
Mitchell said he did not think the crowd was responsible for the mix-up which caused the penalty.
KU Runners Beat Chicago
The KU cross country team won its 19th consecutive dual meet and second of the season Saturday against the Chicago Track Club, 18-45, in a meet at Chicago.
University Daily Kansan
Paul Acevedo finished first for KU with a time of 14:26. Herald Hadley was second in 14:32 and Chicago's Jim Peterson was third in 14:38.
Jown Lawson (14:41) placed fourth and George Cabrera placed fifth in 14:44
AFTER THE FAKE field goal pass and two other passes fell incomplete, Duff was sent in for a field goal attempt from the 20-yard line. The kick was no good, and Iowa State downed the ball for one play to end the game.
KU meets Drake here Saturday in a dual meet at the Lawrence Country Club golf course.
"You can't altogether blame the kicker in a situation like this," Mitchell said. "The center, the holder and the whole team figures in the play. You can't say Duff lost the game, and I know you won't."
Coleman, playing his usual fine offensive and defensive game, scored both KU touchdowns, but was thrown for the first loss of his college career early in the first quarter.
The big senior fullback lost one yard on the third play of the game. Armand Baughman, the other senior fullback, was thrown for his first loss in the Syracuse game two weeks ago.
"I was sorry it happened," Coleman said, "but it was my own fault. I just couldn't get back."
Clay Stapleton, coach of the Iowa State football team, had lost to KU the last five years. With less than a minute to play, Stapleton was beginning to think his team's three-point lead would disappear and the Jayhawkers would add No. 6 in the series between the two schools.
"We had been a 'hard-luck' football team the last couple of years." Stapleton said in the dressing room
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"I was telling myself, if that boy (Gary Duff, KU's place-kicking specialist) kicks that field goal, I'm quitting coaching," I seriously meant it, I was telling myself.
Monday, Oct. 14, 1963
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At the same time Stapleton was worrying about the KU field goal effort which was unsuccessful, the Cyclone coach's own field goal kicker was resting on the sidelines after booting what appeared a few minutes earlier to clinch the victory for Iowa State
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IF you desire to be associated with a research center internationally recognized, small enough to give attention to individual growth and advancement and at the same time part of a larger organization offering many benefits, such as diverse research projects appealing to particular interests, freedom to exchange ideas and results, and recurring opportunities for higher positions either here or elsewhere:
IF your objective is one or all of these:
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IF these are your goals, then join us and advance your career in challenging basic and applied research on the derivatives, reactions, structure, and general physical and chemical properties of organic chemical raw materials.
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Or write to
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Oct. 14, 1963
Woody Herman and Band Here
Plans have been announced for the "Oread Jazz Festival — 1964" which will be held on April 25 in the Kansas Union and Hoch Auditorium.
Mike Bush, Glendale, Mo., senior and chairman of the SUA committee for the concert said invitations would be sent this Saturday to more than 500 colleges and universities in the U.S. to enter the festival competition.
BUSH also announced that Woody Herman and his band would be here for the festival. Herman will act as a judge while the members of his band will hold a special clinic for students interested in music and jazz playing. The band will also give a concert at the festival.
"We are sending invitations to colleges and universities which have a school of music," Bush said. "There is also one other requirement: The school must be coed or all male. No women's colleges or universities will be asked."
Bush said every state in the country would have at least one of its schools invited to enter a group. If a group wishes to participate
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"The semi-finals on Saturday will run from 10 a.m. until 5 p.m.," said Bush. "From 6 p.m. until 7:30 p.m. we will hold a banquet for all the participants and the judges. The finals will begin in Hoch at 8 p.m. and last until 11 p.m. Tickets will be $1.50 and will entitle the student or holder entrance to the semifinals and finals."
in the festival it must make a recording of its music. The recording should be eight to ten minutes long. The group would then send the recording to KU to have it judged in the preliminaries.
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and Saturday Review magazines; Creed Taylor, chief artist and repertoire man for Verve Records in Los Angeles; Matt Benton, of the Kansas State University music department and director of the Kenton Clinics; Robert Share, director of the Berkly School of Music, Boston, Mass., and George Salisbury, instructor and band leader of the Kansas City Conservatory of Music.
The semi-finals and the finals will be held on April 25. During the day, the groups will play for 20 minutes in the Union. After hearing the 15 groups, the judges will narrow the competition to five. They will participate in the finals to be held that evening in Hoch Auditorium.
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The judges for the finals will be Woody Herman, Martin Williams, critic and essayist for Downbeat
IIII
1. Excuse me, sir. I'm conducting a poll for the college newspaper,
a wonder if I might ask you a few questions?
Be my guest.
10
I'll put this on the back cover.
2. In your opinion, what are some of America's most significant achievements in the past 50 years?
3. Let me put it this way. During the last half century what new ideas have led to important benefits for the American people?
Well, uh – there’s the two-platoon system.
Huh?
TOM SCHUMANN
5. Give it a try.
Now you're getting tricky.
A man in a black shirt is hugging another man who is holding a tablet.
I'm sure everyone would agree they've been useful. But isn't there something with a bit more social significance that comes to mind?
There certainly is. There's Group Insurance, the principle of which is to help
Well, speaking off the top of my head, I might say stretch socks.
4. I'll rephrase the question. Since 1912, what developments can you think of that have made the lot of the working man easier?
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EXCEPTIONAL TYPISTS, $3-$4 HOUR
Men or women, college students preferred, up to $140 week plus some overtime if desired. 12 positions open, three shifts. Most class schedules can be accommodated. Work involves re-typing high school yearbooks on an electric typewriter keyboard with certain additional functions, some to do with manual operations at the keyboard and others with slight editing and following of pre-set styles. High school journalism or yearbook experience helpful. Must be exceptional in spelling. Only the very brightest and fastest students should apply.
Most weeks will run from 20 hours up to 35, with possible 40 hours during peak of season January through March. An 80 w.p.m. typist should make at least $3.65 per hour, more if exceptionally accurate. Work starts Nov. 1.
Write P.O. Box 64, Shawnee-Mission, Kansas, for interview and testing appointment. Will give typing, spelling, and intelligence quotient tests. Able students should make around $2500 between Nov. 1 and April 1 without interfering with studies. Plant located in Mission, Kansas, within driving distance of KU campus.
-Classified Ads-
FOR RENT
Nicely furnished apartment between town and KU, very reasonable rent. Off street parking. Prefer married couple. Call either I V 2-0121 or I V 3-4445. 10-18
Large apartment freshly decorated. Suitable for 3 or 4 boys. Also, furnished duplex apartment for boys. Call VI 3-6661. VI 3-1181 or VI 3-8562. 10-17
Large clean, sleeping room. Share kitchen with two girl graduate students. Large screen porch to hang laundry. Private telephone extension. 940 Miss. 10-15
Student to room in 6 room apartment across from chancellor's house. $35.00 per month, utilities paid. VI 3-2008. 10-17
For Rent: Available Nov. 1. furnished sleeping room for boys. Linens furnished and laundered. $25 per month. 1328 Ohio. Mrs. Tipton. 10-16
For Rent: Furnished 2 bedroom apartment — air-conditioned, washer — 1147 Tenn. $90.00 per month, other apartments $65.00 and up. T. A. Hemphill VI 3-3902. 10-16
For Rent: Furnished apartment with shower for two KU men or couple. Private entrance. All utilities paid, close to campus and stadium—$50 per month. To quare at 1005 Miss. Call VI 3-4349. 10-16
For Rent: Free rent for ecouple for apartment bldg. Call VI 3-9824 evenings. 10-14
For Rent: One spacious nicely furnished room, single or double. Call VI 2-2996 or VI 2-4666, 1400 Tenn. 10-14
Vacancies in contemporary home with outside swimming pool for young man. Private entrance, utilities paid. $45.00 per month. Home cooked dinner if desired. Call VI 3-9635. 10-15
1 bedroom house, completely furnished, air-conditioner, near downtown, no pets. Also one 3 bedroom furnished apartment for couple. Clean. Call VI 3-6544 before 9 a.m. or after 7 p.m. tf
FOR SALE
1957 Bel-Air Chevrolet, 8-cylinder hard top, radio and heater. This car is in 2-condition. Can be seen at 755 N. 7th. Phone VI 3-1319.
2 baby beds, automatic electric sterilizer . . . excellent condition. Phone VI 3-8767
Read this terrific deal—1963 A.H. Sprite. Low mileage. All extras. If you have to see it to relieve it. $1.725.
Fender Stratocaster guitar and/or Fender super amplifier like new. Can be seen at Robertson Music Co. Larry Browne 1602 La. VI 3-8544.
Must sell—1960 Simca 4-dr. sedan—delux model. Good gas mileage. Dictate VI 3-2356.
Late model Edison voicewriter dictating machine, like new condition, priced to sell. Call VI 2-3099 after 6 ppm. 10-15
Garage Sale: Deks, book cases, beds, amps, books, dishes miscellaneous, and several antiques. Open daily from 1 to 7 p.m. 1240 Ohio. 10-17
For Sale: Stereo and Hi-Fi Diamond needles, 12 price until Nov. 10–Reg. $9.95
For Sale; Stereo and Hi-Fi Diamond needles. $12 price until Nov. 10—Reg. $9.95 now $4.98. Pettengill-Davis, 725 Mass.
Will baby Call
For Sale: Use Telefunken AM-FM, four band rail; used like new. Also, Bogen turntable and pickup. See at Pettet Davis—725 Mass. 10-16
For Sale: 1963 RCA portable stereo Hi Fidelity sold new at $139.95—used 6 mo. price; $69.00; unpacked perfect. 46 Ray Stoneback's 129 Mass. (also $149.95 Motorola demonstrator cut to $79.97). 10-16
For Sale: 1959 Builch Electra 2-dr., very sharp—$1,000.00, would consider trade for car. Size 125 W. 22nd St. Tern. Call VI 3-5139. 10-16
For sale or trade—1960 Comet—excellent condition, many extras, phone VI 3-5930. 10-16
For Sale: Classic guitar and case, Fine sounding instrument, all frets true; Purchased last May. Call VI 2-1328 after 6:00 p.m. 10-14
For sale — tux suit, white dinner jacket, extra tux trousers, three tux shirts, excellent condition, size 39-long, $45.00. Call VI 3-0800. 10-14
1956 Ford Two door, V-8, automatic transmission; good condition. Call Ron Trachsel . . . VI 2-9100. 10-14
For sale: Electric guitar and amplifier for sale, dual pickup, tone and volume control. Also, unamplified guitar. Call Pat Hardman — VI 3-5770 after 6:00 p.m. 10-14
For Sale: Schwinn 27" 15 speed racing bicycle in demonstration model — Call John Carnahan or Jim Ash — VI 3-7922. 10-14
New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500 sheets to ream—$8.5 Lawrence Outlook. 1005 Mass. tt
1958 "W7" Oldsmobile convertible; white, excellent condition; power windows, steering, radio, seat, brakes. Four new tires. Will take offer. Call: Bill Murdock VI 2-4282. tt
Over 30 modern pistols, rifles and shotguns. Hundreds of rounds of ammunition below the threshold. Thousands of dolls invested in this collection. All must be seen now at 824 Ark. or call VI 3-1110. tt
General Psychology study notes. Excellent study aid for all sections. $4.00 per copy. Call VI 2-9578. tt
Sure! Everything in the net field at Grant's drive in pet center. Where your $$ have more cents. 1218 Conn. VI 3-2921. tt
ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLEANERS. New Electrolux and a limited number of rebuilds, fully guaranteed. All parts available. Equipment picked up for service and delivered. Frank V. Cox, Manager—1904 Barker. Call VI 3-2377. 12-13
Western civilization notes. All new, complete revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $425 per copy. Call VI 2-1961 for free delivery. tt
Printed biology notes. 70 pages, complete outline of lectures; comprehensive outline and definitions; revised for all classes. Formerly known as the Theta notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50
AUTO LIABILITY INSURANCE, also collision and comp. Most risks covered, under age drivers; scooters, motor bikes, motor cycles; rates avail. Brown Realty Chi. VI 2-0179 — Realtors — 729 Mass. tt
Typewriters, new and used portables standards, electrics, Olympia, Olivetti Royal and Smith Corona portables. Typewriter and adding machine service are
Typewriters, new and used portables,
standards, electrics. Olympia, Olivetti,
Royal and Smith Corona portables. Typew-
writer and adding machine service and
rental. Lawrence Typewriter, 750 Mass.
Call VI 3-3644. tt
Monday, Oct. 14, 1963
University Daily Kansan
Page 7
CLASSIFIED ADS SHOP YOUR
One day, $1.00; three days, $1.50; five days, $1.75. Terms cash. All ads must be called or brought to the University Dally Kansun Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 pm, on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion.
MISCELLANEOUS
-
West Side Fresbayan Church, 6th and
Mass, welcome you to attend Sunday
services at 11 a.m. and Sunday classes
at 9:45 a.m.
10-23
four
turn-
engill-
10-16
eo Hi
6 mo.
cet at
149.95
.97).
10-16
PARTY TIME: School house available for private parties, dances, meetings, refreshment with pino, chairs, chairs, freshment bar and coolers. VI 3-7453 - 431 Forrest.
tt
er. 500
outlook,
tf
BUSINESS SERVICES
white;
windows,
r new
hardock.
tf
Will take in ironing 10 cm a piece. Also
have a hammer. Calf Mrs. James Eberhard. VI S-6343.
Calf Mrs. James Eberhard. VI S-6343.
l shot-
ammo.
of dol-
l must
1 VI 3
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Typing; Desertations, theses, manuscripts,
term papers typed. New Smith-Corona
machines; 35 special symbols, carbon
ribbon—if desired. Prompt, efficient service.
Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI 2-1546
or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI 3-3057.
It's time to make your reservations for the Holiday season. The Thanksgiving dinner will be located in no-contact Maupaintout at the Mall Shopping Center, 711 W. 23rd. VI 3-1211-8.
ANERS.
number of
s avail-
service
Local
3-3277.
12-13
Complete line of soles and heels, laces,
cosmetics and polishes. Have new mery-
tails. Can also pursue pursues.
smoke totes. Burgert's One Day Shoe
Service — 1113 Mass. St.
Let your pre-schoolers join the morning
group at 1701 St.
Street, VI 2-3615
10-14
Excel
.00 per
tf
feld at
your
3-2921.
tf
Tutoring by English graduate students—will help with themes, grammar, punctuation or any other special requests. Call VI3-8175. tf
v, comprehensive,
125 per every t,
complete
outive out,
Theta
y, $4.50.
E, also
covered;
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Reality
for 720
toftables,
Olivetti,
s. Type,
Mass
100 Mass.
tt
Do you need a tutor for Chinese? If
you need VP/VTE tutoring, if not
If not in leave name and number. 10-16
Experienced typist for theses and term
masters. Mail resume to Mrs.
Fulcher, 1031 Miss. VI3-0588,
tt
Johnny's Super Oil—Bay Products—23rd and Ousdaul. All work guaranteed. Free pick-up and delivery. Call VI 3-9691. Oil-Lube-Wash and Polish. 10-14
Dressmaking-alterations, formats and
gowns. Ola Smith, 9391$\cdot$84 Matt
VI 3-5283
MILKIKENS SOS—always first quality typing on LB.M. Carbon ribbon machines.
hours 7 - a.m. tape transcriptions. Office hours 8 - a.m. 12 p.m. $1-022\frac{1}{2}$. Phone VI 3-5920
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, reports, Electric Typewriter. Remainnable Eldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI. 3-8586f.
WANTED
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart, 1025 Mass. tf
Efficient and experienced typer would like to do work in home. Prompt and guaranteed work. Call at any time. VI 3-2651. 10-31
TYPING
New electric typewriter. Reasonable rates for themes, term papers, dissertations, and theses. Mrs. Barta, 1955 Miller Drive, VI 3-6994. tf
Typing; Dissertations theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines; 35 special symbols, carbon ribbon—if desired. Prompt, effusion service. Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI2-164 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI3-1357.
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
Legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577.
Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter, carbon printer. Mail to Charles VI 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley, 408 West 13th. tt
Prompt, neat and accurate work on wide carriage electric typewriter. Journalism, Business and Secretary experience. Charlotte Weber. VI 3-3495. tf
Typing, my home Experienced, electric
V 1-2872, Lois Clark, 1301 Vernon
V 1-104
C
Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 2047 Yale, VI 2-1648.
Thesis Typist. Electric typewriter.
English degree. Prairie Village, NI 12
387010000000000
Phone in your Classified Ad
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
LEONARD'S
Standard Service
"the best in car care"
706 W. 9th
VI 3-9830
JOE'S BAKERY
new location at
616 West 9th
25c delivery VI 3-4720
Milliken's SOS
"the best professional service"
- Notary public
- General typing service
- 24 hr. answering service
- Mimeograph & photo-copying
$1021\frac{1}{2}$ Mass., V1 3-5920, 7a.m.-11p.m.
Need a Ride?
I
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One Stop Service
★ Engine Tune Up
★ Lubrication & Oil Change
WRECKER & ROAD SERVICE
★ Brake Repair
Generator & Starter Repair
SKELLY SERVICE
JACK & GUNN'S
SPEED QUEEN WASHERS OPEN 24 HRS.
SKELLY
Across from the high school 19th & Louisiana VI 3-9631
HONN'S COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY
300 W. 6th
图
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
Portraits of Distinction
"A Perfect Christmas Gift"
HIXON STUDIO
See Us Before You Buy
NEW AND USED
PORTABLES STANDARDS
ELECTRICS
Sales — Rentals — Service
VI 3-9271
TYPEWRITERS
Fraternity Jewelry
Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals
LAWRENCE
TYPEWRITER
735 Mass. VI 3-3644
STUDENTS
735 Mass. VI 3-3644
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER
- tobaccos
Balfour
complete accessories
- pipes
BRAKE ADJUSTMENTS ... $.98
at George's Pipe Shop
727 Mass. VI 3-7164
"Smoking is our only Business"
LUBRICATION $1.00
Motor tune-up, wheel balancing
FREE—one quart of oil with each
oil and filter change
oil major brands
all major brands-
PAGE-CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE
1819 W 23rd VI 3-9694
Daniel's
features
- Watch Repair
- Engraving
- Jewelry Repair
Reasonable Prices Prompt Service
Your Service Jeweler is at 914 Mass. VI 3-2572
DX
Fost Car Wash
Minor Tune up
Brake Work
Mufflers & Tail Pipes
REE PICK-UP & DELIVERY
DX Servicenter
6th & Michigan VI 2-9410
365 day hospitalization
$8-$20 daily benefit
$300 miscellaneous expense
$400 surgical expense
LOW COST
Kermit Hoffmeier special insurance agent VI 2-0266
Pitchers----75c
Thursday night at the Purple Pig 810 New Hampshire
TGIF at the Stables TGIS too!
Gene Bailey - Mark Patton
THERE ARE 3,000 ITEMS caught in the COBWEB the antique shop at the
BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass. VI 3-1044
BLEVINS
701 Mich. VI 3-0581
BIKE REPAIRS
Specialized Service
Parts for All Makes
Authorized Schwinn and
Honda Dealer
HAVING A PARTY?
We are always happy to serve you with
are always happy to serve you
Ice cold beverages
Chips, nuts, cookies
Variety of grocery items
Crushed ice, candy
Ice cold 6 pacs — all kinds
LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY
616 Vt. Ph.VI 3-0350
OPEN TO 10 P.M. EVERY EVENING
SHIRTS FINISHED
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TRAVEL RESERVATIONS NOW!
Make your airline reservations now and be assured of your travel for Thanksgiving and Christmas vacation.
For fast, efficient service call our Mrs. Rose Abels.
Airline and steamship reservations
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
Travel Agency
746 Mass.
VI 3-0152
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Oct. 14, 1963
KU Peace Corps Plans Visits To All Campus Living Groups
The KU Peace Cyrps' Speaker's Bureau has announced plans to talk to every student living group on campus
Carl Kuhman, Topica senior and bureau chairman, said the bureau will send letters to the living groups and will present informal "fireside chats" to each group that accepts.
Kuhman said the bureau traveled several thousand miles to talk to about 20,000 Kansans in high schools and civic groups last year.
"This year we plan to enlarge our
scope to include talks in Missouri and a fuller coverage of the campus."
The bureau's goals are to generate interest and clear up any misconceptions about the national Peace Corps, Kuhlman said.
"We present a 27-minute color film narrated by Dave Garroway which explains the Peace Corps and then our speaker gives a 10 minute talk," he said. "We have few scheduled talks now but we expect to be swamped with requests for speakers by the end of the semester."
AP Executives Hear Journalism Professor
---
Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism, spoke about defamation and invasion of privacy at a meeting of the Associated Press radio and television executives of Missouri held last weekend at Arrowhead Lodge near Bagnell dam.
Also on the program were Carl Sisskind of WIBW, Topeak; Louis J. Kramp, assistant general manager of AP, New York; Frank Gorrie, manager of the Kansas City AP bureau; and William McReynolds of KCMO, Kansas City, Mo.
Official Bulletin
Fulbright Applications are to be turned in to 305 Fraser by Oct_19.
TODAY
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford Rd.
Graduate Discussion Group, 7 p.m. p. St.
Lawrence Catholic, Stratford,
Massachusetts; The Problems of the
Church in South America—Father Jesus
S. Mourne, Parana R. Curtizio, Brazil.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Donforth
K.U. Dames, 8 p.m. Kansas Room,
Union, Tea and Style Show.
KU. Dines
Room
Union, Tea and Style Show.
TOMORROW
TOMORROW Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m., 5 p.m., St.
Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Strufford Rd.
Pi *Sigma Alpha*, 7 p.m., 306 Kansas Union Speakers are Charles Warriner.
SNFA. 7-30, 305 Bailey. Educational
sealer. Still buy membership.
Ray Glad-seltier. Still buy membership.
Catholic Inquiry Forum. 7 p.m. St.
London Catholic Student Center. 1910
Straftford Rd.
Western Civ Discussion. 9 p.m.
St. Louis Catholic Student Center. 1910
Stratford Rd.
Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
ARE CATHOLICS CHRISTIANS?
Are the basic tenets of Catholicism the same or different from those of other Christians? Are Catholics logical? Why can't Catholies eat meat on Fridays? Or can they? Why do Catholics drink and smoke? Why isn't drinking or smoking necessarily a sin for Catholies? Are Catholics really different? Was Christ a Catholic?
In an effort to inform those interested in learning about the Catholic Church and what it means, an Inquiry Forum has been set up. The forum consists mainly of a question-answer and discussion session. It is held every Tuesday night at 7:00 at the St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center, 1915 Stratford Road or call Brendan Downey, O.S.B. at VI 3-0357.
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
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Send your dress and sport shirts to us for expert washing starching (the way you like them) smooth collars and cuffs delivered wrinkle free on separate hangers if you wish.
If you leave your laundry chores to us!
"Quality Guaranteed"
LAWRENCE
launderers and dry cleaners 10th & N.H. V13-3711
"Specialists in Fabric Care"
Daily hansan
Tuesday, Oct. 15, 1963
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
61st Year, No.23
K
HOMECOMING QUEEN CANDIDATES—Front row, left to right, Sherry Zillner, Patricia Behen, Susan Merrick, Patricia Cram, Chestina Barnes, Pamela Rice, Nancy Edwards, Joyce Neaderhiser, and Cindy Snyder. Second row, Karen Vice, Janice Klusener, Nancy Litton, Patricia
Kendall, Dianne Turner, Maryce Fleming, Mary Jo Cecrle, Joan Ashley, and Roberta Smith. Third row, Beverly Nicks, Priscilla Osborn, Rebecca Williamson, Mary Gast, Nancy Keens, Carol Jo Weber, and JoAnne Holbert. (See related story page 5)
Adenauer's 14 Year Reign Ends; Back to Deputy Post in Parliament
BONN —(UPI) —The "Adenauer Era" came to an end at an ond today as the West German chancellor officially retired from the government and returned to his parliamentary seat as a deputy.
"Der Alte," just three months short of his 88th birthday, thanked the German people for their help, then returned to the seat he left 14 years and one month ago today to become the first West German chancellor.
"BUT I WON'T just listen," he promised the Parliament. "I'll talk, too."
In the audience was Economics Minister Ludwig Erhard, the man chosen to succeed Adenauer as chancellor. Adenauer will remain technically head of a caretaker government until Erhard presents his cabinet to parliament tomorrow.
Lima Professors Plan Exchange
Two officials from the national University of Engineering in Lima, Peru, are visiting KU to talk about a cooperative program with ten Midwestern schools.
Dr. Mario Samame, rector, and Jorge Succar, dean of the faculty of industrial engineering, are on tour to become acquainted with some of the schools in the Mid-America State Universities Association (MASUA).
The association is planning an exchange of staff, and possibly of Peruvian students, between engineering schools of MASUA-member institutions and the Latin American university. All Big Eight schools, plus the University of Iowa and Colorado State, are members of MASUA.
The Peruvian officials will also visit Iowa State, Nebraska and Missouri universities.
The exchange project is an outgrowth of a 1963 mission to Peru by G. Baley Price, chairman of the KU mathematics department, and 11 other U.S. engineering and science educators.
Reviewing his years in office—beginning in the days when Germany was a rubble heap and ending when it is the world's second greatest trading nation—Adenauer told Parliament:
"We Germans can again walk with our heads up."
he said the greatest development of his administration was the recovery of friends in the world.
WHEN HE CAME to power, he said, the Germans' name was a curse.
Today, the German name again rings true, he said.
He warned his successors agains trying to make a separate deal with Russia in hopes of reuniting West Germany with Communist East Germany.
"The solution of the German problem," he said, "is not possible only between us and the adversary. We need our friends. Thank God we have found friends in the world. Imagine what Germany would be today if we had not again found friends."
Weather
Gerstenmaier opened the meeting by reading a letter from President Heinrich Luebke saying Adenauer resigned effective today.
The lower house of the Bundestag was jammed when Speaker Eugen Gerstenmaier walked in at noon. Most of the 499 deputies were in their places, and the press, diplomatic and public galleries were overflowing. Some of the distinguished guests had been given seats on the main floor, separated from the deputies by silken ropes.
The speaker then rose and addressed the chancellor, who rose too, in his place at the head of the ministerial box to Gerstenmaier's right and facing the members.
ADENAUER WORE a cutaway coat and striped trousers, and high starched white collar.
The low tonight will be in the upper 50s. Wednesday skies will turn partly cloudy and it will not be so warm with a high near 80.
Gerstenmaier was interrupted by applause a dozen times. But the Social Democratic opposition members, who have never forgiven Adenauer for his decision 14 years ago never to form a coalition with them, remained silent.
There Adenaer stood motionless, supporting himself lightly by resting the fingers of his left hand on a railing for 35 minutes, while Gertenmaier read a eulogy on behalf of the whole parliament.
The Socialists rose, too, but sat down immediately after Gerstenmaier finished, and without applauding.
IN CONCLUDING, Gerstenmaier asked the members to rise while he declared "Konrad Adenauer has deserved well of the father."
But the members of Adenauer's Christian Democratic Union and his coalition partners, the Free Democrats, and most of the galleries remained standing and applauding while the old gentleman proceeded to the rostrum.
Marine General Presents Gem III
By Fred Frailey
GEM III, the flying machine that caused a motorist to run his car into a ditch, was to be presented to KU this afternoon for research.
A KU alumnus, Brig. Gen. William K. Jones of the Marine Corps, was to present the ground effects machine to the University in a short ceremony at the new engineering building.
Resembling a fictional "flying saucer," the 22-foot-long, 11-foot wide machine startled more than several motorists while being transported to KU last week by truck.
"THE TRUCK DRIVER told me that one driver ran his car into a ditch when he saw what was coming," said Kenneth C. Deemer, professor of mechanics and aerospace engineering, yesterday afternoon.
"He had to honk his horn at a half dozen other drivers to avoid accidents.
"He said he was really glad to get here."
Getting GEM III to KU from its earlier home in Virginia involved more than dodging gawking motorists. Special permission had to be obtained from each state before the extra wide load could travel on its highways. Permission was granted in all but Missouri which notified the Marine Corps that GEM III could not pass through that state.
LAST TUESDAY—a week behind schedule—the machine finally got started toward Kansas. Even then, though, it had to be rerouted through Arkansas and Oklahoma to avoid Missouri roads.
A wind storm caused damage to the skirts of the machine while enroute to KU. The damage, however, was termed minor by Prof. Deemer.
GEM III, powered by three gas turbine engines, was designed to travel above land or water at speeds up to 36 miles an hour. The compressed air generated by the turbines creates a cushion to keep the machine above ground.
BUT ALL IS NOT PERFECT with GEM III, KU researchers—led by Costas Choliamsmen, professor of mechanics and aerospace—will try to eliminate several problems under the Marine Corp's $10,000 research grant.
One of the difficulties is the machine's inability to travel more than a few feet above ground. Also to be considered will be stability problems and modification of aerodynamic configuration.
Prof. Deemer said GEM III will be flying within two weeks.
"WE HAD HOPED to receive it two weeks ago," he said. "It would have given us time to get it ready to travel."
The project was awarded to KU after 12 universities submitted suggestions for the research.
"The ground effects machine has all sorts of possibilities," Prof. Deemer said. "The military aspects prompted the Marine Corps to spend the money on its development. They are interested in its ability to go over rough terrain."
Load Shift Considered
KU students who have not taken the Western Civilization reading course will be glad to hear that the administrative committee of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences is considering an upward change in the total course load.
This semester the department is considering the program as a two-hour load rather than the one hour that has been previously given to it. This is only a temporary change, however. The final decision will come from the administrative committee.
"OTHER POSSIBLE changes will be discussed by the Western Civilization Committee which will meet this month." David H. Jones, acting director of the Western Civilization department said. "At this meeting we will discuss the readings we now have and the contents of the course."
Jones said the Western Civilization department solicits suggestions from faculty members and students who feel the course may warrant revisions. Those with suggestions may return them into the Western Civilization office.
"Persons must remember that the course is run on one basic premise," Jones said. "That is that the course is a self-study program."
MANY STUDENTS and faculty members have suggested major course changes in the past, but they have failed to challenge the idea of the self-study program.
"If a person can show that the self-study program is not as successful as another type of program then we will consider a major change," Jones said.
Jones said most faculty members feel the University needs at least one self-study program. A dramatic change, such as making the course a three-hour lecture, cannot happen until the self-study method is proved unsuccessful.
Lecture on Da Vinci Tonight
The largely ignored musical abilities of Leonardo da Vinci will be discussed here tonight by Dr. Emanuel Winteritz in the first Humanities Series Lecture of the school year.
Prof. Winteritz, curator of musical collections at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, will speak at 8 p.m. in Fraser Theater.
The Austrian-born expert in law, philosophy, aesthetics, music and art has concentrated his studies in the past several years on the musical activities of da Vinci.
ELMER BETH, professor of journalism and chairman of the Humanities Series committee, said Prof. Winternitz will approach da Vinci's musical activities in relation to the artistic and scientific aims of the artist.
The speaker will illustrate his lecture with the use of slides and the piano.
PROF. WINTERNITZ will talk at 11:30 a.m. tomorrow in 330 Murphy Hall on "Bartolommeo Cristofori and the Origin of the Pianoforte" to the History of Music 101 class.
Four additional talks have been planned at KU for Prof. Winternitz. Monday afternoon, he spoke on "The Variation Form in Music and the Visual Arts" to the history of renaissance art class and on "Visual Arts as a Source for the Historian of Music" to the Music Literature I class.
Music was a familiar pastime in the family of Prof. Winnertniz in Austria in the early 1960's. His mother taught him to play the pianoforte. He later studied the violoncello and learned to play the organ.
After serving three years in World War I on Austria's southern frontier in the Tyrol, he studied law and aesthetics at the University of Vienna. Since prospects for an academic career in his country were poor after the war, he chose law as a career.
FOR TEN years, until the occupation of Austria by Hiter in 1938, he was a corporation lawyer. Prof. Winternitz left his country and became an American citizen in 1942.
In 1941, Prof. Winternitz was appointed to the staff of the Metropolitan Museum. There he reorganized the Crosby Brown collections of musical instruments, the largest such collection in the Western Hemisphere. From 1949 to 1960, he was visiting professor of music at Yale, and since then at Rutgers University.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Oct. 15, 1963
Revilations, Revelations--and a few Bouquets
Newspapers have been reviled and reversed throughout their history, and no doubt there is justification in both the bouquets and the brickbats which have been thrown our way. Below are printed some of the reasons famous people gave for whatever stand they took.
All these comments are reprinted because this is National Newspaper Week, a Week when newspapers continue publication just as if nothing had happened and the rest of the citizenry wonders what National Newspaper Week is.
In terms of celebration, nothing.
In terms of honoring a longtime resident of almost every community in America, a little more.
No one has ever thought of a way to replace the newspaper. It brings to almost every home in America the news. It provides information no one can get for himself, and that aren't provided by television and radio — births and deaths, weddings, hospital news, farm news, even the little personales, in the country papers, about Mr. and Mrs. Jones visiting Mr. and Mrs. Brown.
Newspapers, however, are taken for granted.
\* \* \*
But as the slogan says, "Newspapers make a BIG difference in our lives."
They are sort of assassins who sit with loaded blunder-busses at the corner of streets and fire them off for hire or for sport at any passenger they select.—John Quincy Adams, Diary, 18280.
Newspapers are the schoolmasters of the common people. That endless book, the newspaper, is our national glory—Henry Ward Beecher (18813-1887, Proverbs from Plymouth Pulpit: The Press
Harmony seldom makes a headline.-Silas Bent, Strange Bedfellows, 1928.
The Press is not public opinion.—Otto von Bismarck, speech in the Prussian Lower House, 1862
***
The liberty of the press is indeed essential to the nature of a free state, but this consists in laying no previous restraints upon publications, and not in freedom from censure for criminal matter when published. William Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England, Bk. IV, Vol. II, 1765
There have been three silent revolutions in England: first, when the professions fell off from the church; secondly, when literature fell off from the professions; and thirdly, when the press fell off from literature.—S. T. Coleridge, Table Talk, 1832
Journalism consists in buying white paper at two cents a pound and selling it at ten cents a pound.—Charles A, Dana (1819-1879)
Your newspapers will never become great until they cease to be personal organs. —Charles Dickens (1812-1870), letter to Horace Greeley
I hate to be defended in a newspaper. As long as all that is said, is said against me, I feel a certain assurance of success. But as soon as honeyed words of praise are spoken for me, I feel as one that lies unprotected before his enemies.—Ralph Waldo Emerson, Compensation, 1841
***
It is unreasonable what some assert, "that printers ought not to print anything but what they approve"; since if all of that business should make such a resolution, and abide by it, an end would thereby be put to free writing, and the world would afterwards have nothing to read but what happened to be the opinions of printers. Benjamin Franklin, An Apology for Pinters, 1731
It is clear that the press is itself in a sort of dilemma; it
can cease neither to be big business nor to judge big business. From this point of view, the stock complaint that the American press voices a dominantly "capitalistic" outlook is less a criticism than a truism.-William Ernest Hocking, Freedom of the Press, a report from the Commission on Freedom of the Press, p. 146, 1947
No government ought to be without censors; and where the press is free none ever will. Thomas Jefferson, Writings, Vol. VIII, p. 406, 1799
A newswriter is a man without virtue, who writes lies at home for his own profit. To these compositions is required neither genius nor knowledge, neither industry nor sprightiness but contempt of shame and difference to truth are absolutely necessary. — Samuel Johnson, The Idler, 1758
The liberty of the press is the palladium of all the civil, political, and religious rights of an Englishman.—Junius, Letters of Junius, 1772
If a man makes money by publishing a newspaper, by poisoning the wells of information, by feeding the people a daily spiritual death, he is the greatest criminal I can conceive. —Ferdinan Lasalle, speech in Dusseldorf, 1863
"Would You Repeat That, Sir? The Afternoon Bomb Explosion Jarred The Microphone A Little"
Why should freedom of speech and freedom of the press be allowed? Why should a government which is doing what it believes to be right allow itself to be criticized? It would not allow opposition by lethal weapons. Ideas are much more fatal things than guns. Why should any man be allowed to buy a printing press and disseminate pernicious opinions calculated to embarrass the government?—Nikoali Lenin, speech in Moscow, 1920
ALL WE NEED IS A LITTLE TIME FREE FROM OUTSIDE INTERFERENCE
- BIRMINGHAM LEADERS
There has never lived, and there never will be born, a man wise enough and good enough to be entrusted with the irresponsible power over human thought, and the action which follows thought, which ownership of many newspapers conveys in the modern world, and the freedom to exercise it in the service of his own interests. To say that his interests might also be those of the community is to say something which might periodically be true, but cannot be generally true. It is to forget human pride and human weakness and to break with history.-Wilmott Lewis, speech in New York, 1936
The freedom of the press is one of the great bulwarks of liberty and can never be restrained but by despotic governments. George Mason, The Virginia Declaration of Rights, see XII, 1776
entrusted to them, the people cannot profit by the power of choosing them, and the advantages of good government are unattainable. It will not surely cost many words to satisfy all classes of readers that, without the free and unrestrained use of the press, the requisite knowledge cannot be obtained. James Mill, On Liberty of the Press, 1821.
... All successful newspapers are ceaselessly querulous and bellicose. They never defend anyone or anything if they can help it; if the job is forced upon them, they tackle it by denouncing some one or something else.
—H. L. Mencken, Prejudices, First Series, Ch. 13, p. 1880, 1919
- * *
Three hostile newspapers are more to be feared than a thousand bayonets. Napoleon I (1769-1821), Sayings of Napoleon
Without the knowledge of what is done by their representatives, in the use of the powers
Newspapers are read at the breakfast and dinner tables. God's great gift to man is appetite. Put nothing in the paper that will destroy it.—W. R. Nelson, 1841-1915), publisher of the Kansas City Star
(Editor's Note: The late Colonel Nelson weighed about 300 pounds).
The penny-papers of New York do more to govern this country than the White House at Washington.—Wendell Phillips (1811-1894, Address: The Press
\* \* \*
The liberty of thinking and of publishing whatever one likes . . . is the fountainhead of many evils.—Pope Leo XIII, Immortale Dei, 1885
Editors should be willing to respect and help and even sit at the feet of those schools which increasingly have serious purpose and real scholarship, for it is not true that, because college journalism has faults, it has no value. As well say the same thing about all higher education. —Keen Rafferty, "How Not to Become a Cliche Expert," Saturday Review of Literature, Sept. 8, 1945, p. 17
The newspaper is of necessity something of a monopoly, and its first duty is to shun the temptations of monopoly. Its primary office is the gathering of news. At the peril of its soul it must see that the supply is not tainted. Neither in what it gives, nor in what it does not give, nor in the mode of presentation, must the unclouded face of truth suffer wrong. Comment is free but facts are sacred. C. P. Scott. The Manchester Guardian, 1926
The newspaper! Sir, they are
the most villanous—licentious—abominable—infernal—not that I ever read them—no-I make it a rule never to look into a newspaper.-R. B. Sheridan, The Critic, Act.I,Sc.1, 1779
***
Not more than two newspapers will be published in Savannah; their editors and proprietors will be held to the strictest accountability, and will be punished severely, in person and property, for any libelous publication, mischievous matter, premature news, exaggerated statements, or any comments whatever upon the acts of the constituted authorities. Gen. W. T. Sherman, special field order on occupying Savannah, 1864
***
It is a newspaper's duty to print the news, and raise hell.— Wilbur Storey, statement of the aims of the Chicago Times, 1861
Ah, ye knights of the pen! May honour be your shield, and truth tip your lances! Be gentle to all gentle people. Be modest to women. Be tender to children. And as for the Ogre Humbug, out sword, and have at him. Thackeray, Roundabout Papers: "Ogres." 1862
1
Blessed are they who never read a newspaper, for they shall see Nature, and, through her, God. — Thoreau (1817-1862), Essays and Other Writings,—p. 254
I have been reading the morning paper. I do it every morning—well knowing that I shall find in it the usual deprivatives and baseness and hypocrisies and cruelties that make up civilization, and cause me to put in the rest of the day pleading for the damnation of the human race.—Mark Twain, letter to W. D. Howells, 1899
***
* *
As for modern journalism, it is not my business to defend it. It justifies its own existence by the great Darwinian principle of the survival of the vulgarest. Oscar Wilde, "The Critic as an Artist," Intentions, 1894
***
In centuries before ours the public nailed the ears of journalists to the pump. That was quite hideous. In this century journalists have nailed their own ears to the key-hole—Oscar Wilde, "The Soul of Man Under Socialism," 1891
Dailij Känsan
111 Flint Hall
University of Kansas student newspaper
University of Kansas student loca
UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom
UNiversity 4-3198, business office
Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press.
Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22,
N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates:
$3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 10, 1912.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Mike Miller ... Managing Editor
Terry Ostmeyer, Trudy Meserve, Jackie Stern, Rose Osborne, Assistant
Managing Editors; Kay Jarves, City Editor; Linda Machin, Society Editor;
Roy Miller, Sports Editor; Dennis Bowers, Picture Editor.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Blaine King Editorial Editor
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Business Manager
Bob Brooks ... Business Manager
Joanne Zabornik, Advertising Mgr.; Alice Rueschhoff, Circulation Mgr;
Brooks Harrison, Classified Adv. Mgr.; Jim Evilsizer, National Adv.
Mgr.; Donald Dugan, Promotion Mgr.; Jerry Schroepfer, Merchandising
Mgr.
Page 3
Tunnel Peril Looms For Curious Student
Students exploring steam tunnels under the campus are in extreme danger, Harry M. Buchholtz, superintendent of the physical plant. saves.
Physical plant officials have received reports some KU students have been touring the tunnels re- cently.
"I will not even let our trained steam-fitters go in the tunnels alone." Buchholtz said.
Editor Instant Edi-
Editor
He explained steam tunnel workers hazard dangers such as scalding steam, electrocution, claustrophobia, broken bones from falling down steep inclines, concussion from banging their heads on overhanging obstructions, the terrors of darkness and severe burns from bare areas on steam mains.
"It took six men to get him out of there." Euchholtz said.
manager Mgr.; Adv. dising
Regarding the danger of scalding, Buchholtz said: "You can't get away from 20 pounds of steam. Our pipes carry 150 pounds of steam the year round. Even a bare spot on one of the mains reaches a temperature of 158 degrees, so you can imagine what a broken steam line would do."
BUCHELOTZ SAID several years ago a contractor's employee got lost in one of the utility tunnels when the light power failed. The man suffered claustrophobia.
He described the tunnels as having steep and unexpected inclines and drop-offs. High places in the tunnels trap air which becomes so hot a man can barely breathe.
RUNNING THROUGH all the tunnels are power lines carrying 1500 volts of electricity. Gas and water mains are present too, either of which become potentially dangerous if they break or leak.
The steam tunnels radiate from the physical plant and serve all the buildings on campus. High pressure steam is maintained in them all year to serve campus facilities.
Buchholtz said there has been only occasional difficulty keeping students out of the tunnels.
Official Bulletin
FULBRIGHT applications are to be turned in to 306 Fraser by Oct. 19.
TODAY IS THE last day to submit manuscripts for publication in the fall issue of Quill. Turn the manuscripts into the English Office, 117 Fraser.
University Daily Kansan
TODAY
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road.
Pli Stigma Alpha, 7 p.m., 306 Kansas Union Speakers are Charles Warriner, J.
SNEA, 7:30 p.m., 305 Bailey. Educational Television—Laurie Crocker and Ray Gladselter. Can still buy membership.
Catholic Inquiry Forum, 7 p.m. St.
Lawrence Catholic Student Center. 1915
St. Joseph Road.
western Civ. Discussion. 9 p.m. St.
Lake Central College Student Center. 1915
Stratford Road
Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m. 5 p.m., St.
Lord's Church, Catholic Chapel, 1910 Strat-
ford Road.
Timely Topics, 7 p.m. St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center, 1915 Stratford Road. "What Do You Do for Kicks"—Brendan Downey, O.S.B.
El Atenco se reunitra miércoles, el 16 de octubre, a las 7:30 en la sala Forum. Se encuentran todos los estudiantes del departement de inglés, commentara sus experiencias e impresiones como "Un conferenciante Fulbright en la Argentum." Todos esten cordialmente inviable.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforthe.
31 Years of Brooding Result in Stabbing
BOTLEY, ENGLAND. (UPI) Miss Lilian Harris, 54, pleaded guilty yesterday to charges that she stabbed the woman who stole her boyfriend 31 years ago.
Researchers To Meet
The first meeting of Sigma Xi, honorary scientific research society, will be at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in room 411 Summerfield Hall.
The judge ordered Miss Harris to go to a mental home after she told him she had brooded about her lost boyfriend for three decades.
William Bass, assistant professor of anthropology, will speak on "The Skeleton Talks: Human Identification."
A noted publisher in Chicago reports there is a simple technique for acquiring a powerful memory which can pay you real dividends in both business and social advancement and works like magic to give you added poise, necessary self-confidence and greater popularity.
Why Can't You Remember
According to this publisher, many people do not realize how much they could influence others simply by remembering accurately everything they see, hear, or read. Whether in business, at social functions or even in casual conversations with new acquaintances, there are ways in which you can dominate each situation by your ability to remember.
To acquaint the readers of this paper with the easy-tofollow rules for developing skill in remembering anything you choose to remember, the publishers have printed full details of their self-training method in a new book, "Adventures in Memory," which will be mailed free to anyone who requests it. No obligation. Simply send your request to: Memory Studies, 835 Diverse Parkway, Dept. 3247, Chicago 14, Ill. A postcard will do.
Tuesday, Oct. 15, 1963
Engineering Meet Set
Alpha Chi Sigma, honorary chemical engineering fraternity, will hold a pledge smoker for prospective members at 7 p.m., Wednesday in the Sunflower Room of the Kansas Union.
Clark E. Bricker, professor of chemistry, will speak on the dwindling amount of energy in the world.
AURH Elections Set
The Association of University Residence Halls (AURH) will meet at 9 p.m. Wednesday in Parlor C of the Kansas Union. Officers for the coming year will be elected.
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Experimental Theatre
presents
JOHN BROWN'S BODY
by Stephen Vincent Benet
THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY October 17th, 18th,and 19th in the
SWARTHOUT RECITAL HALL of
MURPHY HALL at 8:15 p.m.
Tickets $1.00 or 50c with I.D. Box Office UN4-3982
Ken Coleman. Kansas Fullback
PLAYER OF THE WEEK
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for his outstanding performance in the Iowa State game
For outstanding performance against dirty clothes, let us earn your laundry of the week award
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Freshman lucky number: 2009 take the pink card you received last summer to Kief's Records at the Malls to get your FREE hi-fi album.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Oct. 15, 1963 Owl Society Chosen
Service Group Selects
12
Alpha Phi Omega, honorary service fraternity, has chosen twelve new members.
Those chosen are: Kent E. Andrews, Abilene freshman; Gerald L. Carden, Kansas City, Kansas junior; Gary B. Evans, Burlington freshman; Robert G. Elliot, Shawnee Mission freshman; Harold L. Hadky, Topeka sophomore; David J. Hutchins,
Kansas City, Mo. sophomore; Raymond V. Isham, Shawnee Mission freshman; James P. Nordstrom, Topeka sophomore; Charles A. Spitz, West Long Branch, N.J. freshman; Ted R. Wilson, Independence, Mo. freshman; Clarence J. Wilson, Kansas City, Mo. freshman, and Robert Sherwood, Prairie Village freshman.
Men or women, college students preferred, up to $140 week plus some overtime if desired. 12 positions open, three shifts. Most class schedules can be accommodated. Work involves re-typing high school yearbooks on an electric typewriter keyboard with certain additional functions, some to do with manual operations at the keyboard and others with slight editing and following of pre-set styles. High school journalism or yearbook experience helpful. Must be exceptional in spelling. Only the very brightest and fastest students should apply.
Most weeks will run from 20 hours up to 35, with possible 40 hours during peak of season January through March. An 80 w.p.m. typist should make at least $3.65 per hour, more if exceptionally accurate. Work starts Nov. 1.
Write P.O. Box 64, Shawnee-Mission, Kansas, for interview and testing appointment. Will give typing, spelling, and intelligence quotient tests. Able students should make around $2500 between Nov. 1 and April 1 without interfering with studies. Plant located in Mission, Kansas, within driving distance of KU campus.
EXCEPTIONAL TYPISTS, $3-$4 HOUR
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
You can't learn it out of a book or from the advice of a friend. The art of money management comes only through experience, like ending up with a flat pocketbook at the end of the month.
VACANCY
We cordially invite you to open an Economy Checking Account before another week goes by.
An Economy Checking Account makes money management easier because it helps you budget expense . . . know where every dollar goes. Money in the bank can't be lost, borrowed or stolen. It's always safe, ready for use when you need it.
1ST FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF Lawrence
Better Money Management
Freshman members of the senate and house of representatives of the Associated Women Students (AWS) will be elected tomorrow.
Novice Debate Meet
Freshman AWS Vote
Eight KU debaters will participate in a novice debate tournament Oct. 19 at Kansas State University in Manhattan.
The Owl Society, honorary society for junior men, have selected new members.
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
Two freshman women will be chosen for Senate from a slate of seven.
They were; Lance Burr, Salina; Colin Case, Colby; Jim Gough, Chanute; Fred Litttooy, Hutchinson; Clark Mandigo, Kansas City; and Terry Miller, Baxter Springs.
8th and MASSACHUSETTS STREETS
The students will compete with teams from approximately 40 other midwestern colleges and universities.
ANNOUNCEMENT!
SECOND ANNUAL MONSTER CONTEST
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10. 000 words).
NOTE: All entries must be postmarked on or before midnight November 8, 1963, and received on or before November 16, 1963. Winners will be notified by mail no later than December 4, 1963. Open to any college student in the U.S.A. One entry per student. Prizes awarded by drawing. All entries become property of Parker. Decision of judges final Void in New Jersey, Missouri, and Wisconsin, and wherever else prohibited by law.
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---
Beauty and Brains Combined In Merit Scholar and Model
Mary Ann Traylor, Emporia freshman, was discovered first by the National Merit Scholarship Foundation for her brains. Then "Seventeen" magazine discovered her beauty.
Miss Traylor, who lives in Gertrude Sellards Pearson, recently was selected to model winter fashions in the January edition of the magazine.
Five other girls from colleges all over the country were chosen with her to model clothes representative of the area.
A FOUR-MEMBER team arrived
Concert Star Visits KU
By Tom Winston
Contraito Maureen Forrester made a separate little scene of each song she sang at the University Theater last night. A nearly full house applauded her enthusiastically all evening.
She knew just how to smile and just when to smirk or leer, especially in the Hugo Wolf songs (from "Italian Songbook"). She was the scorned woman, a little girl or deeply in love, and her French songs (Barber's "Melodies Passageries") were sensual and dreamy.
Only a loving mother could sing the Benjamin Britten lullabies as she did. (She has four children, eldest of which was eight yesterday.)
Her final group, the "Seven Spanish Popular songs" by Manuel de Falla, was a slight disappointment, except for "Nana," a lullaby which Miss Forrester sang with the slightly wist of a tone. Generally, her style was not Spanish or exciting; it was nice like the French songs.
Perhaps these songs are not for her. Her own distinctive sound, so right for the rest of her program, is wrong for the Falla songs. The audience did not seen to share this disappointment, however.
Miss Forrester's voice is not thick as contralto voices can be. She can easily sound like a soprano, even though she has some luscious low tones at her command. One quibble heard at intermission was that maybe her voice had too much ring; she wasn't using her warm, low sound often enough, it was said. But it was merely a quibble.
For her two encores, Miss Forrester sang "The Lass from the Low Country" by John Jacob Niles and a French-Canadian folk song. Her explanation of the folksong was delightful.
Maureen Forrester, Canadian contralto, says she likes to do a good program when she performs at a college, and she is always ready to talk to people.
Miss Forrester was quite impressed with Lawrence. She stated that when she came here for her concert, she forgot to pack several pieces of music she was going to use. She said she expected to find perhaps one of the numbers but, when she went to a local music store, she was surprised to find all of the numbers in stock.
last Sunday to shoot the pictures to be used.
The picture-taking session lasted three hours on various spots of the campus last Sunday.
SARA SCHNEIDER
"I was asked to send in a picture and an autobiography of myself. They saw the picture in New York and later contacted my mother. I haven't had a lot of contact with them," Miss Taylor said.
German Officer At KU to Study Insect Control
A scientific officer of the Bonn government is at the University of Kansas this year with a special mission—to keep unwanted visitors out of West Germany.
The officer is Dr. Isolde Schneider, a guest of the KU botany and entomology departments. Her task is to prevent timber-destroying insects from being imported along with wood.
"THE GERMANS IMPORT timber from all over the world." Miss Schneider explained. The Scandinavian countries, Central America, West Africa, and the U.S. are major suppliers of timber to Germany, she said.
Dr. Schneider said she wants to determine what offenders come into Germany, then how the bugs multiply once in Germany. When she completes her study, she will make recommendations for quarantine to the German government.
ARE CATHOLICS CHRISTIANS?
At KU she has been studying the life cycles of beetles, a few of which will be important in Germany, she said. One of these is the ambrosia beetle, which transmits damaging fungi.
"THE ULTIMATE PRACTICAL reason for the study is to eliminate the fungi by killing the beetles," Dr. Schneider said, "or, if it's easier, to eliminate the beetles by killing the fungi."
Dr. Schneider, who came to KU in September from North Carolina State College, expects to complete her research here by spring. Then she will return to West Germany—if possible, by a freighter carrying timber so she can study the problem in transit.
Are the basic tenets of Catholicism the same or different from those of other Christians? Are Catholics logical? Why can't Catholies eat meat on Fridays? Or can they? Why do Catholics drink and smoke? Why isn't drinking or smoking necessarily a sin for Catholics? Are Catholics really different? Was Christ a Catholic?
In an effort to inform those interested in learning about the Catholic Church and what it means, an Inquiry Forum has been set up. The forum consists mainly of a question-answer and discussion session. It is held every Tuesday night at 7:00 at the St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center, 1915 Stratford Road or call Brendan Downey, O.S.B. at VI 3-0357.
THIS IS NOT the first time Miss Traylor has been a model. Two years ago she was a winner in a Singer Young Stylemaker contest and went to New York City to model fashions she made.
A freshman in the KU Honor's Program, Miss Trayler is in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. She has not vet chosen a major.
She was chosen by the "Seventen" editors because her National Merit Scholar status qualified her as outstanding as a "brain" and her picture indicated a good share of beauty.
KU Coeds Seek Homecoming Title
Out of 25 candidates for Homecoming Queen will come one girl who will reign over the Homecoming activities for 1963.
The Homecoming queen will be crowned during the half-time ceremonies at the KU-K. State game on Nov. 2.
The candidates will be interviewed from 8 to 10 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 20, in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union. They will be judged on the basis of charm, personality and beauty. The 10 semi-finalists will be notified Sunday night after the interviews.
The judges have not yet been announced.
The ten semi-finalists will meet with the judges at 6:30 p.m. on Thursday, Oct. 24, in the English Room of the Kansas Union.
The method for announcing the queen and her attendants has not been decided.
Each of the candidates had her picture taken last week. A composite picture of all of the candidates was taken yesterday afternoon on the steps of Strong Hall.
Student at Med Center After Bicycle Mishap
Martha Deason, Great Bend freshman, was reported in fair condition today at the KU Medical Center. She suffered a severe concussion in a bicycle accident in Lawrence Sunday.
Tuesday, Oct. 15, 1963
University Daily Kansan
FRED McLEOD, PGA PROFESsional at Columbia Country Club, Chevy Chase, Md., won two national championships 30 years apart. He won the U.S. Open in 1908 and the PGA Seniors title in 1938.
Page 5
STEEL SHAFTS FIRST WERE legalized by the U.S. Gold Golf Association in 1926 and three years later they were legalized by the Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St. Andrews, Scotland.
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SUA Quarterback Club meeting is tonight at 7p.m.
KU-IOWA STATE game films will be shown-narrated by varsity player
EVERYONE WELCOME!
---
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Oct. 15, 1963
THIS EVENING...
=By Roy Miller
Not that anyone asked me for my considered opinion or anything, but I still think the KU football team will have to consider itself lucky if it wins five of its ten games this season . . . especially after Saturday's loss to Iowa.State.
With defeats to date from Texas Christian and the Cyclones, you ask where will the other four come from.
Well, Oklahoma, Nebraska and Missouri must still be rated over the Jayhawks. If KU lost to those three teams, the season's record would be .500.
So where's the sixth defeat?
So, where's the siskir defeat?
AT THE RISK of being banned from drinking the newsroom coffee (such as it is), I honestly think Kansas State could upset KU when the two teams meet here in a homecoming game Nov. 2.
Even as poor as the Wildcats must be, you can never predict the outcome of a KU-K-State game. There's just too much rivalry between the boys from Silo Tech and those from the school with the Singing Silo.
Atter all, the Wildcats held Missouri to a 21-11 victory. And, before Saturday's game, the Tigers had beaten Arkansas and Idaho.
COLORADO might even surprise the Jayhawks in a game at Boulder Nov. 16. It may just be that the Cowboys are extra weak, but the Buffaloes beat Oklahoma State. 25-0 Saturday.
injuries don't help the KU outlook any as Coach Jack Mitchell prepares for its game Saturday at Norman. KU may have to play Oklahoma without four or five players of its first two lines.
Larry Ledford, after missing the Iowa State game with a sprained ankle, may be back in action. But, in practice yesterday Ledford was still limping and remained a question mark for Saturday.
Dick Pratt and George Worley are sidelined indefinitely. Pratt fractured a wrist two weeks ago at Wyoming. Worley broke his hand Saturday.
Jim Becker and Buddy Walker are also out indefinitely. A calcium deposit (whatever that is) was discovered in Becker's thigh yesterday and Walker re-injured
a knee Saturday.
MITCHELL just shook his head after yesterday's practice and said his team would work hard on defense this week.
**\*\*\***
Tom Hedrick, KU soccer coach and director of the KU sports network, has pushed the panic button again.
A week ago, Hedrick was frantically trying to recruit 22 players (enough for two teams). Well, Hedrick's recruiting efforts were successful, but that didn't signal the ends of his problems.
It seems a while back he phoned his opponents and alerted them of his player shortage in hopes they could schedule a match with another school.
So they did. And so all the remains of Hedrick's eight-match intercollegiate schedule is one opponent—Park College in a homecoming game there.
Knowing Hedrick, the only broadcaster in Big Eight history who tried to cover an intra-squad scrimmage from a Stouffer Place balcony, KU will have a great soccer schedule—to say nothing of its season.
\* \* \*
KU hasn't had a varsity wrestling team since the spring semester of the 1936-36 school year.
F. C. (Phog( Allen, former director of athletics and basketball coach, discontinued the sport in 1936 because of inteligibilities and a lack of interest the previous spring.
Efforts to revive the team in 1937 were unsuccessful and KU hadn't competed in wrestling against other schools since last year when the sport was revived on a club basis.
P. J. (Pete) MEHRINGER was one of KU's best wrestlers in the 1930s. He was an all-America tackle in football for KU and a Olympic light-heavyweight wrestler.
"Lacy took the first fall with an armlock and body smother after $32_{1/2}$ minutes of work. Mehringer came back with a toehole attack, 14 minutes of which was sufficient for Lacy to concede the fall.
Can the KU basketball team return to the first division of the Big Eight basketball race? Can the Jayhawks win the title?
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Those are the questions being asked not just to distract attention from the football team's loss, but they have real pertinence since basketball drills start today.
Coach Dick Harp will have eight returning lettermen this season. The returners will be pushed hard by newcomers at almost every position.
THREE SOPHOMORE forward prospects have tremendous physique. They are Riney Lochman, 6-5, 210 pounds; Fred Chana, 6-6, 220 and Steve Renko, 6-4, 210. Those three will provide tough competition for veterans Harry Gibson and David Brill.
At center, KU could have a one-two punch with 6-7 junior George Unseld, team scoring and rebounding leader last year, and 6-11 rookie Walt Wesley, who was the leading scorer among the freshmen last year with a 16.7 average.
While Nolen Ellison will be hard to replace at guard, Allen Correll, who played some as a forward last season, could move back to the spot for which he has shown great potential. Corrill will be eligible for games in the first semester only.
We are presently decorating these units. Tenants renting now may select wall colors. .drapes. .etc.
Basketball Drills Begin Today; High Hopes for Improvement
At the start of the third fall, Lacy launched a flying tackle, but had nothing on Pete who had the same idea in mind all the time. The result was a 'head-on-head' collision which terminated the match a minute later.
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Dave Schichtle and Kerry Bolton were used as guard reserves last year, but they'll have to battle rookies Del Lewis and Wayne Loving. Lewis was regarded as one of the best freshman players last year. And, Loving, a red-shirt last year, is a tough defensive player and a good ball-handler.
"WE WILL BE AN improved team," Coach Dick Harp says. "Our sophomores will give us the physical strength to compete on the backboards."
VI 3-5440
"This factor, along with improvement in our returning squad members, should let us compete with every team on our schedule."
The Jayhawks' season opens Dec
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4 here with Arkansas. Then, before the league action starts, KU faces Cincinnati, Texas Tech, UCLA, USC, New Mexico, San Francisco and Stanford.
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Page 7
FOR RENT
Apartment for two MEN, bills paid, roug
housing, convenient, reasonable.
Call VI:3-2300 10-2
Third floor apartment at 940 Ind. Suitable for 3 or 4 students. Private bath and kitchen. $70.00 per month, utility nished. Off street parking. Call VI 3-2566-107
Large apartment freshly decorated. Suit-
able for 3 or 4 boys. Also, furnished
duplex apartment for boys. Call Vi
3-6661. VI 3-1181 or VI 3-8562. 10-17
Large clean, sleeping room. Share kitchen with two girl graduate students.
Large screened porch to hang laundry.
Private telephone extension. 940 10:35
Student to room in 6 room apartment
from home. Provide 15 day, monthly,
units paid. VI 2-3008 0-17
For Rent: Furnished 2 bedroom apartment — air-conditioned, washer — 1147
& bathroom $60.00 per month, other amenities $65.00 and up. T. A. Hempbell,
VI 3-1302. 10-16
For Rent: Available Nov. 1, furnished
sleeping room for boys. Lilens furnished
and laundered. $25 per month. 1328 Ohio.
Mrs. Tipton. 10-16
University Daily Kansan
For Rent: Furnished apartment with shower for two KU men or couple. Pri-
ty fee $150 per person. Campus and stadium—$50 per month. Inquire at 1005 Miss. Call VI 343-4-196. 1095
Available now for lease (12 months).
Two bedroom apartment, close to campus and downtown. $75. Santee Apartments, 1123 Indiana, VI 3-2116.
Vacancies in contemporary home with outside swimming pool for young man. Utilities paid, $45 per month. Home cooked dinner if desired. Cell Vi 3-9635. 10-15
1 bedroom house, completely furnished,
air-conditioner, near downtown, no pets!
Also one 1 bedroom bedroom on campus. Clean. Call
I 3-0543 before 9 a.m. or after 7 p.m. tl
BUSINESS SERVICES
Will take in ironing 10c a piece. Also baby sitting wanted. Under 3 years old. Call Mrs. James Eberhard. VI 3-6343. 10-18
It's time to make your reservations for the Holiday season. The Thanksgiving weekend offers a great Contact Maupince at the Mall's Shopping Center, 711 W. 23rd. VI 3-1211.
Complete line of soles and heels, lacens,
cosmetics and polishes. Have new mert-
heries. Take a nap. Each such pupshie smoke totes. Burgert's One Day Shoe Service — 1113 Mass. St. 11-1
Do you need a tutor for Chinese? If so call VI 3-4289 and ask for Mr. Yang. If not in leave name and number. 10-16 Dressmaking-alterations, formals and wedding gowns. Ola Smith, 9391 Mass. VI 3-5263. tt
Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter, carbon ribbon printer. 3-608ps after 1:40 p.m. Charles (Marlene) Hiigley, 408 West 13th. tt
TYPING
Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typr writer fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1644
New electric typewriter. Reasonable rates for themes, term papers, dissertations, and theses. Mrs. Barta, 1955 Miller Drive, VI 3-6994.
Experienced typist for theses and term
expressions in the field of education.
Mrs. Fulcher, 103 Miss. VI-35088, tf
MILLIKENS SOS—always first quality typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines.
hours 7 a.m. to tape transcriptions. Office
phone VI3-5920 12 p.m.-1211; Mafe t
Typing: Dissertations theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines, 35 special symbols, carbon nanotubes service. Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI2-1546 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI3-3057. tf
Efficient and experienced typer would like to do work in home. Prompt and guaranteed work. Call at any time. VI 3-2651. 10-31
Typing: Desertations, theses, manuscripts, term papers typed. New Smith-Corona machines; 35 special symbols, carbon ribbon; all desired. Promote Mr. Gilbert VI2-1546 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI3-3057. tt TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers reports, etc. Accurate work. Reasonable rates. Electric Typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney. 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568. tt Secretary will do typing in home. Fast, accurate, reasonable rates. Famillar with legal terms. Marsha Goff. tt Prompt, neat and accurate work on wide sheets. Journal writer. Journalism Business and Secretary experience. Charlotte Weber. VI 3-3495.
Thesis Typist, Electric typewriter
English degree. Prairie Village, NI
MISCELLANEOUS
West Side Presbyterian Church. 6th and Mass., welcomes you to attend Sunday services at 11 a.m. and Sunday classes at 9:45 a.m. 10-23
PARTY TIME: School house available for private parties, dances, meetings, equipped with piano, tables, chairs, restrooms and bar coolers. VI 3-7453 - 431 Forrest.
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
WANTED
"the best in car care"
706 W. 9th
Standard Service
new location at
JOE'S BAKERY
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart, 1025 Mass. tf
VI 3-9830
616 West 9th
25c delivery VI 3-4720
FOR SALE
LEONARD'S
STUDENTS
BRAKE_ADJUSTMENTS ... $.98
Lightweight battery powered portable tape recorder. Many accessories, like new languages, parties, etc.
See at 2116 Oriental. This is cheap Japanese recorder! 10-21
19th & Louisiana VI 3-9631
LUBRICATION $1.0
Motor tune-ups, wheel balancing
LUBRICATION
Underwood portable typewriter Good
outstanding bargain price $25.00 Cah
$384 evening's 10-21
FREE one event of oil with each
Tuesday, Oct. 15, 1963
Across from the high school
OPEN 24 HRS.
**FREE**—one quart of oil with each oil and filter change
all major brands-
1957 Bel-Air Chevrolet, 8-cylinder hardtop, radio and heatster. This car is in A-1 condition. Can be seen at 755 N. 7th. Phone VI 3-1319. 10-18
PAGE-CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE
For Sale: 1963 RCA portable stereo HiFi
Fidelity sold new at $139.95—used 6 mo.
Used by the following Ray Stoneback's, 829 Mass, (also $149.95
Motorola demonstrator cut to $79.97).
Over 30 modern pistols, rifles and shotguns left. Hundreds of rounds of ammo. far below wholesale. Thousands of dollars invested in this collection. All must go! See now at 824 Ark. or call VI-3110.
1956 Bulck. H.T. Good condition, new tires, best offer takes. Call VI-3-20.
2 baby beds, automatic electric sterilizer
. excellent condition. Phone VI S81
10a18
COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY
1819 W 23rd VI 3-9694
Quickly, Professionally
SPEED QUEEN WASHERS
Read this terrific deal—1963 AH. Sprite.
Low mileage. All extras. Phone VI 2-3597
or VI 2-1972. You have to see it to be
pleasant. $1,872. 10-18
SHIRTS FINISHED
Fender Stratocaster guitar and or Fender super amplifier like new. Can be seen at Richardson Music Co. Larry Breeden 1602 LA. VI 3-8544. 10-1'
613 Vermont
HONN'S
at
Must sell—1960 Sima 4d, sedr—delux
model. Good gas mileage. Call VI 31
10-81.
RISK'S
Garage Sale: Desks, book cases, beds,
amps, books, dishes miscellaneous,
and several antiques. Open daily from 1 to
7 p.m. 1240 Ohio. 10-17
Late model Edison voicewriter dictating
digital voice. Mail CV 2-3099 by 6 p.m.
sell. CALL VI 2-3099 at 10-15
1957 "98" Oldsmobile convertible; white;
excellent condition; power windows;
steering, radio, seat, brakes. Four new
battery will take offer. Call: Bill Murdoco
V7-4228.
For sale or trade - 1960 Comet—excellent
condition, many extras. phone VI 543-792-4880
10-16
For Sale: Stereo and Hi-Fi Diamond needles. 1½ price until Nov. 10—Reg. $9.95 now $4.98. Pettengill-Davis, 725 Mass. 10-16
For Sale: 1959 Buick Electra 2-dr., very sharp=-$1,000.00, would consider trade for small car. 1523 W. 22nd St. Terr. Call VI 3-5139. 10-16
For Sale; Used Telefunken AM-FM, four band radio—like new. Also, Bogen turntable and preamp. See at Pettengill-dies—725 Mass. 10-16
New shipment of Pink plink paper. 500
ream- $85 Lawrence Outlook
1005 Mass
General Psychology study notes. Excel-
cal. Copy of sections. $40 00 per
call. Call VI 2-35787.
Typewriters, new and used portables,
standards, electrics. Olympia, Olivetti,
Royal and Smith Corona portables. Typewriter and adding machine service and rental. Lawrence Typewriter, 730 Mass.
Call VI 3-3644. tf
Sure—Everything in the field field at
$$$ have more cents. 1218 Conn. VT-93-251
Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, ninegraphaped and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
AUTO LIABILITY INSURANCE also under age drivers; scooters; motor bikes; motor cycles; rates avail. Brown Realty Vi. 2-0179 - Realtors - 729 Mass.
ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLEANERS.
New Electrolux and a limited number of rebuilt, fully guaranteed. All parts available. Equipment picked up for service and delivered. Frank W. Cox Local Manager-1904 Barker. Call VI 516-2843.
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outlining of review videos; classes. Formally known as the Theta notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Oct. 15, 1963
Predictions Affect Concession Sales
By Charles Corcoran
"I have attended every KU home football game for the past 13 years and five minutes of play is the most that I have ever seen in one contest."
Kevin A. Remick, KU concessions manager, looking tired and drawn after the Iowa State game, sat back easily in his chair and smiled.
"THERE'S A LOT MORE to preparing for a game than many people imagine," he said. "We start setting up the stadium concession stands at 5 a.m. the day of the game and everything is in place and ready to go by 11 a.m."
The weather is an all-important factor for the concessions manager to consider. Remick said.
He attributed the lack of customers to three things; the game was close and exciting, the weather was pleasant and the halftime ceremony was colorful and interesting.
Looking back at last weekend's game, Remick said. "The stands were set up and loaded for business. People just didn't come."
"I start watching the television weather forecasts closely the Sunday before the weekend of a home game," he said. "I make my own forecast for the game day's weather five days in advance after consulting weather records for the same period up to ten years before. When I predict that it will be hot, we stock a lot of ice," he said. "If it turns out to be cooler than I predict . . .."
PREPARING FOR the football season keeps Remick busy during the winter.
"All our printed matter, popcorn and soda cones, sunshades and so forth, must be ordered by March and we must receive it from our distributor by June. We can't let truck or rail strikes interfere with our tight schedule." Remick said. "This year, for example, we ordered a two-year supply of 60,000 popcorn cones; we'd almost depleted our supply the year before."
A large per cent of the money collected by the concessions goes to the athletic department.
"We pay for the right to use the facilities just like any commercial company would. Most of the rest of the money pays our costs and the average four per cent remaining goes into the Kansas Union operating fund," he said.
HIS GOAL IS TO sell 10,000 hot dogs at each game.
"We haven't sold that many yet; the best we've done is 8,000 at the University of Missouri game here the year before last. We average about 6,000 a game," he said.
The Wesley Foundation at KU is choosing delegates for the 19th Ecumenical Student Conference to be held in Athens, Ohio, from December 27 to January 2. Over half of the 3,000 students at the conference will be from other countries.
Wesley Choosing KU Conference Delegates
This year's conference, sponsored by the World Student Christian Federation, will have the theme "For the Life of the World." The conference will be interracial, inter-deminational, and inter-confessional.
Air Society Plans Meeting
Students should call the Methodist Center, for further information.
The Kansas Union may look as if it is under martial law this weekend, but the 40 blue-uniformed people will actually be Arnold Air Society and Angel Flight delegates to their semi-annual area conclave.
The Ennis C. Whitehead squadron of KU, are a headquarters for the seven squadrons in Missouri, Kansas and Illinois, will host the combined business meeting and workshop.
The conclaves are held twice annually, and the fall meeting has been held on the KU campus for the last six years.
Commission Late Too
PHILADELPHIA, (UPI) — The Civil Service Commission today upheld the firing of a Welfare Department employee in July, 1962, for being late for work 244 times in five years.
The decision came exactly 14 months and five days after the commission took the employee's appeal of the dismissal.
Bob Tieszen, McPherson senior and area commander, and Joan McGregor, Leawood senior and area angel Flight Commander, will direct the conclave.
Arnold Air Society is a professional honorary organization of Air Force ROTC cadets. With its auxiliary, Angel Flight, it seeks to promote interest in air power and in the United States Air Force on the campus and within the AFROTC program.
LEARN TO BOX!!
Be a master in the art of self-defense.
Expert trainers' secrets can be yours!
No equipment needed. Form a campus
boxing club among your friends for
training and fitness. Complete brochure and
lessons one dollar. Send to: Physical
Arts Gym, 363 Clinton Street, Hempstead,
Long Island, New York.
oct.31, nov.1, 1963
Research Development Engineering Programming Marketing/Sales Systems Engineering
If you cannot attend the interview, write or call: W. H. Jennings, Branch Manager IBM Corp. 1400 Baltimore Avenue Kansas City 41, Missouri BA 1-0575.
interview:
"The future depends on people with ideas."
"The future depends on people with ideas." This statement helps explain the work at IBM today: seeking and finding new ways to handle information, planning and building new machinery for the task, exploring wholly new methods. The demand for ideas has never been greater.
If you'd like to check into the new things going on at IBM—and the significant professional opportunities opening up there for men and women—see your college placement officer and make an appointment to talk with IBM representatives. IBM is an Equal Opportunity Employer.
MOVE AHEAD—SEE IBM
The Classical Film Series
Announces a change of location All films will be shown in Fraser Theater
This Week The Passion of Joan of Arc directed by Carl Dreyer-1928
Wednesday, October 16 Fraser Theater-7:00 p.m. only
Admission 60c
College Support Seen for Barry
By Roy Miller
The group of six KU faculty members huddled over a couple pitchers of beer discussing, among other things, the weather and politics.
The men, most of them wearing suits or sport coats, paused from their discussion of last night's rain storm ("you'd think it was a tornado") and the existing drought conditions ("you should have seen me stick a curtain rod in the ground") to comment on the forthcoming presidential campaign.
"HE'S A Goldwater Democrat," one of the men said loudly before the conversation returned to the weather and numerous other things.
Nearby sat a first-year law student and the chairman of the National Federation of Collegiate Young Republicans.
Dressed in blue jeans, a striped shirt with flaps on the pockets and a pair of cowboy boots, Jerry Dickson was also talking about the 1964 presidential race.
SINCE HE was elected to head the collegiate Republican clubs in June, Dickson has made numerous speaking trips across the country. He doesn't plan any jaunts this month, but trips such as one planned for Nov. 6 to Arizona cause him to call himself a part-time student.
From his observation in the last few months, Dickson believes American college students are solidly behind Barry Goldwater, the Arizona senator who is considered the front-runner for the 1964 Republican presidential nomination.
"I have no doubt there'll be a reaction among faculty members against Goldwater, which no doubt will have some affect," Dickson said. "But, I don't feel it will make a significant impact on college voting patterns. College students are generally Republican. Sixty per cent of the college students who could vote in 1960 voted for Nixon.
"THE KU FACULTY is a representative example of every college faculty. Most of these people grew up during the depression. They have prejudiced attitudes against the Republican party.
"Something which cannot be overlooked, particularly in the East, is the tremendous amount of money the government spends for research of all types. This tends to prejudice the faculty against those who favor a limited government."
"Most of the KU faculty are reasonable men, and I have made many friends among the faculty. The greatest single objection I have to faculty members is the fact that, in considering man's economical, political and social life, they tend to forget the human drive for power when they're considering many of their grandeo proposals."
DICKSON is a conservative at heart, but he hasn't endorsed Goldwater for the GOP nomination. Of Nelson Rockefeller, governor of New York and another Republican being mentioned for the party's nomination, Dickson said: "Don't discount Rockefeller because he has tremendous drive and ability."
The former chairman of KU Young Republicans and former student body president is also kept busy these days helping Rep. William Avery. Dickson feels the Wakefield farmer is a strong possibility for the state gubernatorial nomination.
Dickson has instituted or plans to initiate several new features for the nation's 60,000-70,000 Collegiate Young Republicans in 800 clubs before his two-year term ends.
He has created the position of executive-secretary of the national organization to improve communications among clubs. Art Groesbeck, an alumnus of Kansas State University, was appointed to that position.
DICKSON plans mock presidential nominating conventions and
(Continued on page 12)
Dailu hansan
61st Year, No.21 24
Wednesday, Oct. 16, 1963
LAWRENCE. KANSAS
THE LADY CREEK FUNDRAISER
OLD TIMERS—The Phi Delta Theta men of 1892 look as if they knew then they would be front-page news 71 years later. The man in the
derby hat on the porch and the man in the bow tie suggest an air of self-pride. Has anything changed but the styles? (See page seven)
Lower House Elects Erhard As New Chancellor of West Germany
BONN, Germany—(UPI)—Ludwig Erhard, who as economics minister engineered West Germany's postwar boom, was elected the nation's second chancellor today to replace resigned Konrad Adenauer.
The Bundestag, lower house of parliament, voted 279 to 180 in favor of Erhard.
The Christian Democratic Union which Adenauer and Erhard turned into the most powerful vote-getting machine in German history, voted for Erhard along with their coalition partners, the Free Democrats.
THE OPPOSITION Social Democrats voted as a bloc against Erhard
crats voted as a bloe against Erhard
Speaker of Parliament Eugen
Garstenmaier turned to the stocky
Erhard and said:
"I ask you, member Erhard, do you accept the election?"
In a strong voice, Erhard replied,
"I accept the election."
A storm of applause swept the hall.
IT WAS A FAR larger margin than Adenaer himself had received in his first election to the chancellorship. At that time, in 1949, it was his own single vote that put him in power.
Adenauer stepped down yesterday at the age of 87 after 14 years and one month in office, but he promised
he would continue to speak "often and well" from the back benches in Parliament, where he will represent the Bonn are as a Christian Democratic deputy. Erhard had the support of the Christian Democrats and their Free Democrats coalition allies.
After the 1961 election, Adenauer opponents in the coalition forced Adenauer to make a written promise to resign half-way through the four-year legislative period to give Erhard time to get settled into harness before the 1965 election.
ADENAUER received tributes in Parliament yesterday to his career, which saw West Germany rise from the ashes of total defeat to a place among the great nations of the world.
"You can leave office today." Parliament Speaker Eugen Gerstenmaier told him, "in the knowledge that the foundation has been laid, the framework drawn, the path prepared and the goal determined toward which Germany strives during the second half of the bloody century."
Adenauer, in reply, noted that Germany has not achieved reunification "even though I believe that we can see the possibilities of a reunification approaching the horizon, if
we remain alert and careful and patient."
Then he mentioned one of his greatest achievements, the reconstitution of Germany with its World War II enemies.
"A SOLUTION of this question (reunification) is possible only with the help of our friends," the old man said, "and we thank God that we have again found friends in the world.
"Precisely this friendship in Europe, and beyond Europe with the United States, with all the free peoples of the world, precisely this friendship gives us a right to expect with certainty, that reunification in freedom will some day come about."
. . .
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The State Department paid tribute to retiring Chancellor Konrad Adenauer yesterday and expressed confidence that West Germany would continue to thrive under his successor, Ludwig Erhard.
"One of the most significant aspects of the Chancellor's retirement and the approaching appointment of Dr. Ludwig Erhard to the post is the fact that executive power in Germany has for the first time in many years changed hands.
Pearson, Hashinger Plan to Beat Phone Record
LEE COHLMIA Well. are you set to break the record
THE TALKING FOOTBALL PLAYER.
By Don Black and Charles Corcoran
A. Lee Cohlmia, Wichita senior and JRP social chairman said both halls agreed unanimously to try to break a national "talkathon" record of 421 hours and 52 minutes. The record was set by Olin Templin and Luther N. Lewis halls at KU in December, 1961.
Residents of Margaret Hashinger and Joseph Pearson residence halls are trying to make the world's longest phone call.
"WE THOUGHT that it would be a great way to get to know people in our dorm and in JRP," Judy Phipps, Wichita junior and Hashinger social chairman, said.
Carl Lindquist, Prairie Village junior and JRP president, said, "The 'talkathon' appeared to be a cause that all the men in the hall would work on and thus build dorm spirit.
"We're going for the record for the same reason that men climb mountains, because it's there," he said. "Besides it's fun. The closer we come to breaking the old record, the more fun it will be."
THE "TALKATHON" is believed to have started at the University of Illinois. Students there set a record of 120 hours in November, 1961.
record of 168 hours, but shortly after students at Western Michigan College claimed a record of 401 hours.
On December 13, 1961, Carruth and O'Leary men's dormitory and Chi Omega sorority ended their attempt with a record of 193 hours. Lewis and Templin halls continued to set their standing national record at that time.
The earlier KU talkathons were begun as a means to collect money for the Campus Chest. Men in Templin hall were charged 50 cents to talk for an unlimited time. The hall residents raised $115 for the campus charity fund.
EACH MAN and woman who takes part in the new "talkathon" will talk for 30 minutes. Hashinger resi-
Weather
It will be partly cloudy through tomorrow with widely scattered thunder showers occurring mainly tonight. Temperatures were cooler today with the highs today and Thursday about 80. The low tonight will range from the middle to the upper 50's.
Michigan State University set a dents will begin talking on the quarter-hour and men in JRP on the hour and half-hour. Each person will speak to two individuals.
The telephone hooks in both halls have been taped to prevent any accidental disconnection of the call.
The phone in Hashinger is located between its dining rooms in the basement. JRP's phone is in a booth in the dormitory's second-floor lounge.
UNLIKE THE Lewis-Templin "talkathon" where any resident could speak on the phone, the Hashinger-JRP "talkathon" is on a schedule. Each person has signed a list specifying time and day when he is to talk.
The halls are planning a party it they beat the present record.
KU's first "talkathons" were widely publicized. Both the Associated Press and United Press International wire services carried news of the event. The National Broadcasting Company television station in Kansas City, Mo., featured a film of the feat.
"Hashinger's president, Nancy Johnson (Caldwell junior), and I will end the call with plans for a victory party," JRP president Lindquist said.
WHERE DID THEY GET HOME?
JUDY PHIPPS
. . . Yes, only 422 hours to go!
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 16, 1963
They Get Bigger
The growth of Americans as a nation in the past 50-100 years has been phenomenal-particularly the growth of the American women.
And, I refer not to her growth in numbers, nor her growth in cultural, intellectual and political pursuits. I mean instead, her individual physical growth. The American woman has steadily grown fatter down through the years.
As the spread of the suburbs can be traced to overgrown cities full of onetime agrarian Americans, the spreading of American women's hips can be traced back through outgrown corsets and girdles to the one-time wasp-waist colonial women.
The historical evolution of this expansionist movement was recently called to attention by a Kansas City department store which displayed 35 original dresses depicting fashion trends of the past century. Neither mannequin nor model could be found to fit into some of the dresses. The 17-inch waistlines of the old costumes were simply too small.
THE KANSAS CITY STAR commented:
"The corseted and beautifully gowned bride of 80 or 90 years ago would think women today are too fat—and they would be right, in comparison."
Thus, the daily diet dilemma in the past 20 years has developed. This mass mania for reducing—now one of America's foremost problems—can be seen by row upon row of low-calorie salad dressings and dietetic colas displayed on grocery shelves, the numerous magazine articles describing the miracle reducing exercises, and advertisements flaunting short cuts to weight loss.
And most currently, there is even a rumor that Hansel and Gretel's gingerbread house was really made of Metrecal cookies.
Corresponding changes in bridge table topics
indicate that some American women feel guilty about the feminist "expansionist movement."
However, many refuse to take action and choose to ignore or hide excess poundage. Two metropolitan department store clerks reported that waist cinchers have recently been added to their stock. "We haven't carried them for years, but now some women will do anything to squeeze into a smaller size dress," one clerk said.
SOME WOMEN THINK they have hidden the midriff bulge by raising the waistline to the empire height. Others retreat to the circus tent camouflage. Putting undue emphasis on the current casual look, they pull on long baggy sweatshirts or extra-long sweaters and dawn mu-mu type dresses.
Whether or not the modern feminine ostrich thinks she has covered her feathers with a grubby disguise, the camouflage technique remains evident. And the answer to this fatter matter lies deeper than she can bury her head. Contemporary authorities say overeating and resulting over weight are caused by emotional problems, pressure of school or occupation, insecurity and unhappiness.
Whatever the cause, neither apathy nor sloppiness is the answer to the diet dilemma. One male magazine columnist put it thusly: "I like the beautiful girl because she looks on the outside like she is on the inside. I won't find her inside a baggy skirt, bedraggled pull-over, or a dress designed for smuggling watermelons."
The answer is that 20th century women should stop kidding themselves and stop making excuses for their fatter selves—and take heed from their colonial antecedents less privileged with political power and more endowed with willpower.
- Linda Machin
Court Questionable Editor:
The People Say...
Recently, the Daily Kansan described the workings of the student court, the main function of which has been the hearing of traffic ticket appeals. My experience with the court has shown that in their concern with the officialities of their duties, the justice they ostensibly administer is a fallacy. In particular, their assumption seems to be that there is a "revealed law," namely the pamphlet handed out with the automobile stickers at the beginning of the semester. It is against this document of rules that traffic cases are judged, with apparently little regard for the particular circumstances of the case which moved the student to appeal the ticket in the first place. (that is, unless those circumstances should have been covered in another book of revelations containing precedents of the court).
First, the idea of having a court to which appeals can be made is a mockery if the court feels that it is only an arm of the administrative authority which issued the ticket to begin with.
It is not my purpose to publically air the merits of my particular case. Rather, I would like to see the situation corrected which makes the student court a questionable body for the reviewing of students' traffic appeals, and perhaps the other functions that the court might serve.
The irony of this discrepancy between "book law" and justice was brought out after the chief justice had announced that my appeal had been turned down. Speaking off the record, he said, in effect, that he did feel my appeal was legitimate, that he would make a request to the administration to correct the situation I based my appeal around, but . . . the traffic pamphlet was the authority in this case, and there was nothing else they could do.
A second point is that the assumption implicit in any court system—but not heeded in the student court—is that laws are not absolute or revealed, but are subject to consideration which revolves about the special circumstances involved in a given case.
Thirdly, the court is run by the law school to give law students
practice in a "real" court situation. The appelants, however, are not practicing! When a triflic fine, whether of four dollars or sixty-four dollars is at stake, a student would like to feel that his needs are being considered, not those of neophyte lawyers who halteringly sputter forth legal jargon. Moreover, one's faith in the student judicial system is little enhanced when the morning following a court session, one finds the same "judges" and "lawyers" sitting en masse on the steps of Green Hall hooting at passing girls (indeed, on one occasion one of the justices had cleverly rigged a string across the sidewalk, apparently designed for the purpose of stopping some young pretty . . . or perhaps to lift her skirts).
I believe the function of considering traffic appeals would be best served by a student-faculty committee, which could give adequate attention to the circumstances of the appeal rather than the "legalities" involved.
Stephen Goldfarb graduate student
Daily Hansan
Member Inland Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 Street, New York, NY. Represented by International Mail subscription rates; $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence. Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and holidays. Received in examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas
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EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Baine King Editorial Editor
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Mike Miller Managing Editor
Terry Ostmeyer, Trudy Meseerve,
Jackie Stern, Rose Osborne, Assistant
Managing Editors; Kary Jarvis, City
Editor; Society Society Editor;
Roll Miller, Sports Editor, Dennis
Bowers. Picture Editor.
Hear Mme. Nhu
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Bob Brooks Business Manager
Jonnie B佐莉kin, Business Manager
Alice Rueschhoff, Circulation Mgr.:
Brooks Harrison, Classified Adv. Mgr.:
Donald Dugan, Promotion Mgr.: Jerry
Schroepfer, Merchandising Mgr.
Editor:
After reading Miss Annemarie Hoffman's letter in Monday's Kansas, I feel some sort of minority voice is necessary. Both Miss Hoffman and the New Frontier seem blithely to assume that Americans, while flocking to hear and to see Mme. Dinh Nuh, do so only to present to her hostile and unsympathetic audience. Indeed, can it be necessary to point out that the art of character assassination by the adroit quote-out-of-context has been carried to depths hitherto undreamt of, to insure the most hostile of receptions for Mme. Nuh?
But I am sympathetic. The Diem government, ostensibly our ally, is taced with the spector of foreign conquest and the sedious threats of an anarchistic and publicity conscious rabble. As an important and articulate member of the Diem regime, Mme. Nhu should be heard, with antipathy if necessary, with courtesy if possible.
Khrushchev visited the U.S., threatened to "bury us," and was lionized. Nehru, clumsily masking his fear and hatred of the West behind an oily and arrogant hypocrisy, visited the U.S. and was showered with uncomprehending apostolic devotion. Mme. Nhu, in contrast, has been denounced and vilified without quarter. Love thy enemy? And hate thy ally?
Miss Hoffman ingeniously links Mme. Nhu with Christine Keeler, because both have made headlines. Quite right, too. Mme. Nhu has already been compared to the Dragon Lady, Lucrezia Borgia and Torquemada. How fortunate it is that the Keeler scandal provides the opportunity for a new low in letters-to-the-editor malignancy. Congratulations to Miss Hoffman for not invoking the name of Adolf Hitler.
Miss Hoffman asks, "What is our real motivation?" The Kennedy family levels the charge of nepotism at Diem; Castro alleges tyranny; "civilization" honors Jomo Kennetta and his Mau Mau butchers, but turns its face from a legally constituted government; The U.S. Constitution upholds the principle of non-seditious, non-libelous free speech. Indeed, Miss Hoffman, what is our real motivation?
Robert L. Yaple
St. Joseph, Mo., graduate
ANTI-
WHEAT SALES
QUEEN HERBLOOK
"It's Peacemongering And Creeping Private Enterprise, That's What It Is!"
Good Time to Launch Attack on Abbrv'tns
It's a good time to launch an attack. Madame Nhu is under attack. The Traveling Hootenanny is under attack. The English Pro, as usual, is under attack. The Daily Kansan is under attack.
And now I'm going to attack Charley Finley and the nation's sportswriters.
In case you can't see the connection between Finley, the owner of the Kansas City Athletics, and the sportswriters, I'll sum it up: they butcher names.
This year Finley, at about mid-season, slapped nicknames on the backs of his players' uniforms. He had a space problem in doing this, so names of more than five letters were anathema.
JERRY LUMPE, A's second-sacker became "Lump." Ted Bowsfield, allegedly a pitcher, was known as "Bows." Norm Siebern, the team's first-baseman and All Star representative, was "Norm." (If you recall, Ralph Houk, manager of the American League All Stars, was so embarrassed by the sight of Siebern in the green and gold KC colors, he refused to play him.)
So much for Charley.
Such practices must be nipped in the bud. With available space everywhere constantly being reduced, these people are setting a dangerous example.
Next comes the sports writers. Basketball season is approaching, and with it comes the box-scores. Chamberlain, in these agate monstrosities, is "Ch'b'l'n," or some other abbreviation.
People with long names may be denied social intercourse and recognition. Old family names may have to be abolished.
EITHER THAT OR these abbreviations will become an accepted part of our language. Your wife will greet you every morning with a stirring, "Hi, h'n'y." Your kids will call you 'D'dy." You'll be known to your boss and associates as J'n Sm'th. It's a good thing the ZIP code has been invented because the postman would never know you from your name on an address.
As the population continues to explode and space keeps dwindling, the abbreviation mania will expand from names to the other parts of our language. All writing will be in abbreviations. Reading a newspaper or magazine will be like decoding a secret document.
After a while this madness will be accepted; people will begin to speak entirely in abbreviations. Enunciation and diction will be forgotten things. The master of the slurred, abbreviated statement will be a man of status.
"But how can we prevent this?" you ask, clearly, I hope.
The first step is to put the quietus on Charley Finley and the sportswriters. Would they have shortened "Washington" to "W'sh'n'n" or "Jefferson" to J'frs'n?" That would be practically un-American. Let's investigate their motives.
Write letters to your C'ngr'sm'n. Abbreviate his name so he can see how it looks. Address letters to your favorite TV and movie stars using abbreviations. That'll get them with us.
Let's straighten these sportswriters out quicker than you can say "J'k R'b'ns'n." Let's make their names "M'd" with the public.
H N
It'll work or my name isn't R'lf G'g.
Ralph Gage
Philosopher Lauds Nuclear Test Ban
Page 3
by Greg Swartz
Errol E. Harris, professor of philosophy, yesterday lauded the nuclear test ban treaty which was recently concluded by the United States, Russia, and Great Britain and signed by 100 other nations.
No further addition to radioactive fallout in the atmosphere will be made for the duration of the treaty.
In an interview yesterday, he gave two reasons for his position;
- A clear indication is given of the relaxation of international tensions and the possibility of agreement and co-operation between Russia and the United States.
PROF. HARRIES IS holding a lecture at 7:30 p.m. every Thursday in Dyche Auditorium on "The Philosophy of War and Peace." Tonight's lecture, the fifth in the series will be on sovereignty in international law.
"The treaty has created a new atmosphere in which further progress toward easing the international situation and staving off the threat of war is at least possible," Prof. Harris said.
The treaty became law on Oct. 10, after being signed by the United States, Russia, and Great Britain, the three countries which negotiated the treaty, and by more than 100 other countries.
IT WAS NEGOTIATED last August in Moscow. The U.S. Senate approved the treaty on Sept. 24 by an 80-19 vote, and it was signed by President Kennedy Oct. 8.
Prof. Harris was skeptical of further steps being taken in disarmament.
The treaty bans tests of all nuclear weapons except those conducted underground.
At the present time, arms and weapons are further security for the countries of the world, he said. They cannot afford to disarm unless they have some other means of security.
"And in the present setup there is no other means of security to which they can appeal."
PROF. Harris said a serious weakness, though unavoidable, in the treaty is that there is nothing to prevent or restrain China, France or any other non-signatory power from developing nuclear weapons.
Any signatory nation may withdraw if it decides the supreme interest of the country is jeopardized, Prof. Harris said.
"Accordingly, the development of nuclear weapons by China, or even the testing of them by France, could be a pretext for unilateral repudiation of the treaty."
THE TREATY will last as long as it is in accordance with interests of the signatory countries, Prof. Harris said. This applies to the United States, Russia, and any other country.
Ike, Rockefeller Combine Efforts Against Barry
By Lyle C. Wilson United Press, International
United Press International It doesn't take much imagination to suspect that former President Eisenhower and Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller were in cahoots in last week's presidential political maneuvers.
In an interview, Eisenhower said of Sen. Barry Goldwater (R-Ariz.)
"I think that before he can be considered a truly serious candidate (for president) he has to do his best to make his views clear."
THIS COMMENT could not be regarded as a loud Eisenhower cheer for Barry Goldwater. On the contrary, it seemed more a challenge to the Senator's Presidential candidacy.
Rockefeller's move was to quickly invite Goldwater to meet him in television debate, an invitation the Senator dodged instantly. Goldwater argues that top Republicans should be debating with the new frontiersmen and not with each other.
Wednesday, Oct. 16, 1963 University Daily Kansan
The Governor argues that such a debate would lead toward a Republican consensus on principles and their application.
It is now in the interest of both the United States and Russia that this treaty works. Prof. Harris said.
China and France did not sign the treaty because they want power which they do not have in the world conflict, he said.
"CHINA WANTS to hold its own against all. Their ability to hold their own depends on further testing."
Prof. Harris foresees no change in the position of France and China in the near future.
He said it would be foolish to imagine the advantages of the test ban treaty are permanent or more than a beginning. He described the treaty as "a small first step toward reduction of international tensions and the maintenance of peace."
IT WOULD be extremely foolish to become complacent and think that we have now solved the problem of war and peace or even that we are well advanced on the road to a solution."
The future of the treaty rests in part upon the development of weapons through underground testing and upon the power balance which would be thereby affected, Prof. Harris said.
It is impossible to predict what effect underground testing will make on weapons, he concluded.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Film On Joan of Arc To Be Shown Tonight
Phone in your Classified Ad
BE SHOWN TONIGHT
mission of Joan of Arc",
film, will be shown to-
a the Forum Room of the
as Union.
One film is the third in the
classical Film Series, sponsored
by Student Union Activities.
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During National Newspaper Week we wish to pause a moment from our busy daily routine and say . . .
THANKS
because if it weren't for you it would be impossible for us to publish a newspaper.
THANKS... TO OUR READERS for your keen interest in the Daily Kansan.
THANKS... TO OUR ADVERTISERS for your confidence in investing your advertising dollars with us. This support continues to enable us to give the KU campus a better newspaper.
THANKS... TO OUR ADVISORS for your professional and patient assistance. We, as students, are indebted to you.
THANKS... TO THE UNIVERSITY PRESS for the technical assistance in helping us prepare the Daily Kansan. Your patience is greatly appreciated.
THANKS... TO ALL OTHERS who have assisted us during the past year by bringing in news and pictures or who have helped our staff in numerous ways to enable us to give complete and accurate coverage of the campus.
Daily Hansan
"The Only Way To Reach The Campus Market"
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 16, 1963
73 Nations Represented By Students
The 423 foreign students from 73 countries at KU this fall have set two records.
Fifty-eight more foreign students are enrolled at the University this year than were enrolled last year. They represent five more nations than last year's foreign students did.
CLARK COAN, foreign student advisor, said that Asia sends the most students to KU. They have 244 here with 195 from the Far East and 49 from the Near East. Europe is next with 81. Other areas sending students are Africa, 37; South America, 26; Central America, 21; North America (Mexico and Canada), 14.
Although Taiwan (Nationalist China) again is represented by the most students, 64, India has moved on rapidly and now has 63.
Germany is third with 24, and Venezuela fourth with 13. Canada and the Philippines each sent 12, Costa Rica and Iraq 11, and Korea and Saudi Arabia, 10.
There are 277 graduate students and 146 undergraduates. There are 337 men and 86 women; 199 are at KU for the first time
OTHER NATIONS represented are: Greece and Iran, 9; Egypt, Great Britain and Hong Kong, 8; Pakistan, 7; Japan, Norway and Thailand, 6; Cuba, Indonesia, Lebanon, South Africa and Turkey, 5; Algeria, Argentina, Austria, Burma, France, Jordan, The Netherlands, Switzerland, Syria and Tanganyika, 4; Cambodia, Israel, Panama, and Tunisia, 3; Afghanistan, Bolivia, Chile, Denmark, Equador, Finland, Iceland, Liberia, Mexico, Nigeria, Poland, Southern Rhodesia, Singapore and Spain, 2; Aden, Brunel, Cameroons, Colombia, Cyprus, Czechoslovakia, Ethiopia, Ghana, Guatemala, Italy, Jamaica, Kenya, Kuwait, Malaya, Morocco, Nepal, Peru, Sierra Leone, Uruguay and Yemen, 1.
British Politics To Be Faculty Forum Topic
search there on the history of British political parties.
Professor Aldon Bell will speak on "Current British Politics" at the Faculty Forum at 12:30 p.m. Wednesday in the English Room of the Kansas Union.
Professor Bell just returned from England at the beginning of the school year. This summer he did re-
Those not interested in attending the luncheon at noon are invited to attend the speech beginning at 12:30. A discussion will follow the speech.
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results
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The Classical Film Series
Announces a change of location
All films will be shown in Fraser Theater
This Week The Passion of Joan of Arc directed by Carl Dreyer-1928
Wednesday, October 16 Fraser Theater - 7:00 p.m. only
Admission 60c
Wednesday, Oct. 16, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 5
KU Law School Forms New Moot Court Council
Eight law students have been named to the newly formed Moo Court Council.
The council will conduct the most court program by selecting hypothetical cases to be argued by first and second-year law students. The council will also assist students in preparing the cases for presentation before faculty and students.
All first year law students are required to participate in the moot court program. They do research write briefs and argue cases under simulated appellate court conditions for one hour of credit.
Those in the moot court program will participate in the James Barclay Smith Competition. Smith, professor of law at KU since 1937, is a national authority on administrative law, and advisor to Phi Delta Phi, honorary law fraternity.
THE PROGRAM is voluntary for second year students.
The top two-man team in Smith competition here will represent the University in regional and national moot court eliminations.
FACULTY ADVISOR to the Moot
Court Council is Richard B. Dyser,
assistant professor of law.
Third-year law students on the council are Tom Clark, Bonner Springs; Harry Craig, Lawrence; Bobbie E. Potts, Cherryvale; and Henry Goo, McPherson.
Second-year members are Ernest Adelman, Kansas City, Mo.; Gary Clifton, Rock Port, Mo.; Michael Holland, Russell, and Rogert Lyster, Lincoln.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 16, 1963
Dr. Arturo Illia Is New Leader For Argentina
A white-haired, fragile-appearing country doctor has taken over the job of proving that Argentina can exist as a practicing democracy.
He is Dr. Arturo Umberto Illia, under whom Argentina returns last week to constitutional government. His chances for success will depend in large part upon the control he is able to exercise over Argentina's military factions on the one hand and the followers of former dictator Juan D. Peron on the other.
FROM THE VANTAGE point of a recent visit to Argentina, it is possible to predict that President Illia is in for some lumps at home and at least occasional clashes with the United States.
For the more than 10 years since Feron's fall, the two groups have kept the nation in an unceasing state of turmoil.
For one thing, he has been accused of being a rabid Argentine nationali t. He already has announced plans to annul the foreign oil contracts which helped to make Argentina self-supporting in oil.
These will be taken over by the state-owned YPF Oil Company.
He also has been accused of being pro-Communist. This he denies, but he believes Communists should have the right to organize and express their views.
The Venezuelan regime of President Romulo Betancourt held similar views in its earlier days and learned the hard way that Communist expression of views comes in violence and in unceasing conspiracy against existing order.
THE VIEW is certain to bring him into conflict with Argentina's military and suggests a leniency toward Castro's Cuba which will not endear him to the United States.
The enormity of his task at home is illustrated by the fact that Argentina's deficit this year will run to around $200 million, that economic development is at a standstill and that unemployment in a country of around 21 million now is estimated at around the million mark.
The two sorest spots in the Argentine economy are the state-owned railroads and the YPF Oil Company.
Among other things, Illia has promised "efficient administration" of the railroads, a task no Argentine leader before him has been able to accomplish.
A sociologist and an anthropologist last night discussed with members of Pi Sigma Alpha, honorary political science society, how field work in sociology and anthropology can affect political science.
Sociologist Tells Of Field Work
Charles Warriner, professor of sociology, who spent 1958 in the Philippines studying the Maranaos, a small Muslim group there, said the main problem he found was in the intolerance between the administrative groups there.
The administrative unit which the people of the Philippines are accustomed to is based on the family, Prof. Warriner said. Though the unit has a territory, relatives outside the territory may be members, he said.
This unit has come into conflict with a new unit based solely on territory which has been imposed by the national government of the Philippines, Prof. Warriner said.
"The question is." he said, "shall we insist upon the use of modern units even if they don't fit."
Felix Moos, assistant professor of anthropology, who specializes in Korea and Japan, said, the role of the anthropologist is that of a participant observer.
Prof. Moos said an anthropologist must look at a society's structure, its concepts of what the people ought to do, and how they view the world in order to make an analysis of the society.
An anthropologist most view a society in detail for a long time. Pref. Moos said, "Long term viewing allows the anthropologist to look from the outside in and from the inside out."
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Wednesday, Oct. 16, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS in 1896. This photograph of the campus was made from the top of a water tower looking south. The paved walk coming north was fairly new when this photograph was taken. Note the poor condition of Oread Ave. (Jayhawk Blvd.) at the right of the paved walk.
A University Rich with History and Color
Pictures and Story By R. Dennis Bowers
To a student currently studying at KU, the University has often represented a fine place to graduate and a four-year challenge.
There appears to be little KU history worth troubling about and none of significance to stimulate thoughts of a long and colorful Mount Oread tradition.
BUT DEEP IN THE canyons of books in the basement of Watson Library are stacks of documents which write a story of KU history, a school with historical significance.
Files of dusty books bring forth countless post cards taken by instructors and Lawrence residents. They depict Lawrence as it was when Clark Quantrill and his small army left a wake of death and destruction in the August, 1863 raid. Lawrence and the university are revealed as they were on that long-distant September day when the university first opened. Kansas was only five years old at the time.
DURING THOSE first days, the faculty took stock of their students and found forty-nine enrolled. In
a few days, the number rose to 55. Of these students, not one was ready for college work. All had come for preparatory studies.
The staff consisted of three professors, a lecturer on hygiene, and a janitor. This school, on the edge of the frontier, was forced to rely on young men with little experience, or on older men who desired a change of locality in search of health.
GENERAL JOHN FRASER visited the campus by invitation on December 4,1867 and was elected president of the university the same day. A student of Fraser's wrote later; "In stature he was below the medium; but his sturdy, closely knit frame was impelled with a spirit extraordinarily active . . ."
Gen. Fraser's arrival in 1869 infused new life into the university. The enrollment increased, new teachers were added and the number of courses were expanded. Fraser Hall, then called University Hall, was built complete with hitching posts for student's mounts.
THE UNIVERSITY grew and so
did the need for more room. Blake Hall and Watkins Hall (the present Art Museum) were built. Watkins Hall was then called Chemistry Hall. Snow Hall was constructed next.
SPORTS were beginning to emerge on the scene. Football and baseball became intercollegiate sports between KU, Baker University and Kansas State University. A game between KU and Baker in 1890 is still contested. KU claims the victory 14-12 and Baker claims a 12-10 victory.
Campus organizations were forming, allowing an outlet for interests and talents. The mens glee club, the mandolin club, poetry club, drama club, Jay James, K-Club, the Kansas Editors and the KuKu's were organized.
AND THE UNIVERSITY adopted traditions—the yell, "Rock Chalk, Jayhawk" had its origin over doughnuts and cider following a social meeting of the KU science club. The yell was originally, "Rah, Rah, Jayhawk" but was changed that year just prior to a football game. The word "chalk" originated from the
chalk outeroppings in the rock strata on the hill.
The crimson and the blue were not adopted until after school colors of maize and sky blue had been used. These colors were changed to just the crimson and finally the blue was added.
Much of the tradition and history has been forgotten and lies at rest at the bottom of those musty canyons.
NO LONGER do we have the annual Dandelion Day where students scatter with their dates across the campus grounds to pluck the yellow weeds. No longer do we have the Maypole fight where sophomores and juniors battled over who would get the Maypole. No longer is swimming permitted in Potter's Lake where diving boards and rafts were once busy.
Time brings changes. But the past is there and it is upon that past that KU, as it is now, was built. It is colorful and significant, and gives meaning and a kind of nostalgic retrospect which could be termed pride.
PATRICK SCHWALZMAN
SO, BRING ON OKLAHOMA
—This KU football player, if he seems somewhat inadequately dressed for the occasion in his uniform, looks formidable enough even without shoulder pads.
THE SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS
as it was although "Old
North" fine
THE SCHOOL OF FINE ARTS as it was in 1900. Although "Old North" was the home of fine arts, externally it relied on its name in a manner scarcely conceivable to today's architects.
FROM THE ARCHIVES comes this photograph of the women of Pi Beta Phi sorority as they dressed in 1892. Of course styles have since experienced an evolution from long
FROM THE ARCHIVES comes this photograph of the women of Pi Beta Phi sorority as they dressed in 1892. Of course styles have since experienced an evolution from sun bonnets and long dresses to other more sporty-looking attire.
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 16, 1963
Defensive Backfield Player Looks Forward to Wrestling
One of the happiest persons over the announcement that wrestling would be added to the KU athletic program as a varsity sport this year was Phil Doughty, starting defensive halfback for the Jayhawkers in football.
Doughty, 5-11, 170 pounds, wrestled last year in four meets on a club basis. KU lost three of those meets, but Doughty expects improvement and growth for the sport here in the future.
The Olewein, Ia., senior had a personal victory of one victory, one loss, one draw and a third place finish in the AAU meet in the 167-pound class last year.
"WRESTLING IS a good sport for football players," Doughty said. "It's a rough sport.
"One thing I like about it is that it's an individual sport, but still you have to work for a team, too. "It helps your reactions. The whole thing is contact."
THIS EVENING... By Roy Miller
YOU GET THE idea Doughty likes contact. Asked if any one play stood out in his mind from his duties in the KU defensive backfield. Doughty described a tackle he made in KU's game last year at Iowa State.
"If Marsh ever hit anyone, he'd kill 'em." Mitchell said and then proceeded to demonstrate the style that has made Marsh a Golden Gloves champion.
Monday, Coach Bud Wilkinson said "we're probably not as good as Kansas."
Asked yesterday about Wilkinson's statement, Mitchell said it was "silly."
With tongue in cheek, he told one reporter:
"We must have improved a lot in 24 hours."
ASKED WHAT he thought of
Joe Don Looney's dismissal from
the Sooner squad, Mitchell had no
comment.
"It's none of my business what Oklahoma does," Mitchell said. "I shouldn't say anything."
Looney was dismissed from the team because of disciplinary reasons. The Fort Worth, Tex., senior led the Sooners in rushing last season with 852 yards and led the nation in punting with a 43.4-yard average.
He rankd fifth nationally in rushing and led LED in scoring with 10 touchdowns and 62 points. He ran 61 yards for the tying touchdown here against KU as the Sooners went on to win, 13-7.
"I had a chance to put my helmet in one of their end's backs," he said. "I flipped him end over end and he had to be taken out of the game."
"Oklahoma just had a bad day." Jack Scofield, an assistant KU coach, said after scouting the Sooners' 28-7 loss to Texas Saturday.
"They are much better than that."
Doughty, one of the team's fastest members, isn't the only football player who doubles in wrestling. Others are Fred Elder and Gary Duff, who was a state champion for Salina High School.
Doughty, who started wrestling as a seventh-grader, is most afraid of Jim Grisham, Oklahoma fullback, in regard to KU's game at Norman Saturday.
"THAT GRISHAM is a power runner and he'll really kill us.
"But, I think we'll be much more ready to play these guys than we've been the last three games."
★★
Since wrestling and boxing are similar sports, it might not hurt mentioning Coach Jack Mitchell put on somewhat of a boxing demonstration after his team's football practice yesterday.
The demonstration, in a roundabout way, was prompted by a scuffle between Willie Rav Smith and Karl Sartore. Mitchell explained it was his policy to let squad members settle their differences without interference.
HE THEN THOUGHT of one exception—Ron Marsh.
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University Daily Kansan
Page 9
Park Chung Hee's Succession Looks Certain. But Vote is Close
SEOUL, Korea —(UPI)—Military junta chairman Park Chung Hee, the peppery little ex-general who can be expected to irritate the United States on small matters but agree with it on basic policies, appeared certain of election today as South Korean president.
THE CLOSE FIGHT put up by the 66-year-old Yun meant that Park's apparent victory gives him no mandate to do what he pleases for the next four years.
Park, 46, led former president Posun Yun in unofficial returns by 4,471,300 votes to 4,379,084. This represented all but about a million of the 10,857,062 votes cast.
And hard political and military realities prevent Park from showing too much independence from the United States, although there have been recent reports that he would seek to follow a more neutralist line in foreign policy.
There are 50,000 U.S. soldiers here to help guard South Korea against aggression from the Communist North, and the United States spends nearly 500 million annually in military and economic aid to Korea.
U. S. AND United Nations observers watched some of the polling places, and despite charges of irregularities from both sides, the election was non-violent and appeared generally honest.
Yun, however, was expected to contest the results as bitterly as he fought his campaign.
There is no recount guaranteed by election law, but local election committees can order district-by-district recounts.
Victory for Park means a continuation of the rule he assumed in May, 1961, when his officers and troops overthrew the civilian government of Premier John M Chang and set up the military junta.
THERE WERE reports Yun left his home for a hideout today in anticipation of losing and in fear of arrest. But aides said he was at home, reading the returns and resting.
Yun and other opponents argued in the campaign that Park would only be continuing junta rule in another form if elected.
Other causes of friction were his delays in the holding of the elections and his announcement on election eve of the purchase of $5 million worth of Canadian and Australian grain. The United States contends there is no food shortage here because of U.S. grain gifts, and says the Korean economy needs the money for other purchases.
PARK HAS GONE against U.S. wishes in many of his moves, including the military takeover that put him in power.
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Park was believed to have bought the grain to keep food prices down and win urban votes.
"I'm having all my clothes cleaned at Independent Laundry."
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Olathe Rotary to Host 35 Foreign Students
Thirty-five KU foreign students will travel to Olathe this week-end where they will be the guests of Olathe Rotary club members and their families.
The students will leave by bus from the Kansas Union at 12:45 p.m. Saturday and return at 4 p.m., Sunday.
Plans for the trip have been coordinated on campus by KU People-to-People.
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 16. 1963
CRC Plans Advice Board
The Civil Rights Council will hold its weekly meeting at 6 p.m. tonight in the Cottonwood Room of the Kansas Union.
Dennis Bowers, Kansas City senior and vice-chairman of the group, said the council will select members to form an advisory board which will prepare ideas and suggestions that the group will be asked to vote on.
George Ragsdale, Kansas City senior and chairman of the group, said he hopes the council can have
a Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) speaker for one of its future meetings.
Last week an official of the state NAACP, Hartzell Whyte, Kansas City attorney, spoke to the group.
GOLF IS NO STRANGER TO the Douglas home in Clayton, Mo. Dave, a touring pro, is the son and grandson of Scottish professionals. His grandfather owned a course near Edinburgh and his father learned the game at an early age. Naturally, Dave did, too.
UP Will Meet Tonight,
Vox Populi, Tomorrow
University Party and Vox Populi will hold meetings in the Kansas Union this week.
University Party will meet at 7:30 p.m., tonight to approve the new constitution and discuss the November All Student Council living group election.
Vox Populi will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday. Vox candidate interviews for ASC nominations continued last night.
UP interviews will be conducted Sunday afternoon, and candidates will be announced Sunday night.
Introducing... Our newest stylist, Mr. Lonnie Carson.
Lonnie, who's also a KU student, knows the latest styles in campus hairdos.
Come in soon and get acquainted.
Campus Beauty Shoppe
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— On the Campus —
VI 3-3034
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Town Shop
DOWNTOWN
University Shop
ON THE HILL
-Classified Ads-
LOST
Black handbag last Thursday. 121 Man-
turn to GSP. rm. 233. Received reward!
0-19*
Yellow gold ladies' wristwatch. Contact
Sally Mottff at VI 2-1340. 10-18
Pair of glasses lost between Dyche and Strong Hall on Oct. 14th during morning hours. If found please return to Strong Hall business office. 10-18
TYPING
Experienced typist, fast and accurate.
Call Mrs. Hays at VI 2-0057. 16-22
professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter, carbon vii 3-5648 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley, 408 West 13th. tt
Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typr writer fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 2047 Yale, VI 2-1648.
Experienced typist for theses and term papers in English, US, UK and Japan. Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Miss. VI 3-0588, tf
New electric typewriter. Reasonable rates for themes, term papers, dissertations, and theses. Mrs. Barta, 1955 Miller Drive, VI 3-6994.
Efficient and experienced typer would like to do work in home. Prompt and guaranteed work. Call at any time. VI 3-2651. 10-31
Typing: Dissertations theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines; 35 special symbols carbon ribbon; if needed service. Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI2-14 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI3-3057. tf
Tyning; Desertations, theses, manuscripts term papers typed. New Smith-Corona machines; 35 special symbols, carbon ribbon—if desired. Prompt. efficient service. Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI2-1546 or Mrs. Dorothy MOII VI3-3057.
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast,
legal terms. Marsha Goff, YI 3-2577. f
MILLIKENS SOS—always first quality typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines.
tape transcriptions. Office hours—7 a.m., 10 a.m., 12 p.m.
Phone VI-3-5920. Mail
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West
Mass..
service
at 9:45
PART
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TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, articles in journal and conference rates. Electric Typewriter. Mrs Mc-Edlowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568
Will baby Call 1
Prompt, neat and accurate work on wide carriage electric typewriter. Journalism, Business and Secretary experience. Charlotte Weber. VI 3-3495.
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FOR RENT
For rent or sale, one mobil home, 35' x 8'. Neat and clean. VI 3-9453 after 1:30 p.m.
tf
Apartment for two MEN, bills paid, rough
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0-21
Third floor apartment at 940 Ind. Suitable for 3 or 4 students. Private bath and kitchen. $70.00 per month, utilities nished. Off street parking. Call VI 3-1566. 10-17.
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For Rent: Available Nov. 1. furnished
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Mrs. Tipton. 10-16
For Rent: Furnished 2 bedroom apartment — air-conditioned, washer-Tenn. $80 per month apart—apartments $65.00 and up. T. A. Hemphill V 3-3802. 10-16
For Rent: Furnished apartment with shower for two KU men or women. Two bathrooms paid, close to campus and stadium—$50 per month. Inquire at 1005 Miss. Call I 3-4349. 10-16
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MISCELLANEOUS
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10-22
PARTY TIME: School house available for private parties, dances, meetings, refreshment bar and piano, tables, chairs, freshment bar and coolers. VI 3-7453-431 Forrest.
BUSINESS SERVICES
Will take in ironing 10c a piece. Also
Calf Calf, James Eberhard. S-36434.
Dressmaking-alterations, *formals* and
gowns. Ola Smith, 939½ *Mass.*
V 3-5262
10-18
It's time to make your reservations for the Holiday season. The Thanksgiving event will be held on Friday, November 17. Contact Maupintur at the Mall's Shopping Center, 711 W. 23rd. VI 3-1211.
11-1
Complete line of soles and heels, lacens,
cosmetics and polishes. Have new mert-
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smoke totes. Burgert's Shoe Shar-
Service — 1113 Mass. St. 11-1
Do you need a tutor for Chinese? If
you need it, enter 10-16.
If not in leave name and number. 10-16
Want a ride to Prairie Village or vicinity
Contact Alderson, 238 Lewis Hall. 10-18
Want ride from Prainie Village to Law-
bury on Mondays, Marty Alderson's
Laws Hall. 10-18
TRANSPORTATION
Page 11
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED -Linotype operator, 9 to 3 daily. Must be experienced on newspaper straightmail. University of Kansai, Press, 117 Flint Hall. Phone UNI at 3282
WANTED
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart, 1025 Mass. tf
FOR SALE
Three component Hi-Fi) unit Whralldeaf fan filled speaker, 50 watt Sherwood woodchopper. Must sacrifice changer. Must sacrifice. Call UN 4-3294 Leave number if not in. R. Neeley. 10-22
1950 Plymouth 4-dr. Sedan Deluxe, blue, r and h. Perfect body and paint, very good mechanically. Passed Official Motor Vehicle Inspection. 6 cyl., average 19 m.p.g. $150.00. Call VI 3-2528, see it any time. 10-18
Patronize Tour
Kansan Advertisers
9 speed bike, needs some work. Only $20.00. See at 1106 Ohio after 6:30 p.m.
1-8
Underwood portable typewriter with
case. In perfect condition. $25.00. Call
VI 3-7950 8 to 10 a.m. or after 5 p.m.
10-20
Underwood portable typewriter. Good
price again. price $25.00. Call:
3848 evenings. 10-21
1956 Buick, H.T. Good condition, new tires, best offer takes. Call VI-12- 100-7880.
Over 30 modern pistols, rifles and shot-
far below wholesale. Thousands of dollars
invested in this collection. All must
be seen now at A24 Ark. or call VT
110.
1957 Bel-Air Chevrolet, 8-cylinder hardtop, radio and heater. This car is in A-1 condition. Can be seen at 755 N. 7th Phone VI 3-1319. 10-18
Lightweight battery powered portable tape recorder. Many accessories, like new laptops, audio players, parties, etc.
See at 2116 Ohio after 90. This series cheap Japanese recorder! 10-21
For Sale: 1863 RCA portable stereo H. Fidelity sold new at $139.95—used 6 mo. Mint condition. Ray Stoneback's, 329 Mass. (also $149.95 Motorola demonstrator cut to $79.97).
Wednesday. Oct. 16, 1963
2 baby beds, automatic electric sterilizer excellent condition. Phone VI 3-8767.
Fender Stratocaster guitar and or Fender super amplifier like new. Can be seen at Richardson Music Co. Larry Breeden.
1602 La. VI 3-8544. 10-17
Read this terrific deal—1963 A.H. Sprite.
Low mileage. All extras. Phone VI 2-3597 or VI 2-1972. You have to see it to believe it. $1,725. 10-18
University Daily Kansan
Must sell -1960 Simca 4-dr sedan -delux
model. Good gas mileage. Call SIEN
10-17
Typewriters, new and used portables,
standards, electronics, Olympia, Olivetti.
Royal and Smith Corona portables. Type-
writer and adding machine service and
rental. Lawrence Typewriter, 730 Mass.
Call VI 3-3644. tf
Garage Sale: Desks, book cases, beds,
amps, books, dishes miscellaneous,
and several antiques. Open daily from 1 to
7 p.m. 1240 Ohio. 10-17
For sale or trade—1960 Comet—excellent condition, many extras. phone VI 3-016
New shipment of Pink typing paper. $50
One cream—$85 Lawrence Outdoor
1005 Mass
For Sale: Used Telefonken AM-FM, four band radio—like new. Also, Bogen turntable and preamp. See at Pettengil Davis—725 Mass. 16-16
1957 "98" Oldsmobile convertible; white;
excellent condition; power windows,
steering radio, seat, brakes. Four new
radio take offer. Call: Bill Murdoco
V1-24282
For Sale: Stereo and Hi-Fi Diamond needles. 1/2 price until Nov. 10—Reg. $9.95 now $4.98. Pettengill-Davis, 725 Mass. 10-16
For Sale: 1959 Buick Electra 2-dr., very sharp—$1,000.00, would consider trade for small car. 1523 W. 22nd St. Terr. Call VI 3-5139. 10-16
General Psychology study notes. Excel-
case. Call VT1-93788. sections. $4.00 per
call. Call VT2-93788.
Sure—Everything in the pet field at
$hwe have more cents. 1218 Conn. V3-12921.
ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLEANERS. New Electrolux and a limited number of rebuilt, fully guaranteed. All parts available. Equipment picked up for service and delivered. Frank V. Cox. Local Manager-1904 Barker. Call VI 5-3277.
Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per call. Call VI 1-2901 for free delivery. **tf**
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outlining of all the classes. Formerly known as the Theta notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50.
AUTO LIABILITY INSURANCE, also collision and comp. Most risks covered; under age drivers; scooters; motor bikes; motor cycles; rates avail. Brown Realty Co. Ph. VI 2-0179 — Realtors — $729_{1/2}$ Mass.
Business Directory
Tops — Glass & Zippers —
Rear Glasses — Headlines —
Door Panels —
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Specialized Service Parts for All Makes
BIKE REPAIRS
BLEVINS
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BRAKE_ADJUSTMENTS ... $.98
LUBRICATION $1.00
Motor tune-ups, wheel balancing
FREE—one quart of oil with each oil and filter change
Sales - Rentals - Service
LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER
DX
1819 W 23rd
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6th & Michigan VI 2-9410
JOE'S BAKERY
new location at
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NEW AND USED
PORTABLES STANDARDS
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735 Mass. VI 3-3644
Balfour
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Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals
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A complete line, including,
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TYPEWRITERS
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THERE ARE 3,000 ITEMS caught in the COBWEB the antique shop at the BOOK NOOK 921 Mass. VI 3-16
See Us Before You Buy
- pipes
WRECKER & ROAD SERVICE
- complete accessories
Kermit Hoffmeier special insurance agent VI 2-0266
Thursday night at the Purple Pig 810 New Hampshire
at George's Pipe Shop
727 Mass. VI 3-7164
"Smoking is our only Business"
$8-$20 daily benefit
$300 miscellaneous expense
$400 surgical expense
TGIF at the Stables
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JIM'S CAFE
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图示:机械装置或设备示意图。
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TRAVEL RESERVATIONS NOW!
Make your airline reservations now and be assured of your travel for Thanksgiving and Christmas vacation.
For fast, efficient service call our Mrs. Rose Abels.
Airline and steamship reservations
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
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746 Mass.
VI 3-0152
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 16, 1963
College Support一
elections at the local college level this spring. "I think the mock conventions and elections will create a greater political consciousness on the part of college students," the Newton student said. "Traditionally, college students are apathetic. And, too, I think these mock affairs will expand participation among a larger group of people."
- Dickson also plans to start a drive in the spring for more clubs in the South.
- "This project has top priority in my administration," he said. "The Republican party will become the majority party in the next 10 years because of an increased strength in the South. And, I don't think this is because of racial prejudice."
- Dickson plans to organize a national opinion poll to be made at each college based on polls conducted at KU. He said the polls would concern the presidential race and key political issues.
DICKSON believes Victor Lasky's book, "The Man and the Myth," will convert college students to Republicans. He believes the book points out the "ruthless methods that power-hungry men can use.
AMES, Iowa—(UPI)—A professor snooped into his students' love life to find out what electronic brains know about romance.
Electronic Brain Plays Cupid Role
Sociology Prof. William Kenkel put automation to the test at an "IBM Mixer Dance" where an electronic brain picked the dancing partners.
Some of the Iowa State University students attending the dance liked what they got. Some didn't.
Kenkel said a preliminary check indicated "the students seemed very well satisfied."
Almost 1,000 students filled out questionnaires before the dance. The information was transferred to punched cards and fed into the computer.
Frosh Hawks have elected ten officers for 1963-64.
Elected president was Anne Machin, Ottawa freshman. Miss Machin, former head cheerleader of Ottawa High school.
Frosh Hawks Elect Officers
Other officers of the freshman women's pep club are Ann Schroeder, Lawrence, vice-president; Virginia Kamberg, Prairie Village, secretary; Sharon Taylor, Shawnee Mission, treasurer; Marianne Keller, Quincy, Ill., social chairman.
Cwens Picnic Location To Rest With Weather
The picnic for sophomore women, sponsored by the CWENS, will be held in Hoch Auditorium today if the rainy weather continues. The picnic is scheduled from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. at Potter Lake said Kay Lutjen, president of CWENS.
Sheri Humphreys, Leawood, publicity chairman; Kathy Hutton, Mount Hope, song leader; Jean Hardy, Hoisington, song leader; Sandra Kemp, Hill City, representative to the Inter-Pep Club.
Patronize Kansan Advertisert
Help us celebrate our 38th birthday backwards!
We give you a free gift with each purchase of $1.00 or more because you made us 38 years old.
LAWRENCE BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass. VI 3-1044
Da Vinci Knew Acoustics. Time
A New York musicologist said last night the notes and drawings of Leonardo da Vinci reflect his great knowledge of music.
Prof. Emanuel Winternitz, musicologist and curator of musical collections at the Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York, was speaking at the first of the 1963-64 series of humanities lectures.
IN HIS LECTURE, "Leonardo da Vinci as a Musician," he emphasized that the musical abilities of da Vinci have been largely overlooked by historians.
"Historians have had no particular interest in his musical talents," Prof. Wintermitz said.
"One reason why no one has studied Leonardo da Vinci as a musician is the fact that there is no music in existence today which was actually written by him. Evidence of his musical abilities is, in fact, hidden in his notes and drawings," Prof. Winteritz said.
He said da Vinci was a musician who used the style of improvisation which was common during his lifetime. Improvised music is not, as a rule, recorded on paper.
PROF. WINTERITZ, who showed many slides to the group, said the musical notations and diagrams of musical instruments appear in the notes and drawings of da Vinci.
"Da Vinci should be remembered as a musician because of his original research in acoustics, his development of new musical machines and instruments and his anticipation and diagramming of instruments which actually appeared after his era," Prof. Winternitz said.
Prof. Winternitz said da Vinci was concerned with the role of time in music and that this concern is reflected in his work.
The profes or showed several slides which depicted musical devices designed by da Vinci to overcome irregular tempo in music.
Prof. Winternitz has given two lectures at KU in addition to the humanities lecture last night.
Official Bulletin
he spoke Monday on "The Variation Form in Music and the Visual Arts" to the history of Renaissance art class and also on "Visual Arts as a Source for the Historian of Music," to a music literature class. He plans to speak today on "Bartolomieu Cristofori and the Origin of the Pianoforte," to a history of music class.
turned in to 306 Fraser by Oct 19.
Foreign Students who have an automobile and are interested in attending the banquet on Oct 26 should see Dr. Coun.
TODAY
Timely Topics, 7 p.m., St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center, 1915 Stratford Road, "What Do You Do for Kicks?"—Rigden Downey, O.S.B.
FULBRIGHT applications are to be turned in to 306 Fraser by Oct.19.
El Atenco se reunirá ha a lay 7:30 en la sala Forum de la Union. El Sr. Prof. Stuart Levine, del departement de inglés, comentará sus experiencias impresiones como Un conferiente Fulbrigat en la Escuela "Todas estan cordialmente invitados."
TOMORROW
Latter-Day Saints Institute of Religion
27 Augem. Pan American Room, Union.
Der deutsche Stammtitsch trifft sich am Donnerstag, den 19.07.2015 in Auckland der Akademie Union (Cafeteria). Sie haben hier Gelegenheit Ihr Deutsch zu über. All sind herzlich
Delta Sigma, 7:30 p.m. Pine Room.
Christian Science Organization, 7:30
Christian Science Organization, 7:30
Christian Family Movement, 8 p.m. St.
Lawrence Catholic Student Center, 1915
Stratford Road. Married couples wel-
come.
ENGINEERS-SCIENTISTS
J. R. DEMPSEY
President
KRAFFT A. EHRICKE
Director of Advanced Studies
KAREL J. BOSSART
Technical Director
GENERAL DYNAMICS
HEAR
THE
GENERAL
DYNAMICS
ASTRONAUTICS
STORY
BEFORE YOU
DECIDE ON
A CAREER
ASSOCIATION
Listen to the voices of three men who have played key roles in forging Astronautics into a complex of technical and management skills that has become a national resource. It's all on a 33-1/3 r.p.m. recording and it's yours for the asking See your placement office for a copy or visit our representatives who will be on campus soon. If you miss us, write to Mr.R.M.Smith, Chief of Professional Placement and Personnel, Dept. 130-90 General Dynamics | Astronautics, 5871 Kearny Villa Road, San Diego California 92112.
THE
GENERAL DYNAMICS
ASTRONUTICS
STORY
AS TOLD BY
GARRELL L. CAMPBELL
AND
JIM A. SMITH
LARRY M. NEILSON
G D
G D ASTRONAUTICS An Equal Opportunity Employer
pub-
button,
Jean
eader;
senta-
Daily Hansan
tiserz
Thursday, Oct. 17, 1963
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
61st Year, No.25
THE GYPSOPHILES COME TO THE NEW YORK HILLSTATE UNIVERSITY FOR A FILMING SHOW. THEY WERE ALLOWED TO WATCH THEIR FILMS IN THE FILMING AREA OF THE UNIVERSITY. THEY WERE ALLOWED TO WATCH THEIR FILMS IN THE FILMING AREA OF THE UNIVERSITY.
OVER FRIED CHICKEN and other box-lunch goodies, these sophomore women reminisce about the good old days on "4 East" or "3
South." The freshman floor reunions took place at the CWEN-sponsored sophomore picnic last night at Potter Lake.
Jayhawker Yearbook AURH Policy Settled
The Association of University Residence Halls (AURH) and the Jayhawker yearbook have reached agreement concerning pages in the book purchased by AURH member halls.
the procedure and policy of the yearbook and the AURH for the coming year was set forth in a joint statement made this week. The agreement replaces a special contract which the AURH sought and which was turned down by the Jawhawk Advisory Board.
The residence halls and the Jayhawker have been at odds for the past two years concerning complaints about text and pictures on the pages purchased by the halls in the annual.
According to the agreement,
AURH member halls and the year-
book will work through a special
Jayhawker liaison, Karen Shoop,
St. John junior. Miss Shoop was
appointed to the position last
spring.
The statement says, "upon her has been placed the responsibility of assuring that all members of the AURH are properly informed on matters concerning their halls and the Jayhawker. In the performance of her duties, she will work closely with Alan Stamper, the editor, who will at all times keep her informed of the responsibilities of the group she represents and what the Jayhawker is able to do to insure their satisfaction."
All but three or four of the contracts for the AURH members have been signed under the terms of the agreement, John Mays, Lyons junior and Jayhawker business manager. said.
the ones who have not signed have agreed to, but still have details to work out within their own halls, Mays said. He expects them to sign by the first of the week.
to Stamper, Plainville senior, said the AURH contract proposal was turned down because it took too much power from the Jayhawker. "It would have taken the power of censorship outside the Jayhawker," he said.
Mays said the contract was not
actually turned down. "Everything in the contract, which is feasible is in the joint statement," he said.
Mays says he didn't think the contract would have worked for either the AURH or the Jayhawker. He said it is impossible to foresee conditions which might not have been covered in the contract.
To aid in the communication, Miss Shoop has a committee consisting of one representative from each member hall who is responsible for relating information about the Javhawker directly to the halls.
As soon as Stamper informs her of anything the Jayhawker needs from any or all of the halls, she will contact the responsible person and pass the information to him. It is then up to the representative to cooperate with the Jayhawker
James Tschecheltel, Shawnee Mission junior, was re-elected chairman of the Association of University Residence Halls last night.
(Continued on page 12)
AURH Re-elects Former Chairman
He was elected last fall and is the first chairman of the year-old organization which coordinates activities which involve all university housing for single students other than the freshman women's residence halls.
Tschechtelin announced the AURH has asked the All-Student Council for $400-$450 to help in the financing of the Whatchamacallits.
Tschechtelin presented plans to form an AURH housing board which would work with the University on the construction and design of future University housing. Ronald Rarden, Leawood junior, was appointed to look into the possibilities of such a board.
The Whatchamacallits are weekly Friday night dances open to the entire student body.
Other officers elected were vicechairman, John Underwood, Parsons senior, and secretary-treasurer, Jean Lewis, Overland Park junior.
The next meeting of the association will be Oct. 30.
Weather
It will be partly cloudy today through Friday with a good chance of thunderstorms this evening and Friday morning. The high temperature today will be near 80 and the low tonight in the 60's. The high temperature Friday will be in the 80's.
Civil War Play To Open Tonight
John Brown's Body, epic poem of the Civil War, will open the KU Experimental Theatre season on Thursday, October 17.
A dramatization of the poem will be a series of scenes dealing with many aspects of life set against the background of the Civil War.
The cast includes; Richard Kelton, Miami, Okla., junior; George Bradley, Pittsburgh graduate student; Marcia Dalen, Minneapolis, Minn., graduate student and Nancy Vunovich.
"John Brown's Body" is a dramatized, staged reading of Stephen Vincent Benet's epic poem, which views the events of the Civil War, beginning with Brown's attack on Harper's Ferry, through the eyes of two families, one southern and aristocratic, and the other, northern and pro-abolitionist.
The production will travel to Kansas City and will be given at Battenfeld Auditorium and KU Medical Center. Oct. 25-26.
Tickets are 50 cents with student activity card, and $1 for nonstudents.
Washington Ignores Mme. Nhu's Arrival
WASHINGTON—(UPI)—South Viet Nam's traveling first lady, Mme. Ngo Dinh Nhu, appears to be peeved at the reception—or lack of it—accorded her visit by official Washington.
The capital debut of the sharp-tongued sister-in-law of Vietnamese President Ngo Dinh Diem took place yesterday in a hotel only a few blocks from the White House, but there were only two administration officials in attendance.
SHE CRITICIZED the Kennedy Administration and said the "Vietnamese government looks much more anti-Communist than the American government." She claimed there were "distortions and blackouts" in news dispatches from Saigon.
Buddhists who commit public suicides are "all victims of incitement." Mme. Nhu said, and the Communists are exploiting them because they (the Reds) know they are losing the war.
The administration's studied coolness was not the only rebuff Mme. Nhu suffered yesterday. She sought in vain for a meeting with her father, Tran Van Chuong, who quit as Vietnamese ambassador to the United States this summer in protest against the actions of his daughter and his government in repressing the Buddhists.
SHE WENT to Chuong's home in northwest Washington last night but he was not home. He said he will not see her.
The cold shoulder from her father may have hurt South Viet Nam's first lady, but it was the chilly non-reception accorded her by official Washington that bothered her more.
SHE SAID SHE had evidence that some Kennedy administration officials have "no eagerness to win the war against Communists in South Viet Nam."
Mme. Nhu criticized as political pressure a recent withholding of U.S. commercial aid to Saigon. "I cannot see how such a thing can be done without reason against a government which is winning the war."
The State Department has ordered a delay in payment of a reported $12 million in grants this month which would help South Viet Nam finance commercial imports. The move was interpreted here as a mild form of pressure to remind the regime of Mme. Nuhu's brother-in-law, Ngo Dinh Diem, of the heavy support it gets from the United States.
MME, NIU SAID the aid restriction "shows real evidence there is no eagerness to win the war against the Communists." She said the Vietnamese government surely is more anti-Communist than a few members of the Kennedy administration," emphasizing the word few.
She also explained her much-criticized phrase, "Buddhist barbecue," which she used to describe Buddhist monk protest suicides-byfire. She said her 18-year-old daughter picked up the expression from Americans she overheard in a Saigon snack bar. Mme. Nhu said she herself used the expression hoping to prevent future suicides through ridicule, but that she meant no harm.
ASC To Define Exact Meaning Of Liaison Bill
The dispute between the student body president and the chairman of the Student Liaison Committee of the All Student Council over that committee's duties may be settled.
Reuben McCornack, Abilene senior and student body president, Jim Thompson, Hugoton senior and liaison committee chairman and Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, discussed the group's scope at a 90-minute meeting Wednesday afternoon.
"The problem is that the bill (creating the committee) is ambiguous in its wording." McCornack said last night. "As a result, people are reading different meanings into it."
McCORNACK announced that the members of the liaison committee, and John Stuckey, Pittsburg senior and ASC chairman, would write amendments to the bill to clarify its wording, and introduce them at the ASC meeting Tuesday night.
He explained that Wescoe was invited to discuss the committee's duties "because he is directly involved in its work, and is, therefore, interested in what it does."
The Student Liaison Committee began functioning last month, and was immediately involved in a disagreement about its scope. McCornack said the committee was to inform governmental bodies off campus—such as the Board of Regents and State Legislature—of student opinion on matters affecting KU, as directed by the ASC.
THOMPSON argued that his committee also was empowered to investigate problems on campus if existing ASC committees would not do so.
Several weeks ago, in connection with Thompson's views of the committee's functions, the group announced it would examine KU's health service, traffic control system, and a proposed installment payment of tuition fees.
"We felt that some actions of the liaison committee were beyond the original intent of the bill. This is not to say that the ideas of individual members of the committee should be dropped, but that they as individuals should present these problems to the ASC and to its committees for their consideration and action." McCornack said.
"EVERY MEMBER of the council should feel this responsibility. Some activities in which the liaison committee has been engaging are beyond the intent of the bill."
Loudspeakers Purchased as Senior Gift
Eight 15-inch loudspeakers will be installed in the KU football stadium as part of the Class of 1964's senior gift.
The speakers will be erected on 15 foot high poles on the track and used by the cheerleaders at home games. They will be permanently spaced along the student section of the east stadium.
Rebecca Williamson, Wichita senior and chairman of the senior gift committee, said the speakers will be first used on Senior Day, Oct. 26. The gift is being presented to the
school before graduation in order that it may be used this season.
The committee also discussed the senior coffee that will be held at 9:30 a.m. Oct. 23 in the Kansas Union. Sweatshirts will be given out to seniors and a program of speeches and folk singing will be presented.
The gift idea was presented to the living quarters committee in a meeting last night and approved.
The senior class will elect a Senior Queen at the closing of the coffee hour. Twenty candidates will be selected from the women's living houses and presented for the title.
The Queen will be the official hostess of the senior class.
The committee discussed the Senior Day Party to be held 5-11 a.m. at the Big Barn.
Jerry Cook, St. Louis, Mo., senior and special events committee chairman, presented ideas for a senior party during the second semester. Two ideas were a ski party or a train party.
Cook said the senior class has been discussing the possibility of bringing a comic, such as Bob Hope, Bob Newheart, or Mort Sahl, to the school as a project next semester.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday. Oct. 17. 1963
Intramurals Necessary
Reuben McCornack, student body president, recently proposed the formation of a committee on recreation and sports at the University of Kansas. One of the main functions of the committee, according to McCornack, would be to promote the intramural program and to inform KU students of the availability of recreational facilities and equipment.
Such a committee is greatly needed and would be an asset to the University student program.
The University of Kansas is one of the few universities which do not have a compulsory physical education program for students. As a result, students tend to minimize or even overlook gratefully the fact that physical exercise is important, even essential, to physical well-being.
BUT SINCE the University of Kansas has no compulsory physical education program as such, the responsibility is left in the main to an intramurals organization. Not all students have the athletic ability to be varsity athletes but many students have enough ability to enjoy participating in sports. It is to this latter category that the intramurals program is directed. And it is in this latter category where most of the KU students are found.
So doesn't it follow that everything should be done to reach the students and tell them of the benefits and enjoyments they can gain through such a program? A committee on sports and recreation would be a vital link and channel of communication in such a program.
According to McCornack, the committee would serve not only as an intramural promotion agency but as co-ordinating agency. The University of Kansas has three organizations which are involved in the intramurals program: the Women's
Recreation Association, the Men's Recreation Association, and the Student Union Activities. One of the main co-ordinating problems of the committee, as explained by McCornack, would be to schedule events so they would not conflict, thus giving the student an opportunity for participation in all of the events if he chooses. The schedule conflict seems to be with the recreational associations' events and those scheduled by SUA. Perhaps it can be worked out, but for some students there may be no problem of choice.
One definite advantage of such a committee would be the development of a closer relationship between the women's and men's organizations. The place of the woman in athletics is not to be minimized. The formation of such a committee would in part be a recognition of that fact. With the closer cooperation which would be demanded by both organizations in such a committee, the end result would no doubt be a strengthening of both programs and a possible combining of the programs with such events as mixed doubles in tennis, badminton, table tennis, etc.
ROBINSON GYMNASIUM may not at present have facilities to meet all the demands. It will in the future. But the facilities it does have are not being used to their fullest extent. And also some equipment and facilities can be purchased without the construction of a new building. It all goes back to that old law of supply and demand.
The University of Kansas needs a larger more active intramurals program. It needs an established physical fitness program. A step toward the realization of these goals would be the establishment of a committee on sports and recreation.
— Dolores Orman
Students Won't Work Editor:
Your editorial on the grade system, "Attitudes are Wrong," interesting as it was, contained certain errors pertaining to the European system. The Europeans have come up with a "rational" solution, but not the solution.
The People Say ..
A European student preparing for his comprehensives looks just like his American counterpart, the Ph.D. candidate, preparing for his preliminary exams. Both start cramming about 6 months before the exams. And when the German student, for example, finishes his state exams, he receives, God forbid, a grade.
The point is that Europeans, as well as Americans, know that 90% of the students will not work unless forced. If there is a fault in a system of forced work, then it lies among those professors who
For the first year, and sometimes also the second, the German student does virtually nothing but attend lectures. True, he takes no exams and receives no grades, but he also does very little if any work, i.e., reading in his fields. After that period he becomes involved in the seminar system, and in seminars he must work, receiving in turn a certificate from his instructor. Upon that seminar certificate is also a grade.
take up their students' time with worthless busy work and poor reading selections.
Calvin Gruver
graduate student
Controversial Figures Editor:
I see that certain groups are heading a movement to invite Madame Ngo Dinh Hu, "controversial 'first lady' of Viet Nam, to visit KU during her tour of the United States." I'm glad to see that someone is again getting round to inviting some controversial speakers to appear on campus. Since KU has the responsibility to serve as a forum for ideas and discussions, there are a few other controversial figures who I would like to see and hear in person on campus. Among these prospective speakers would be Mrs. Murray, the lady who is starting the colony for atheists in western Kansas, and Governors Ross Barnett and George Wallace. The latter two could appear on the same program with Madame Nhu and we could see a cross-societal study of bigotry, prejudice, intolerance, and suppression of human freedoms. Also, the latter two probably would be willing to pay their own expenses to be able to air their ideas.
Wallace Danny Johnson, Jr.
Lawrence senior
111 Flint Hall
Dailij Hänsan
University of Kansas student newspaper
UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom
UNiversity 4-3198, business office
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Managing Editor
Terry Ostmeyer, Trudy Meserve, Jackie Stern, Rose Osborne, Assistant Managing Editors; Kay Jarvis, City Editor; Linda Machin, Society Editor; Roy Miller, Sports Editor; Dennis Bowers, Picture Editor.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
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.
Mike Miller
Return the Bell
For almost a decade University of Kansas students enjoyed the color and excitement of college football—the band, the cheerleaders, the Jayhawk and the TEKE bell.
This year KU students have felt that something was missing, that there was a void in the pageantry of home games. The TEKE bell was gone.
Blaine King ... Editorial Editor
Editor:
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
What prompted this university of 11,000 students to rid itself of a tradition? One man. One man in the athletic department labeled the bell a troublemaker, and had it removed.
Bob Brooks ... Business Manager
Last year a group of rather inebriated Nebraska alumni attempted to ring, and rang, the bell when Nebraska scored. These men were quickly returned to their seats by several KU policemen and students without further ado.
Is this lone instance, after seven years of bell ringing, reason enough to remove the bell? There is very little doubt that the University can prevent any "riots" before they develop, by the use of Pinkerton men and KU police with dogs (which they are now using without any bell to start riets).
The men of Tau Kappa Epsilon have received calls, and have been stopped on campus by students, parents and instructors, all of them asking why we don't have our bell at the games this year. There have also been many instances of students, and even an instructor, wanting to start petitions to get the bell back in the stadium. We replied that instead of rushing things with a petition we would rather try to straighten it out with the administration and the one man who had the bell removed. After three weeks of "chasing the duck around the bush" we have received a firm NO from the University.
Tau Kappa Epsilon has offered many suggestions to remedy the threat of violence over our bell. The most logical of these is to move the bell from the end zone, where the visitors sit, to a place in front of the KU student body.
It is up to you, the student, to put the bell back on the field where it can echo our touchdowns through the passing years.
David Perry
David Perry
Webb City, Mo., junior
Tau Kappa Epsilon
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"Small World, Isn't It?"
Hostile Hot Air Sears Political Scene Too
Either I'm confusing my childhood memories, or those southbound geese that go honking over my house every night haven't looked at the official thermometer lately.
Maybe instinct or habit was too much for them to resist. It couldn't have been the cold weather settling in the marrow of their bones—not with the temperature ranging in the mid-90's for the past several weeks.
It is possible that therein lies the answer. The fall of 1963 is too darn hot; they are on their way to cooler parts.
HOWEVER, I HAVE just one thought to say to their leader, "Grain up for a long flight. To leave this heat which promises even hotter temperatures from political issues, it will be necessary to go far from this country."
Take for example, the smoldering remains of the "sell-wheat-to-Russia" deal. Molecular pros and cons are bumping each other so rapidly that it's enough to spark a presidential campaign issue.
Seeking to apply ointment to the painful scorches on journalists and state department officials, Madame Ngo Dinh Hu, Viet Nam's first dragonlady, is presently touring the U.S. However, even good dragons can forget, and breathe fire without thinking.
The flames which have been feeding on Buddhists' flesh have made Vict Nam one of the hottest spots in the world, and the scorching heat is being felt here.
Supporters of possible Republican presidential hopefuls are busily chopping wood for the growing campfires.
THE WOODCUTTERS for Arizona's Sen. Barry Goldwater include Arizona's Paul Fannin, Oklahoma's Henry Bellmon, Montana's Tim Babcock and Wyoming's Cliff Hansen. In the process of sharpening their axes are Colorado's John Love, Kansas' John Anderson, Utah's George Clyde and South Dakota's Archie Gubbrud.
There's still the possibility that Dwight Eisenhower's reactions to Goldwater's remark of "one Eisenhower in a decade is enough" might dampen the spirit around the roaring bonfire.
Meanwhile, Rockefeller is working hard at starting a bonfire of his own. He intends to enter the New Hampshire, California, and possibly the West Virginia primaries. He has been on a 12-day tour of Europe where he met with Pope Paul VI, Charles de Gaulle, German Chancellor-designate Ludwig Erhard and British Labor Party Leader Harold Wilson.
With two such bonfires raging across the country, it's bound to get unbearably hot—more so than people feel now.
The sound of "going south" for the winter becomes more appealing all the time. However, while traveling the airways, one must be careful not to get caught in the convectional air currents over Latin America.
—Carol Lathrop Knupp
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Birmingham Scene Of Quiet Negotiation
By Al Kuettner
Behind the dramatic announcements of showdowns, deadlines and demands, a group of local Negroes in Birmingham is working quietly with the white leadership to bring a solution to the city's racial turmoil.
By Al Kuettner United Press International
Gaston thinks the massive street demonstrations of last spring "served their purpose" in making clear to the city government and to the nation that Birmingham Negroes were dissatisfied with conditions. He feels now, however, that the negotiations should move to the conference table.
Birmingham sources report the group is increasing in size and influence and that it includes Negro businessmen, clergymen and school personnel.
A. G. GASTON, millionaire Negro insurance and real estate executive, is the most vocal spokesman for the group which feels that local Negroes should have the chance to work out their destiny with the Birmingham city government.
This attitude comes at a time when Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., and the Rev. Fred Shuttlesworth—leaders of a continuing campaign for civil rights concessions in Birmingham—are threatening once more to call Negroes into the streets and into mass rallies to back up demands.
KING'S LATEST move was to set a deadline of next day for the city to hire 25 Negro policemen. He intimated that failure to comply would touch off the demonstrations. The city government has repudiated the tactics as "gun pointing."
Gaston feels that such an ultimatum is ill-advised at this time.
"You use soldiers to win the war but you use diplomats to win the peace," Gaston told a reporter. "You never win anything if you go to the peace table with a gun in your hands."
eal must over
Gaston said local Negroes of Birmingham have established "some communications" with the city council
and he is optimistic that "requests"—he shies away from the word "demands"—by Negroes will be compiled with in time.
One is the hiring of Negro policemen, a move which Gaston believes will do much to cure racial animosity.
"I TOOK ONE of these courses that is supposed to show you how to make friends," Gaston said. "I guess I learned one lesson from it. That was to always let the other fellow have face even after you beat him.
Returning to Birmingham "to assess the situation." King and Shuttlesworth threatened new demonstrations by "more numbers" than any man can count." But they refrained from setting a date. Shuttlesworth said only that "if we have to demonstrate, we will demonstrate"
"I am all for the effort to improve the situation for Negroes. I will work for it because it is needed. This is my home and I have my investment here. But I feel this thing needs some time to be worked out. We can all make some progress that way."
Boutwell said he would not permit "other interests to intervene or defeat that objective." Apparently he was referring to King, Shuttlesworth and their organized integration effort.
MAYOR ALBERT BOUTWELL insisted that "local leadership, both white and Negro, who have lived with these problems are now working on their solution."
"Whatever is done will be out of the cooperative efforts of local people and never in response to threats or deadlines from anyone," Boutwell said.
SUA Friday Flicks
"An Anatomy of a Murder," starring James Stewart and Lee Redick, will be shown at 7 and 9:30 p.m., Friday, October 18 in Fraser auditorium.
This film is the third in the SUA Friday Flicks.
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A new stereo system has recently been installed in Battenfeld Scholarship Hall, and the men of Jolliffe Scholarship Hall liked the idea so well they have voted to build one for themselves.
Jollie voted to build an AM-FM stereo console unit Monday night.
Do-it-Yourself Stereo Catches On In Halls
Battenfeld's stereo was purchased in kit form and assembled by the residents. The system was started last spring with the purchase of speakers, a tuner, and an amplifier. This fall a record changer, speaker enclosures, and a cabinet to hold the equipment were added.
CITIES SERVICE
The money for the console, which would retail for about $600, came from the house special maintenance fund. This fund is designated for permanent improvements to the house.
Although everybody in the hall worked on the console, three residents were in charge of construction. Jim Tschechtelin, Shawnee Mission junior, majoring in electrical engineering, and Pat Staples, Kansas City, Kansas, junior, a radio amateur, were in charge of wiring, while Stanley Church, Wichita junior, did the cabinet work.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Oct. 17, 1963
Professor Terms Diem Critics Naive
By Tom Coffman
"Politically naive self-styled liberals" who are indignant about the policies of the Diem regime were criticized yesterday by a KU professor.
Grant Goodman, associate professor of history and East Asian area studies, spoke before the KU-Y Current Events Forum in the Kansas Union.
Last week, in the same forum, Klaus Pringsheim, instructor in East Asian area studies, presented the other side of the debate—an attack on the Diem government and U.S. policies in Viet Nam.
GOODMAN yesterday called for a "dispassionate" view of the Viet-namese situation in its historic prospective.
"To discover so suddenly that Mme. Nhu is not democratic and therefore must be given a public cold shoulder in this country smacks of international immaturity and the worst sort of scapegoatism." Goodman said.
He presented the following points as his view of the history of the Diem government and South Viet Nam:
- IN 1954 THE U.S., fearing a Communist take-over, engineered the return of Ngo Dinh Diem to South Viet Nam from Diem's self-exile in East Lansing, Michigan.
- Diem exhibited talent and skill in the years 1955-58 in consolidating the authority of the government and revitalizing a deciving economy
- Americans—both government officials and citizens—impressed by Diem's success in internal improvements, painted glowing pictures of Diem, going so far as to call him a "one man democracy."
- "IN REALITY Diem's successes were largely due to American aid." Goodman said, and Diem's use of efficient bureaucrats.
Diem restime has never been high.
- The internal popularity of the
Bien regime has never been high. • "Only in rare instances do the fates of governments depend on popularity contests," Goodman added.
- Vietnamese peasants are politically indifferent. The terms "democracy" and "communism" have no meaning to them.
The belief that the Viet Cong—Communist guerillas—gained amazing support among the peasants was labelled by Goodman as a "dangerously romantic American nation."
COMMUNIST Viet Cong strength has come from terrorism, the advantage of a guerilla band in a rough terrain, and several dissenting groups—the mountain dwellers, anti-Americans, and a few religious groups—including Buddhists—Goodman believes.
The British spent 12 years overcoming much smaller groups of guerillas in Malaya, Goodman said.
The U.S. must be determined to accept the length and cost of the jungle war, he believes. "Petulant outbursts by our President for possible political gain at home are no more commendable than the overblown egotism of Ngo Dinh Nhu," Goodman said.
GOODMAN SAID
HE THINKS that the "self-styled liberalis" are victims of oversimplified propaganda slogans such as "free world," "religious freedom," and "popular democracy."
He cautioned against considering the world scene in terms of morality versus immorality—"black versus white. Sadly, the predominant coloration of international affairs is now and has historically been a rather amoral grey."
U. S. policy makers are not immediately concerned with Diem's authoritarian characteristics, Goodman said, but rather with maintenance of public order and the attitude necessary for a fight against the Communists.
If the U.S. wants to keep South Viet Nam from falling to the Communists we have no choice but to continue to back Diem, Goodman concluded.
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Oct. 17, 1963
Page 5
State Policemen to Play Detective At Burglary and Larceny Seminar
By Charles Corcoran
By Charles Corcoran Sixty Kansas policemen will sift through clues in simulated crime scenes today in the Kansas Union. The investigation will highlight the second day of the third annual Burglary and Larceny Seminar being conducted here.
Yesterday, policemen attending the seminar heard talks outlining investigative procedure and points of law governing search and seizure, and admissability of evidence in court.
William M. Ferguson, Kansas attorney general, presented the discussion on search and seizure of evidence and suspects. He outlined the legal barriers confronting law enforcement officer in his investigation of a crime.
THE SCHOOL is conducted annually by the KU Governmental Research Center, Kansas Bureau of Investigation (KBI), KU School of Law, Kansas Peace Officers Association and the KU University Extension.
Today's crime scene investigation, created as a training aid by the KBI, will test the investigative skills of 12 teams of five police officers each.
The policemen will use the latest crime detection equipment—including photography, finger print analysis—to uncover the criminal who committed the simulated crime.
a school system superintendent which was actually burglarized. The investigating officers will note that the door has been forced open and that the floor and containers in the room will yield clues to the identity of the burglary.
Items in the room are a desk and chair, a wastebasket, a filing cabinet and a safe which has been "peeled." "Peeling" is a technique used by safe crackers to remove the metal layers of a safe door in order to reach the safe's contents.
IF THE POLICEMEN are successful in their investigation, they will know where to find the burglar who will be hiding somewhere in the Kansas Union.
Professor Paul Wilson of the School of Law will be judge for the
The scene simulates the office of
jury trial which is to begin at 8:30 am. Selby S. S. Woward, Sherman county attorney, Goodland, is prosecuting attorney and Richard Leibert, attorney and state representative from Coffeyville, is defense attorney. Officers of the KBI will pose as the criminal and his ali witness.
Members of a panel which will evaluate all phases of the seminar are James S. Kline, chairman and coordinator of peace officer training for the KU Governmental Research Center; Harold Nye, assistant director of the KBI; Ramon K. House, Dodge City chief of police; Logan Sanford, director of the KBI; Major J. R. Klepper of the Wichita police department detective division; and Professors Wilson, Leibert and Soward. (See Picture Page 12)
NEWSPAPERS MAKE A BIG DIFFERENCE IN PEOPLE' LIVES
NATIONAL NEWSPAPER WEEK OCT. 13-19, 1963
Read and Use Kansan Classifieds
Women Elected To AWS Seats
Susan Langston, Springfield, Mo. freshman, and Kathryn Mize, Salina freshman, were elected yesterday to the Senate of the Associated Women Students (AWS).
Freshman officers for the House of Representatives are Kathleen Thompson, Iola, Grace Pearson hall; Carolyn Brewster, Prairie Village; Corbin hall; and Cecily Pitts, Shawnee Mission, Gertrude Sellards Pearson hall.
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University Daily Kansan Thursday, Oct. 17. 1963
Quints Claim Early Life Minus Men
NEW YORK —(UPI)— The four surviving Dionne quintuplets charged today that their parents taught them "there was no possibility of our ever marrying" and had them followed by detectives to check on their friendships even when they were adults.
What rankled, said the quints in their second published blast at Oliva and Elizire Dionne, was that their father charged the detectives to them through the trust fund set up in their behalf.
THE ARTICLE detailing their life after the death in 1953 of their sister, Emile, appears in the current issue of McCall's magazine. Three of the quints are now married and the fourth, Yvonne, is a nun.
The quints wrote that as young adults "our area of greatest ignorance was men."
"We had been carefully guarded and even the most casual contact with them . . . the only members of the male sex we could talk to without risking dad's displeasure were a few neighbors' sons, our brothers, and before our marriages, the admirers of our older sisters. . ."
"THEERE WAS NO possibility, we had been taught, of our ever marrying. We were destined to stay at home or go into the church as inevitably as water runs down to the sea . . . men frightened us to death."
Cecile was the first to find romance. She met and fell in love with Philline Langlois, who worked in a flower shop which Marie had opened in order to be near Cecile. He used an assumed name to avoid the press.
The three married sisters—Annette Marie and Cecile—revealed that they also were scared of having children, but all have had strong, healthy children.
"IT SOON DAWNED on Phil," the quints wrote, "that he was being watched. A series of men followed him around the city, looking exactly as they do in television, in raincoats and hats with pull-down brims.
"There was no doubt that this was dad's doing, because the detectives were charged against us. The bill for their services was included in the annual statement of accounts that was submitted to each of us under the terms of the trust agreement."
CECILE AND Langlois married and Marie's business venture failed. She worked briefly in another flower shop, using an assumed name to avoid publicity, but "the detectives appeared again and were billed to her account as before."
Marie eventually married Germain Allard, although her father was opposed to the match. Annette also married. They came, in time, to have some understanding of their father's attitude.
"He was compelled, by no choice of his own, to fight so hard to win us back as a kind of prize (from Dr. Dafoe) that he locked us up too tight and cried out against them, outsiders, who tried to interfere," they said.
"HE WAS RELUCTANT to give us up again, even in marriage. He wanted us for himself as long as he lived. He did not see the good things in our birth. The money that flowed spontaneously was both a good and bad thing.
"Good because it took the edge off the poverty our family had experienced and made material living comfortable for everybody, ourselves most of all.
"But it was bad because it changed the nature of dad."
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Cabinet Blamed in Profumo Incident
The impact of the Profumo-Keelen scandal on Great Britain was attributed partially to indecisive action among the cabinet members in a speech yesterday.
Ardon Bell, professor of history, speaking at a Faculty Forum entitled, "Current British Policies," said the members of the British cabinet knew John Profumo, ex-war minister of Britain, was having an affair with Christine Keeler, society prostitute, months before the story broke in the newspapers.
"THE WHOLE affair does not necessarily indicate any moral decay in Great Britain." Prof. Bell added.
However, they did not discuss it among themselves because they did not wish to interfere with Profumo's personal life. Prof. Bell believes.
He believes the scandal will be largely forgotten when a new Tory prime minister is elected to succeed
Awards Made by Business School
Wiley Mitchell, associate dean of the School of Business Administration, announced recently that 15 KU students have received graduate scholarships in business for 1963-64.
Those receiving the awards were: Richard Clark, Kansas City, Mo.; James Davis, Herington; Michael J. Easterday, Salina; Michael P. Eckles, Dodge City; Robert J. Harbison, Kansas City; Fred Bert Johnson, Kansas City; David C. May, Merriam; Denton W. Morse, Burlington, Vt.; William R. Patterson, Wichita; Kirk L. Prather, Wellington; Robert L. Sarna, Wamego; Clyde R. Stephens, Inman; James J. Stone, Dodge City; Fenton Talbott, McPherson, and Ronald Trachsel, Topeka.
Prof. Bell discussed possible Tory successors to Macmillan, now that the Prime Minister is unable to fulfill his duties. There are four possibilities, he believes.
THE FIRST is Lord Hailsham, who would have to give up his peerage to become Prime Minister, since the Prime Minister presides over the House of Commons. He is largely counted out now, Prof. Bell said.
Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, who has resigned because of poor health.
The second candidate is Reginald Maudling, Chancellor of the Ex-
THE TORY most likely to replace Macmillan is Lord Home, Foreign Secretary of the Conservative cabinet. Prof. Bell said Home is very independent and capable. However, Lord Home has never said he is interested in the position.
The fourth possible candidate is Mr. R. A. Butler, who was passed over for Prime Minister in 1957 when Macmillan was chosen. He also said Butler will probably be passed over again, because he has never really been accepted in the Tory Party.
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University Daily Kansan Thursday, Oct. 17, 1963
Foreign Journalism Student Finds Language No Barrier
By Tom Coffman
A news writer working in a foreign language? Not unheard of. There is one at KU.
He is Vinay Kothari of Bombay, India. A year ago he began a journalism major and plans to be graduated in January. His native language is Gujerati, one of India's 33 major languages.
In addition to Gujerati and English, Vinay speaks and writes Marathi and Hindi, both languages of India, and "a little French."
HE ADMITS that when he started studying journalism he felt unsure of himself. "I was too slow and I had trouble with correct usage," he said.
Comparing his present work to that of other Kansan staff members Vinay said, "I don't see any difference now. I might spend five minutes extra writing a story, but I can write as well as some of the Kansan staff."
Relaxing on a couch in his three-room basement apartment at 1231 Louisiana, Vinay talked rapidly, much of the time with a wide grin splitting his brown face.
A map of the United States, a world map, a picture of the Taj Mahal and several prints of Indian art decorate his living room wall.
He said he began studying English nine years ago in India, but it was always a minor subject. He originally learned British-style English, but picked up American pronunciation watching American movies in Bombay.
INCIDENTALLY, Kothari believes that Bombay gets most good movies before the Midwest does. "I saw 'Ben Hur' in Bombay and saw it a year and a half later in Lawrence," he said.
In addition to being a member of the Kansan staff, Vinay works at the Topeka Daily Capital every Monday night as part of an advanced reporting class.
The 21-year-old Indian originally came to this country three years ago to study engineering. His criticism of engineering? "It wasn't challenging. It was monotonous. In journalism I can get out and meet people and do something different every day," he said.
He could not have gotten into the United States if he had originally intended to study journalism, he said. The Indian government gives exchange permits only to students studying science and technology, he explained.
KOTHARI FEELS that he has been treated well in the United States. "I can't expect everybody to treat me like a king," he added with a grin.
Asked if he had been discriminated against at times, he answered quickly. "Who isn't—tell me that."
Kothari criticized his fellow foreign students for not mixing enough with Americans. "Too many of us stay in our own groups. If they don't learn anything about America, then it is their own fault."
He plans to travel through the South before leaving the U.S. to see "how I am treated—because of my skin color—and how I will react."
HIS WALL MAP of the U.S. is marked with dark pencil, outlining his travel in the West, Northwest, and East. Two years ago, Kothari worked as a counselor in a private camp in northern California. He found that most of the children of the extremely wealthy were "emotionally disturbed."
"Some of them had their own cooks and their own chauffeurs, but no parental love," he said. In general, American children have too much independence, he believes. Indian families are more close-knit, he said.
Kothari criticized Americans for considering marriage a "game," and blamed the high U.S. divorce rate on marriage partners not trying to resolve conflicts.
MOST INDIAN marriages are arranged by parents, and they work out about as well." he said.
Vinay is one of three Kothari brothers on campus. The other two —Pravin and Lalit— are both engineering students. Lalit Kothari, 23, is a senior and works on weekends as a draftman for Midwest Conveyor Co. in Kansas City. Pravin, a junior, works in the Kansas Union bowling alley, as does Vinay.
"The bowling alley job has provided him the best opportunity for observing Americans, because there they are relaxed and free. They expose themselves," he said.
He said the financial prospects for his brothers as engineers are far better in India than for a journalist.
"But I'm not particularly interested in money."
HE HOPES TO work in public relations for an Indian industry, thus utilizing his knowledge of science. He plans to do post-graduate study in advertising as preparation for public relations work.
In addition to his studies, Kothari is a cricket player and an amateur actor. In Bombay he played the lead role in a college play, he said, smiling in apparent amusement at the idea of himself on stage.
International Club activities have
been his only outlet for the greasepaint urge in this country. Last year he played the lead in an Indian play at the foreign student festival. The year before he was a part of what he called an "Indian stick dance team," which performed at the foreign festival and a People-to-People festival in Wichita.
With all of his activities, Kothari suffers from a common student problem—lack of sleep. "No kidding, I don't realize when the day begins and when it ends," he says.
KOTHARI PLANS to run on the University Party ticket as a candidate for representative of students not in organized housing.
He is a member of the brother and sister program committee in People-to-People, past secretary of the India Club, and a member of the International Club.
Two years ago Kothari was program director of the foreign student festival.
---
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Page 9
University Daily Kansan
Talking, Tugging Quilt To Be Investigated
POY SIPPI, Wis.一(UPI)-Six fearless women made plans today for an "impartial" test of the crazy quilt of Poy Sippi.
The mysterious quilt is said to be haunted.
Mrs. Dora Monroe, 61, owner of the quilt, begged out from the test because she suffers from a heart condition. She does not want to chance a shock.
The quilt, normal in material and workmanship to any other patchwork quilt, allegedly talks to people during the night, becomes heated and eventually tugs its way off the bed.
The best story related by Mrs. Monroe goes this way:
HER GRANDDAUGHTER'S boy friend took the quilt to his home at Winneconne, Wis., for a test. Sometime after midnight he was awakened when the quilt started moving. He got out of bed, sat in a chair and watched as the quilt straightened itself as though the bed had not been slept in.
Mrs. Margie Monroe, 20, Oshkosh, daughter-in-law to Mrs. Monroe, said she heard a beating when she slept under the quilt.
Mrs. Monroe's husband, William, was the last to use the quilt. That was only two months ago. The same tugging occurred about the same early morning hour for three consecutive nights. One night Monroe released the quilt and it "crawled" under the dresser, he told his wife.
MRS. MONROE said she is unable to trace the origin of the quilt since the man from whom she and her husband purchased the house has since died.
Two neighbors, Mrs. Nancy McCue and Mrs. Arthur Fraser, have rounded up four other women volunteers and have Mrs. Monroe's consent to test the quilt at Mrs. Fraser's home one night this week.
Mrs. McCue and Mrs. Fraser will try the quilt together while the four other women, one of them holding a camera, stand by as witnesses.
University Party's General Assembly discussed plans for the Nov. 13-14 All Student Council election last night at a meeting in the Kansas Union.
UP candidates in the living group election will be announced at a 7:30 to 11 p.m. party Sunday at the Dinea-Mite. The Campus Council will conduct interviews with prospective candidates Sunday afternoon in the Kansas Union.
The party's platform will be released next week, Bob Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla., senior and platform committee chairman, said.
Thursday, Oct. 17, 1963
UP Candidates To Be Named
Fred Hoffman, Toppea senior and public relations committee chairman, said speakers have visited Hashinger and Lewis Halls and will talk at Gertrude Sellards Pearson, Corbin and Grace Pearson Halls soon. He added that wing representatives are being recruited in the larger residence halls.
Bob Crosier, Lawrence junior and membership committee chairman, said fraternity pledge classes will sell party membership cards at freshman women's dorms tonight.
Military Ball Date Set For December 6
The 1963 Military Ball will be Friday, December 6, in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union. The ball is under the combined sponsorship of departments of the Army, Navy, and Air Force R.O.T.C.
Music for dancing will be provided by the "Airmen of Note," the official Air Force band stationed in Washington, D.C.
WRA Announces Plans For Coed Volleyball Team
The possibility of men and women's living groups co-operating in a sports program has been discussed by the Women's Recreational Association (WRA) general board.
Tentative plans include a volleyball tournament in March. According to the plan a women's living group would ask a men's living group to be their partners throughout the tournament. The teams would be composed of three men and three women and any number of teams from the paired groups would be possible.
MARY MULVANEY, assistant professor of physical education and WRA advisor, said that by scheduling the tournament in March it would give the women a chance to practice during the WRA volleyball tournament in February.
Five WRA members and a physical education faculty member attended an exhibition hockey game Sunday at Iowa State University between teams who participated in the international tournament in Maryland last September.
Barbara Hobson, instructor in physical education, was accompanied by Barbara Bock, St. Louis freshman; Marilyn Matt, Minneapolis junior; Eleanor Burkhead, Kansas City, Mo. senior; Marilyn Mouden, Lawrence freshman; and Judy Waterman, Wichita senior.
LEARN TO BOX!!
Be a master in the art of self-defense.
Expert trainers' secrets can be yours!
No equipment needed. Form a campus
boxing club among your friends for
fun, self-confidence and teamwork.
Learn new curse and lessons
one dollar. Send to: Physical
Arts Gym, 363 Clinton Street, Hempstead,
Long Island, New York.
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VOL 148
Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Oct. 17, 1963
Buffs' Success Credited to Slate
By United Press International
By Charles
No one seriously believes the Colorado Buffaloes stand a chance of finishing in the first division of the Big Eight Conference football race—unless it's the Buffaloes.
Even Colorado's sports publicity director, poetic Fred Casotti credits the Buffs' early league lead (2-0) to the easy, early-season schedule.
Casotti expressed his beliefs poet-
Pro Analyzes KU
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe and his son were watching the closing moments of Saturday's KU-Iowa State football game from the 30-yard line near the south end of the Cyclones' bench.
Chancellor Wescoe, having watched the Jayhawks' field goal effort fail, took a puff on his cigar, turned around and shook hands with one of KU's most enthusiastic followers — Curtis McClinton.
The game was the last KU game McClinton, former KU all-America halfback will get to see this season. His duties with the Kansas City Chiefs will keep him a way from Mount Oread.
"KU is always the team that can hand OU a terrific surprise," McClinton said. "No team's ball control is better than Oklahoma's, but the Jayhawks running attack is better.
"If the line can keep on with their effectiveness in clutch circumstances, the team will be able to pile up scores that will at least mean victories over teams with offensive attacks that aren't completely up to par.
"I will never take anything away from Gale Sayers. He broke away in the ISU game, and, continuing this, he will remain one of the finest running backs in the nation.
"He has speed and perfect ability to catch a pass—something I can't do. He can throw it, too."
ically in his latest relase;
"The Buffaloes are leading the league
And I want to congratulate
"Crowder, his team and the gentlemen."
"Who drew up the '63 slate."
TO DATE. Colorado has defeated Kansas State and Oklahoma State, admittedly choice candidates for the second division. But this Saturday, the Buffs host Iowa State, which last week surprised highly-regarded Kansas.
If Colorado should upset Iowa State, the Buffs will have to be considered seriously for a first division finish.
Wednesday, Colorado ended contact work for Saturday's homecoming. The club may be without the services of starting halfback Ted Sommerville because of a knee injury.
Iowa State, 1-1 in league play, went through its last heavy drill before the weekend contest. Coach Clay Stapleton said he planned no lineup changes for the game.
FOR THE FIRST time this season, the Saturday slate will be entirely conference action. KU goes to Oklahoma, Kansas State hosts Nebraska and Missouri is at Oklahoma State.
Oklahoma, with or without halfback Joe Don Looney, is heavily favored to take KU. Looney was booted off the team after Texas beat the Sooners last week.
"They'll be desperate to come back," said KU Coach Jack Mitchell. "This will be the most fired up Oklahoma team we've ever faced because of the loss to Texas and the shakeup in their squad."
In Soonerland, Oklahoma announced it may be without the services of center Carl McAdams and halfback Larry Shields. McAdams suffered a severe muscle sprain in practice and Shields has been sidelined with flu.
24
IT'S TIME
FOR A
PIT
STOP
If you haven't had your "Pit Stop" yet this week, come in over the week-end.
The Southern Pit
1834 Mass.
VI 3-9481
45
THE SOONERS MAY NOT have the services of Joe Don Looney when they meet KU Saturday, and Bud Wilkinson may not be a U.S. senator, but the Sooners (barring injury) will still have Jim Grisham, their 6-2, 205-pound junior fullback. Last year, Grisham rushed for 711 yards and scored eight touchdowns. Grisham picked up 74 yards in OU's loss to No.1 rated Texas last Saturday.
JANE
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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 D Kansas Business Office in Flint Hall by 2 p.m. The ad is desired. Not responsible for errors not mentioned before second insertion.
MISCELLANEOUS
West Side Fresneyperian Church, 6th and Mass., welcomes you to attend Sunday services at 11 a.m. and Sunday classes at 9:45 a.m. 10-23
BUSINESS SERVICES
PARTY TIME: School house available for private parties, dances, meetings—brassed with piano, tables, refreshment in rooms and coolers. VI3-7483--431 Forrest. tf
Classes for Pre-school children ages 3.
VI 2-1410 for more information. 10-23
English or Speech trouble? Certified English and Speech teacher, will tutor at reasonable rate. Also typing. Call VI 3-2873. 10-23
Will take in ironing 10e a piece. Also baby sitting wanted. Under 3 years old. Call Mrs. James Eberhard. VI 3-6343. 10-18
Dressmaking-alterations, *formals* and
gowns. Ola Smith, 939½ *Mast*
VI 3-5263
It's time to make your reservations for the Holiday season. The Thanksgiving weekend offers a variety of Contact Maupinture at the Mall's Shopping Center, 711 W. 23rd. VI 3-1211.
Complete line of soles and heels, laces,
cosmetics and polishes. Have new mery-
coris. Have also chosen such purses,
smoke totes. Burgert's One Day Shoe
Service — 1113 Mass. St. 11-1
HELP WANTED
Want a ride to Prairie Village or vicinity on Fridays after 4:30 p.m. Contact Marty Alderson, 238 Lewis Hall. 10-18
Want ride from Prairie Village to Law-
rence on Mondays, Marty Alderson,
Lewis Hall. 10-18
HELP WANTED - Linotype operator, 9 to 3 daily. Must be experienced on newspaper straightmate. University of Kanada Press, 117 Flint Hall. Phone UN 3282
WANTED
FOR SALE
Buy, sell or trade rare American and
Foreign coins, military equipment,
medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American
Coin Mart, 1025 Mass. tf
New stereo multiflex GE radio and phono. deluxe model portable with Garage-Card system damaged co-cut to $199.97 (reg. list $279.38) Stoneback's, 329 Mass. St., 10-23
Electric alarm clock with nite hands.
Special offer $1.99 plus tax to Kansan readers only. You must bring this ad as coupon to Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass.
1957 Cadillac, 4-door hardtop. Clean, air-conditioned, full power. Also 1956 Cadillac, 4-door hardtop, full power. Nice. Show Auto Service, 612 N. 2nd, N° 8943.
1952 Cadillac 4-door sedan. Excellent condition. Private owner. See at 19th and Mass. Phone VI 3-1013 Days. VI 3-6506 evenings. 10-23
1956 Chevrolet 4-door sedan, blue and white, carpeting, new tires, 70,000 actual miles. Excellent condition, best in town. By owner. VI 3-0061. 10-21
INCOME PROPERTY — large 2 story house near campus divided into apt. units. Units appr. $450 per month. Full price is $16,000 including furnishing. ROGERS' REAL ESTATE CO. Bus. ph. VI 3-0005, W. 14th. Res. ph. VI 3-9293
Three component Hi-Fi unit. Wardhale fain ill, danced speaker. 50 watt Sherwood sound system. Record changer. Must sacrifice. Coll UN record Leave number if not in R. Neeley. 10-22
Five room house on Tenn. St. near campus, basement, garage, needs some paint.
ST. NEILS HARSERS TATE CO. Bus. ph. VI 3-0005. Res. ph.
VI 3-2929. W. 7. W. 14th. 10-22
1950 Plymouth 4-dr. Sedan Deluxe, blue,
r and h. Perfect body and paint, very
good mechanically. Passed Official Motor
Vehicle Inspection. 6 cyl., average 19 m.p.g.
$150.00. Call VI 3-2528, see it any
time. 10-18
Underwood portable typewriter with
case. In perfect condition. $25.00. Call
VI 3-7950 8 to 10 a.m. or after 5 p.m.
10-22
Jinderdoer portable typewriter. Good
price. Just price $25.00. 10-21
3845 evenings. 10-21
1956 Buick, H.T. Good condition, new tires, best offer takes. Call VL-52-1087.
Thursday, Oct. 17, 1963
Over 30 modern pistols, rifles and shotguns left. Hundreds of rounds of ammo. below wholesale. Thousands of dollars invested in this collection. All must go! See now at 824 Ark. or call VI-1110. tf
1957 Beir-Air Chevrolet, 8-cylinder hard-top, radio and heater. This car is in A-1 condition. Can be seen at 755 N. 7th. Phone VI 3-1319. 10-18
Lightweight battery powered portable tape recorder. Many accessories, like new Epson and Sony cameras. See at 2116 Ohio after 5:00. This isn't a cheap Japanese recorder! 10-21
2 baby beds, automatic electric sterilizer
. excellent condition. Phone VI 351-874-0000
10-18
Read this terrific deal—1963 AH. Sprite.
Low mileage. All extras. Phone VI 2-3597
or VI 2-1972. You have to see it to be
believe it. $1.725. 10-18
Fender Stratocaster guitar and/or Fender amplifier like new. Can be seen at Richardson Music Co. Larry Breeden. 1602 La. VI 3-8544. 10-17
Must sell -1960 Simca 4-dr. sedel-deluxe model. Good gas mileage. Cedal VI 10-17
Typewriters, new and used portables,
standards, electrics. Olympia, Olivetti.
Royal and Smith Corona portables. Typewriter and adding machine service and rental. Lawrence Typewriter, 730 Mass.
Call VI 3-3644. tt
Garage Sale: Desks, book cases, beds,
amps, books, dishes miscellaneous,
and several antiques. Open daily from 1 to
7 p.m. 1240 Ohio. 10-17
New shipment of Pink pikting paper, 500
ram-tam - $85. Lawrence Outdoor,
1005 Mass
1957 "98" Oldsmobile convertible; white;
excellent condition; power windows,
iteering, radio, seat, brakes. $40.
Will still take offer. Call Bill Murdock.
V1-428-4285. tf
reasonable prices
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
elegant styling
finest food
HAPPY HAL'S
STEAK HOUSE
- Bar B-Q
- Seafoods
- Steaks
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outlining of classes. Formerly known as the Theta notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50.
General Psychology study notes. Excel-
cel file. All sections. $4.00 per
copy. Call VI 3-9378.
AUTO LIABILITY INSURANCE, also collision and comp. Most risks covered; under age drivers; scooters; motor bikes; motor cycles; rates avail. Brown Realty Co., Ph. VI 2-0179 — Realtors — $729_{1}$ Mass. tf
Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 1-2901 for free delivery. tf
ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLEANERS New Electrolix and a limited number of rebuilt, fully guaranteed. All parts available. Equipment picked up for service and delivered. Frank V. Cox, Local Manager - 1904 Barker. Call VI 3-127-37.
Sure—Everything in the pet field at
$$$ have more cents. 1218 Conn. I.V. 3-2921.
VI 3-9753
LOST
Ladies' yellow gold wristwatch, Wyler brand — tear-drop face. Lost Saturday night in the Union. Contact Nancy Brown, GSP 249, VI 3-9123. 10-21
Black handbag last Thursday 121 Mas-
turn to GSRm 232. Genring reward?
10-18
Yellow gold indies' wristwatch. Contact
Sally Moffitt at VI 2-1340. 10-18
East 23rd Street
TYPING
Pair of glasses lost between Dyche and Strong Hall on Oct. 14th during morning hours. If found please return to Strong Hall business office. 10-18
Professional typing by experienced secretary.
New electric typewriter, carbon
card. Attn: Charles Wilkins VI 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles
(Marlene) Higley, 409 West 13th. tt
Experienced typist, fast and accurate.
Call Mrs. Hays at VI 2-0057. 10-22
Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typrwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow. 2047 Yale, VI 1-2648.
New electric typewriter. Reasonable rates for themes, term papers, dissertations, and theses. Mrs. Barta, 1955 Miller Drive, VI 3-6994 tf
Experienced typist for theses and term
projects. Send resume to:
Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Miss. VI-3 0588. ff
Efficient and experienced typer would like to do work in home. Prompt and guaranteed work. Call at any time. VI 3-2651. 10-31
Typing: Dissertations theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines; 35 special symbols. carbon ribbon—if desired for service. Call Ms. Suzanne Gilbert VI2-148 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI3-3057.
Typing: Desertations, theses, manuscripts,
term papers, bibliographies, 35 special symbols, carbon
ribbon- if desired. Prompt. efficient ser-
vice. Quoted in *Dorothy Moon V13-357* or
*Mrs. Dorothy Moon V13-358*.
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
Will also assist with legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577.
MILLIKENES SOS—always first quality typing on LB.M. Carbon ribbon machines. The tape is also tape transcriptiones. Of hours 7 a.m. 12 p.m. 1024-1. Mass phone VI3-5920. *Mass* tt
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, reports, Electric Typewriter. Mrs McEldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI. 38-868f. tfr
Thesis Typist. Electric typewriter
English degree. Prairie Village. NI 3; SE
8.
Prompt, neat and accurate work on wide carriage electric typewriter. Journalism, Business and Secretary experience. Char-otte Weber. VI 3-3495. tt
FOR RENT
Large room, single or double, near campus, 1215 Oread. Telephone and parking available. Rent $35.00, prefer graduate or post-grad. Contact Jack Ashmore. VI 3125 1215 Oread. 10-23
Very spacious 4 room apartment. Lots of closet space. Fully furnished, carpeted. Close to KU and downtown. Off street parking. Very reasonable rent to nice couple or graduate student. For appointment, call VI 3-6696. 10-21
Large apartment freshly decorated. Suitable for 3 or 4 boys. Also, furnished duplex apartment for boys. Call VI 3-6611, VI 3-1181 or III 8-5621. 10-17
For rent or lease, one mib home, 53' x
Neat and clean. VI 3-9453 after 1:38
ifm
Third floor apartment at 940 Ind. Suitable for 3 or 4 students. Private bath and kitchen. $70.00 per month, utilities nished. Off street parking. Call VI 3-256-107
Student to room in 6 room apartment
10-day month utilities paid. VI 2-3008. 10-17
Apartment for two MEN, bills paid, rough
convenient, convenient.
Call VI 3-2430. 10-21
For Fast Results READ and USE THE WANTADS REGULARLY!
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
LEONARD'S
Standard Service
Standard Service "the best in car care"
706 W. 9th VI 3-9830
JOE'S BAKERY
new location at
616 West 9th
25c delivery VI 3-4720
19th & Louisiana VI 3-9631
HONN'S COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY
Across from the high school
--all major brands
SPEED QUEEN WASHERS OPEN 24 HRS.
LUBRICATION $1.00
Motor units wheel balancing
Tailor Made Seat Covers at Competitive Prices with sewed double lock stitch.
Jack's Seat Covers
545 Minn. VI 3-4242
STUDENTS
BRAKE ADJUSTMENTS ... $ .98
FREE—one quart of oil with each oil and filter change
Tops — Glass & Zippers
Rear Glasses — Hailcorns
Panels — Door Panels
PAGE-CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE
1819 W 23rd VI 3-9694
912 Mass. — VI 3-0151
PORTABLES - $49.50 up
SERVICE SALES RENTALS
All Kinds Office Equipment
Printing, Mimegraphing
and Duplicating
Risk up Delivery
IT'S OK TO OWE RAY
Ray Christian JEWELERS
SHARP
809 Mass.
BUSINESS MACHINES CO.
FRATERNITY JEWELRY
A complete line, including,
● Lavaliers ● Guards
● Pins ● Mugs
● Rings ● Crests
Pick up — Delivery
9th & Mississippi VI 3-9897
O
ALLAN EASUM LEROY HADL
ACE STEERING AND RADIATOR SPECIALISTS
Bear Wheel Alignment Dynamic Wheel Balancing Brake & Frt. End Parts Auto Glass Installed
THE NAME FOR SERVICE
★ WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT
★ STARTER AND
GENERATOR WORK
★ BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED
ART'S TEXACO
6th & Minn. VI 3-1300
★ MUFFLER SERVICE
★ TUNE-UPS
★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M.
SHIRTS FINISHED
Quickly, Professionally
at
RISK'S
613 Vermont
Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Oct. 17, 1963
COURTESY PHOTOGRAPHER
THE SCENE OF THE CRIME-Lowell Nye of the Atchison (Kan.) Police Department takes photographs of the evidence in a safecracking job. There wasn't really any burglary, but Nye is learning new techniques in his job at the Burglary and Larceny School being held at KU this week.
in regard to material, deadlines, etc. After this has been done, it is the yearbook's responsibility to make sure the hall is accurately and satisfactorily represented.
Policy Settled
(Continued from page 1)
The agreement says each member hall will be able to see the text for the pages they purchase after it has been edited by the Jayhawker staff. Proof sheets of the pictures and the text may be checked by the halls when they are given to the Jayhawker by the yearbook's printer.
The AURH member halls must check the edited text within 48 hours after the Jayhawker has notified Miss Shoop that the text is available, the agreement says. No time limit is given for the availability of proofs.
"At this time it is impossible to say how long the Jayhawker will be able to make these proofs available; however, at present it appears that we are far enough ahead of schedule to be able to hold them for a reasonable length of time." the statement says
According to the agreement, if a group is grossly dissatisfied and has reasonable grounds for dissatisfaction, it may appeal to the Jayhawker Advisory Board. A rebate probably would be made if the appeal was reasonable.
German War Film Planned for Friday
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results
"The Bridge," a German film acclaimed one of the most powerful war dramas ever filmed will be shown at 7.30 p.m. Friday, in Hoch Auditorium.
You've Never Known Such Comfort
And at such a modest cost . . .
One or Two Bedrooms $75 and $85
These units have been newly decorated — with new drapes, carpets disposals, etc.
All Units Air-Conditioned Provincial Furniture Available
PARK PLAZA SOUTH
Ph. VI 2-3416
1912 W. 25th
Official Bulletin
Day or Night
Fulbright applications are to be turned in to 306, Fraser, by Oct. 19.
*Peace Corps Exam: 8:30 a.m. Oct. 19.
*7th and 8th classes Obtain more
*experience in 228 Strong.
Teacher Interviews: 1:30-4:30 p.m.
Oct. 27. Alvin Schumacher, Milwaukee
public schools. Kindergarten - High
School.
TODAY
Student Peace Union, 4 p.m., Sunflower Room, Union.
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m., St. Lawrence Catholic Chanel, 1910 Stratford Road.
Der deutsche Stammtisch trift sich am
Dommerset, am 24.05.2016.
Alveore A." der D" aus Kansas Union
(Cafeteria). Sie haben hier Gelegenheit
lir Deutsch zu üben. Alle sind herzlich
Christian Science Organization. 7:30
p.m. Danforthe, Everyvone welcome.
Christian Family
School. All married Student Center, 1915
Stratford Road. All married couples wel-
come.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
MARY JOHNSON
Mrs. Jerry Leroux
President of KU Dames We congratulate Kay on her office. She's wearing a corduroy coat trimmed in blue fox in the new 7 8 length.
COACH HOUSE
Chicken For Town and Country
COACH HOUSE
Charles Far Town and Country
12th and Oread VI3-6369
ENJOY AUTUMN
THAILAND
Don Dugan, Oswego senior, and his wife Inge, are enjoying the autumn beauty of Lone Star Lake. They even enjoyed the short jaunt out to Lone Star . . . they rode a HONDA 50 Mark 102. The responsive HONDA makes any trip pure fun. It glides effortlessly through carblocking traffic and parking it is never a problem. It is so economical . . . 200 miles on one gallon of gasoline. The HONDA is whisper quiet. Why don't you see how the HONDA will brighten up your life . . . start enjoying our beautiful autumn now. Just good all-around fun.
"HONDA . . changing America's concept of cycling"
BLEVINS
701 MICH. VI 3-0581 KU's Honda Dealer
1
Your Bones Are Your ID, Anthropologist Says
By Charles Corcoran
Five or six times a year an FRI, KBI or local law enforcement investigator carrying a box or bushel basket full of bones enters the office of William M. Bass, professor of sociology and anthropology.
"Well, Doc, who is it?" the officer will invariably ask
"I lean over and inspect the bones, rub my chin, and mumble to myself for a few minutes, and then I tell him." Bass said.
A TYPICAL analysis might sound like this: "Negroid, female, about 25 years old, 120 pounds, 5 feet 6 inches tall, bore at least one child and left-handed." Bass said.
Prof. Bass, who received his doctorate in anthropology in 1961, thus introduced his lecture, "The Skeleton Talks: Human Identification," to members and guests of Phi Sigma, national honorary biological science fraternity last night.
He explained that an anthropologist is the last man who can be consulted when an unidentifiable body is found.
"If I can't do anything about it, nothing will usually come out of the case," he said.
He outlined a hypothetical case of a fisherman who happens across a body.
HE CALLS the local sheriff, who in turn calls the local coroner." Bass said. "If the body is badly decomposed, the coroner, who's usually just a local doctor who never had a patient that looked quite like that, calls me. I might add that if a doctor did have a patient look like that, I'd say he pretty well bungled the job."
Bass said when he is called in to identify a body or when he is unearthing the remains of bodies at a burial site, he uses basic facts about human body growth to tell the sex, age and race of the individual.
Examination of the teeth is one method of determining age.
Bass said that a better method than examination of teeth to tell the age is scrutiny of the epiphytes, pieces of bone at the ends of most of the post cranial (those below the skull) bones. These pieces of bone are joined with the larger bones in an adult, but they fuse gradually. Since the rate at which the fusing takes place is constant,
the degree of fusion is a reliable scale by which to judge age. This method is useful up to the time an individual has reached 16-18 years of age.
Anthropologists at one time judged age by the degree of closure of the cranial sutures (jagged unions of the bones of the skull), but this proved inadequate because the process was too erratic.
THE BEST METHOD of age determination is the examination of the public sympysis, Prof. Bass explained.
We can tell age within a range of plus or minus 3 years with the public symphysis," he said.
The public symphysis is the area of anterior mid-line union of the two hip bones. The joint surface never fuses.
"Let's talk about sex." Bass said, turning the lecture to an explanation of how gender of skeletal remains is determined.
"When in doubt, look at the pelvis, then the skull and finally the sternum (breast bone)."
BASS SAID the female pelvis is wider than the male's to facilitate
childbirth. A large sciatic nerve notch is wider and the sacroiliac joint is built up with bone in the female.
"The female skull is nice and smooth and gracile (graceful). There are no pronounced ridges above the eye. The chin is pointed where in the male it is squared. The mastoid process, just behind the ear, is not so pronounced as in the male. The eye sockets have almost a knife edge where in the male they are smooth."
The breast bone can be divided into three distinct parts. To simplify matters, Prof. Bass compared them to a sword with a handle, blade and tip. The blade is less than 2 times the length of the handle in the female. If the blade on the upper arm and leg bones is less than 44 millimeters in diameter, it is most likely a female; if it is 45 mm or longer, it is a male.
Pass explained the anthropologist's interest in race.
"TO A PHYSICAL ANTHROPOLOGIST, race is biological. If a Negro goes into a tavern and is thrown out because of his race, that's a social problem, not a biological one. This is not race to the physical anthropologist."
A Caucazoid has a pointed face with a prominent nose. The area between the nose and the chin is flat. Bone along the lower edge of the nose forms what he called a gutter. It allows a Caucasian to sniffle when he has a cold, he said.
The Negroid has a protrusion of the mouth region in definite contrast with the flatness of the Cauca-zoid. There is a protrusion of the teeth. There is no gutter of bone under the nose.
"Mongoloids have flat, moonlike faces. Their cheekbones come far forward. They have shovel-shaped incisors."
"THE SKULL IS about the only part of the skeleton with which you can define the race of an individual," he said.
Bass summarized his talk with a detailed description of an investigation on which he is now working.
The skeleton of what appeared to be a man in woman's clothing was found along the Delaware River in Easton, Pa. The physical descrip-
(Continued on page 12)
A
EVERYTHING IS UPSIDE DOWN when it rains—even KU coeds whose shadows are reflected from the rainy sidewalk. The sudden change in weather gave KU students a chance to don their raincoats and galoshes.
Daily hansan
KU Spirits Dampened By Wind, Rain Stprm
61st Year, No.26
The spirits of KU's out-of-doors enthusiasts were dampened today by a wind and rain storm.
Lawrence received .72 inches of rainfall. Winds reached 43 m.p.h. during the 11 p.m. storm.
The Buildings and Grounds office said that no damage was reported to the University buildings during the storm.
Harris Says Force Rules in States' Disputes
Scattered thunderstorms were still going on in the northeast quarter of the state early today.
Errol E. Harris, professor of philosophy, last night said force is more important in the affairs of states than international law.
Mrs. Marian E. Wilson, 69. Sigma Chi housemother, died from a stroke this morning at 1 a.m. in St. Luke's Hospital, Kansas City. Mrs. Wilson had been the Sigma Chi housemother for five years. She is survived by two sons, Dr. John S. Wilson, Hillsborough, California, and Frank W. Wilson Jr., Kirkwood, Missouri.
It will be partly cloudy through Saturday. Thunderstorms are expected to redevelop in the Southeast and extreme East tonight and in the extreme Southeast again tomorrow. The high temperatures Saturday will be in the middle 70's and the low will be near 60, the weather bureau said.
The five-day forecast calls for temperatures to average 6 to 10 degrees above normal for the period Saturday through Wednesday. It will continue to be mild with no decided day to day temperature changes. Scattered showers or thunderstorms will occur over most of the area through Wednesday.
Prof. Harris spoke at a lecture in Dyche auditorium on "The Philosophy of War and Peace." It was the fifth of the series.
Housemother Dies
"The underlying presupposition of international law is that the final arbiter is force, not law," he said.
Before 1920 it was a recognized doctrine of international law that any country could resort to war as it saw fit. Prof. Harris said.
PROF. HARRIS said the League of Nations and the United Nations have attempted to stop wars. Now war is only justified for defensive purposes, he added.
Neither the League or the U.N. have greatly altered the use of force. Prof. Harris continued.
The state's sovereign independence is a fundamental principle of international law, he said. The mark of sovereignty is the authority it has over affairs within its own territory, he said.
THE PRINCIPLE of sovereignty is not clearly stated in international law, but it is clearly recognized among nations. Harris said.
"Keeping the peace is dependent on the ability of nations to keep laws without resort to force."
- A state is an equal among equals, "Since a nation is not subject or responsible to any higher authority, then all sovereign states are equal in the eyes of international law," Prof. Harris said.
Prof. Harris presented these three points as consequences of the recognition of sovereignty:
Although in legal theory all states are equal, they are not equal in power.
- A STATE CANNOT be compelled by law to submit to arbitration and to the decisions of international organizations.
Prof. Harris pointed out that membership in the Council of the League of Nations and the Security Council of the U.N. went to the big world powers. Other states are ranked in descending order in accordance with their power and capacity to affect world affairs, he said.
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MEMBERSHIP in the "concert of powers" theoretically depends on recognition by the other nations of the world, he said.
Prof. Harris will continue his lectures next week at 7:30 p.m., Thursday, in Dyche Auditorium when he will discuss the concept of law.
Home Named Prime Minister
LONDON—(UPI)—Prime Minister Harold Macmillan resigned today and Queen Elizabeth promptly asked foreign secretary Lord Home to replace him and form a new government.
The series of moves came swiftly after eight days of agonizing appraisal and consultations that appeared to wrack the ruling Conservative Party.
IN CHOOSING HOME as the next Prime Minister, the Queen obviously followed Macmillan's advice from the sickbed where he is recovering from a prostate gland operation.
The decision eliminated the present Deputy Prime Minister R. A. (RAB) Butler, who had been a leading candidate for the job many times, but never had been able to muster enough party support to win it.
Macmillan beat him out for the Prime Minister's role last time, and Home was chosen over him this time—presumably because a
(Earlier story, page 8.)
contest between Butler and Science Minister Lord Hailsham could not be reconciled and Home was an acceptable compromise candidate. Once this was settled events moved fast.
Once this was settled, events moved fast.
The Queen and the new prime minister-designate conferred for 37 minutes.
THE ANNOUNCEMENT of Home's appointment said briefly:
"The Queen has received the Earl of Home in audience and invited him to form an administration."
There was wide belief that Home's choice as a compromise candidate was made in hopes of averting a dangerous Conservative Party split—especially now, when the new Prime Minister must lead the party into general elections before next October in the face of a united Labor Party which is favored in current polls to win a majority of seats in the next parliament.
Although he has had a successful record as foreign secretary for three years, Home is virtually a political amateur. His opponents charged he did not have the experience for the rough and tumble of parliamentary debate nor the toughness required of a party leader.
Opponents of Lord Home fought apparently to the last moments to sidetrack his selection.
LARGE CROWDS gathered outside both Buckingham Palace and No.10 Downing Street, the Prime Minister's official residence, as the political drama unfolded.
Lord Home, hatless and wearing a conservative dark grey pinstriped suit, drove through the crowds to the place in a chauffeured limousine.
He waved and smiled as he entered the "King's Gate"—now changed to the "Queen's Gate" in this reign—and again when he departed just before the Queen's announcement at 1 p.m.
NEXT OFFICIAL step for the prime minister-designate was to go to 10 Downing Street to start his round of preliminary steps.
A spokesman said Macmillan's old cabinet was expected to gather
(Continued on page 12)
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Oct. 18, 1963
Just Raise Hell
KU is taking the Homecoming out of Homecoming.
Recently, the Homecoming committee announced that the traditional "All for Fun" theme for the annual weekend would be reversed to the Kansas motto, "To the Stars Through Difficulties" and "Higher Education—The Road to the Future." Evidently there is a choice.
The new theme calls for an aesthetic version of intellectual companionship throughout the Homecoming festivities with the opponent—in this case, K-State, no less.
THE COMMITTEE MUST have seen too much crepe paper in past years. The new theme is fine and should be pursued by all, but please, not on Homecoming. Higher learning is a vital part of KU. There are times, however, when a university must bring back some of the old Siss Boom Bah and just plain have a hell of a good time. Homecoming is one of these times.
The committee says the new theme should be emphasized in all the house decorations and other Homecoming ceremonies. This spells only confusion. Imagine the poor, unsuspecting alum who drives 1,200 miles for Homecoming, sees the campus full of giant papier-mache rockets, reactors, computers, textbooks and microscopes. He will think it's really Science Day and go back home.
The Pi Phis will never figure out how to build an Atlas rocket with wine and silver-blue trimmings. Those Betas will probably pull a double reverse and launch a missile and blow up Aggieville in Manhattan. God knows what the Fijis will do with the H-bomb they'll make. Who wants to go to a pep rally for more classwork? How are the fans down in Memorial Stadium
going to see the letters T—N—E painted on a rocket going 3,000 miles an hour? And what about all the (shudder) parties?
TO GET BACK to the alumni those who stay aren't going to want to attend joint panel discussions on higher education and talk intelligently with that K-State alum who broke a Cutty Sark bottle over his head 25 years ago. This is the weekend when the grads want to talk over old times and carouse a bit. Homecoming has always been a time for fun and memories, not deep thought, operas and tours through the chemistry lab. Alumni would rather have a headache from other means.
The new theme will never find a place at the football game. Higher learning will be the farthest thought from 22 minds out on the field. In fact, they primarily will be working very hard at knocking each other's brains out. The football game is the center attraction of Homecoming. There is nothing intelligent about 40,000 persons screaming for someone to plow someone else under. It never will be a form of higher education.
KU'S NEW Homecoming theme can ruin Homecoming. A successful Homecoming needs that special spirit that goes with such a celebration. Take away the elements of that spirit and there is nothing. Granted, there is a spirit for learning, too, but it has a place just as Homecoming does. Forced together, the spirit for both may be lost.
There are only two reversals needed at the KU Homecoming this year. One is on the football field for those who remember last year's disaster, and the other is to employ a more simple reverse, such as "Fun for All."
The Lucky Fifth
— Terry Ostmeyer
A national readership survey reports that while two-thirds of a newspaper's readers may look at the editorial page, not more than one-fifth regularly read the editorials.
This is discouraging, considering the millions of verbal pearls I have strewn in three decades of editorial writing. The bulk of them seem to have been wasted.
The situation appears almost as sad as the state of television advertising. A recent Wichita survey indicates fewer than one-eight of the viewers recall the sponsor's message.
On the other hand, The Journal's readership is upwards of 100.000. If the one-fifth proportion applies, at least 20.000 persons besides yourself are reading these words.
This is probably more than the number of persons who will listen to all the sermons preached in Salina today.
I hasten to add, of course, that the sermons undoubtedly have more lasting value. And more effect.
While the preacher's words may lead to salvation, mine often have reverse results. Those that are intended to evoke may only provoke.
Those written to illuminate may douse the glim, if not cause the subscription to be cancelled.
The editorial writer soon learns humility. The thoughtful piece on which he has spent hours of research and much sweat in polishing may be tee-totally ignored. But an idle confection rapidly spun off may fill his letter basket.
This may be why some editorial writers, such as the erudite ones on the New York Times, write chiefly for the President, the justices of the Supreme Court and the more literate members of the Congress. Or why down in the Balkans of southeastern Kansas the editors write mostly for each other and comprise a society of mutual flatulence. Or why the editor of a large Kansas newspaper writes exclusively for the proofreader.
It is the rare editor who, day in and day out, can be the goad in the ribs of progress, the lamp of learning, the thurifer of community accomplishment, the scourge of evil, the purificator of politics and the matrix of ideas. Sometimes he is just dull.
Perhaps he is lucky to get his fifth.
Dailij 17hnsan
111 Flint Hall
University of Kansas student newspaper
UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom
UNiversity 4-3198, business office
— In The Salina Journal
Founded 1889, 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 Lawrence, Kansas.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Terry Ostmeyer, Trudy Meserve, Jackie Stern, Rose Osborne, Assistant Managing Editors; Kay Jarvis, City Editor; Linda Machin, Society Editor; Roy Miller, Sports Editor; Dennis Bowers, Picture Editor.
Managing Editor
Mike Miller
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Blaine King Editorial Editor
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Bob Brooks ... Business Manager
Joanne Zabornik, Advertising Mgr.; Alice Rueschhoff, Circulation Mgr.; Brooks Harrison, Classified Adv. Mgr.; Jim Evilsizer, National Adv. Mgr.; Donald Dugan, Promotion Mgr.; Jerry Schroepfer, Merchandising Mgr.
Editor:
The People Say . . .
I refer to Thursday's UDK editorial by Dolores Orman. Miss Orman's gung-ho dissertation on the wonders of organized physical recreation was quite good and I agree with her entirely that there is a need for a strong intramural program at KU.
Nevertheless, she did leave the definite impression in the third and fourth paragraphs that "... since the University of Kansas has no compulsory physical education program ..." the curriculum is somehow deficient.
May a footsore freshman inject a weary comment at this point?
Personally, I think there are already enough "busy work" courses I am required to take without adding another to the list. I figure that if any student can take a typical schedule—a 7:30 in Malott, an 8:30 in Dyche, a 9:30 in Haworth, a 10:30 in Summerfield and an 11:30 in Strong—they are in GREAT physical shape.
Jacke Thayer Ellsworth, Kansas freshman
MY NAME IS Tory Party
TAKE ME TO MY LEADER
1963 HERBLOCK
THE WASHINGTON POST
Atlantis Sank Into Sea; Mu Too, Apparently
With the weather, politics, and everything else the way it is, it's high time we considered the lost continents of Atlantis and Mu.
You've probably never heard of Mu. For some reason, it doesn't seem to have as good a public relations crew as Atlantis.
Everybody knows that Atlantis was situated in the Atlantic Ocean. Exactly where in the Atlantic is up for grabs. Educated guesses have been made of sites ranging from the North Sea to Crete. Wherever it is, we'll let it lie there.
Mu was located, according to men who went to college, in the Pacific Ocean between South America and Burma. Most of the experts, let's call them Mueans, believe wholeheartedly that the Pacific Islands are the last mountainous vestiges of the lost kingdom. Of course, the Atlanteans claim the Azores were once Atlantis.
Of course, the Arabian lands both sides claim that their beloved islands supported vast civilizations, superior to our own in most respects, and that we owe them lots. Both islands claim to have been the original home of man.
STRANGELY ENOUGH, there are Mueans who refuse to accept Atlantis, and Atlanteans who say Mu leaves them cold. What's more, there are even a few rebels who refuse to be committal about either one.
The legends of Mu are extremely old ones, especially in South America and the Pacific Islands. Most of the basis for modern man's curiosity is derived from groups or unquestionably ancient tablets unearthed in the past 50 years or so in Mexico and India. These tablets, of uncertain origin, tell the story of the "lost home of man, Mu, which sank beneath the waves of the Pacific 50,000 years ago.
Atlantis has even less basis for its authenticity. The whole legend of Atlantis started with Plato about 400 B.C. In a book called "Timaeus," he describes an island, "... larger than Libya and Asia together," which lay "... opposite the columns of Hercules (Giralta), in the Atlantic." Plato states that the island disappeared, "... swallowed by the waves." In a later book, "Critias," Plato says the destruction of Atlantis occurred about 9600 B.C., and he gives descriptions of its temples, palaces, wealth, and government. It is clear, from a careful reading of the works, that Plato set out to do no more than tell an allegory, in order to illustrate his conception of a perfect political state. He pointed at a moral but the mythical conception was preferred. Thus was born the legend of Atlantis.
NOW THAT I HAVE shattered one of our favorite myths, let's look briefly at the other ocean. I have no other basis for Mu than what Colonel Churchward says, and that is none too clear. He bases his arguments for Mu on some tablets found in temples in India and ruins in Mexico and South America. The tablets are interesting, if you like that sort of thing, but they don't prove much to me since the translations are his only and I have heard of no other collaborating translations. You can believe what you will.
As far as modern science goes, experts tell us that first glances at the ocean bottoms of the questionable areas may seem to confirm the former existence of continents. However, they state, any disturbance of the nature of whole continents sinking would have occurred hundreds of thousands of years ago.
One must admit, though, that Atlantis and Mu are fun to think about. Wouldn't it be grand if continents had once existed in the oceans and these continents had supported mighty civilizations? The whole thing is part and parcel of man's folklore, and, as such, should be kept alive along with King Arthur and the rest. Atlantis has furnished us with something to waste our time on and what, I ask you, would we do without anything to waste our time on?
— Larry Knupp
Page 3
Convoys Move; Russians Stopped
University Daily Kansan
BERLIN—(UPI)—The U.S. Army today sent a convoy through the Soviet zone in a new demonstration of Western access rights and the Russians cleared it for Berlin in record time.
Twenty-four soldiers in 12 trucks passed through the Russian checkpoint on the western end of the 110-mile highway to Berlin without difficulty, an Army spokesman said.
American Military Police blocked a Russian military automobile in West Berlin and held it for 20 minutes in retaliation for East German harassment of American military sedans in East Berlin.
Russian border guards cleared the convoy in eight minutes and did not attempt to make the soldiers leave the trucks to be counted.
A U.S. Army spokesman said an MP patrol car cut off a Soviet sedan near the Army's Checkpoint Charlie and blocked its passage from 11:25 a.m. to 11:45 a.m.
Informed sources said the action was taken in retaliation for East German police interference with U.S. Army patrol cars in East Berlin.
The new Communist harassment of military traffic in East Berlin was disclosed as the U.S. Army sent a convoy to Berlin from the west in a demonstrations of western access rights.
The American MP sedan caught the Russian automobile at Askansischer Platz, about one half mile from Checkpoint Charlie on the East-West Berlin border, after what eyewitnesses described as a wild chase.
The American sedan cut off the Russian automobile, forced it to the curb and blocked its passage.
Two American MP's jumped from the patrol car and stood in front of the Russian automobile to prevent a Russian lieutenant colonel from leaving it, eyewitnesses said. There also was a Russian driver in the automobile.
After 20 minutes the Russian automobile was allowed to proceed, the Army spokesman said.
The Western allies regularly send military automobiles into East Berlin through the Friedrichstrasse crossing point for foreigners as a demonstration of the Western right of freedom of movement in East Berlin.
A Russian demand that soldiers dismount to be counted held up an American convoy for 48 hours last week and a British convoy for nine hours Wednesday.
The swift passage of today's U.S. convoy and four British convoys yesterday did not convince Western officials that the Russian interference with traffic was over.
East Berlin police recently have halted the automobiles without reason and blocked their passage.
They said the Russians might be laying off for a few days to start in again later.
On Tuesday the British will start an airlift of about 1,200 troops and their families between Berlin and England.
The four-day airlift will rotate infantry battalions.
Friday, Oct. 18, 1963
Today's convoy was sent to Berlin as part of a coordinated Western allied plan to run frequent convovs on the highway to see if the Soviets have started a deliberate campaign to harass the vital traffic.
KU Chemical Society Lists Three Guests
Leon Dorfman of the Argonne National Laboratory near Chicago, Ill., will be the speaker for the season's first meeting of the KU section of the American Chemical Society Oct. 24. His talk, "Pulse Radiolysis—Fast Reaction Studies in Radiation Chemistry," will be at 7:30 p.m. in 122 Malott Hall.
Charles Marvin, Lawrence senior and UP co-chairman, said Sunday his party would debate Vox on any campus issues at any time.
With the All Student Council representative elections less than a month away, the two political parties are busy selecting candidates and writing platforms.
Tom Bornholdt, Topeka senior and Vox president issued the same challenge last night at a meeting of the Vox general assembly in the Kansas Union.
UP will announce its candidates at a party Sunday night from 7:30 p.m. to 10 p.m. at the Dine-a-Mite. Membership cards, which are necessary for admittance, will be sold at the door.
Other meetings of the KU section already scheduled are: Nov. 21—C. C. Cheng Midwestern Research Institute, Kansas City, "Recent Developments in Cancer Chemotherapy"; and Dec. 17—Prof. Glen Russell, Iowa State University, "Free Radical Reactions."
University Party and Vox Populi invited each other to debate this week.
Political Parties Ask for Debate
"We would prefer the debate to be in a freshman dormitory after next week." Bornholdt said.
The UP platform will be released by next Friday.
(Sigh)
"I know," was his answer, "but my competitors did."
Ecumenical Council OK's Language Use
A man who went broke in business said, "I blame it all on advertising."
His friend replied, "What do you mean? You never did any advertising."
Wise Merchants Use The
University Daily Kansan
The only way to reach the college market
VATICAN CITY — (UPI) — The Ecumenical Council today sent back for "further liberalization," a document authorizing the use of modern languages at Catholic weddings, funerals, baptisms and other sacraments.
As presented to the council today, the document placed only one restriction on the use of modern languages in the Catholic Sacraments. it provided that Latin must continue to be used for the "essential verbal formula" of the rite.
Many prelates of the council's "liberal" bloc had let it be known they would like to eliminate even his vestige of Latin, and allow all acraments to be entirely in the language of the people.
The vote on the document was 1,130 yes. 1,054 yes-with-reservations, and 30 no.
UNDER COUNCIL rules, prelates who vote yes with reservations are required to submit a written description of the change they wish made in the document before giving t final approval.
Council experts said that unquestionably, a very large percentage of the reservations were voiced by Bishops who want to eliminate Latin entirely from the administration of Catholic Sacraments.
They said the campaign for a large number of reservation votes had been quietly conducted by liberal Bishops from Western Europe in preparation for today's vote.
The document and the reservations now go back to the Council's liturgical commission, which will attempt to draft an amendment expressing the view represented by the largest number of reservations. This amendment will then be put to a vote, and like all proposals will require a two-third majority to carry.
EVEN THOUGH the unqualified yes votes today slightly outnumbered the reservations, they fell short of the necessary two-thirds for final approval of the document.
The Rev. Frederick McManus, a consultant to the Council's Liturgical Commission, said at a press briefing, "today's vote indicates many council fathers wish to allow the vernacular even in the central verbal formulas of the sacramas."
After voting, the fathers continued debate on a document defining the role of the laity in the church. Valerian Cardinal Gracias of Bombay, India, said church authorities sometimes act as if they don't want a collaboration from the laity. He said the hierarchy must learn that the layman "has a right to share in the universal mission of the church."
Bishop Michal Klepacz of Lodz, Poland, said that the church document was the place to define the precise relation between civil and religious authorities, due to the present situation in some countries "of encroachment of totalitarian states and the rights of the church."
The Bishop said that where "moral values are ignored and even suppressed" it is necessary to have a definition of the proper sphere of activity for church and state. He said that this relationship could be defined by one of two systems, either by concordat or by separation of church and state.
ALBERT GROSSMAN PRESENTS
IN PERSON
Peter, Paul and Mary
EXCLUSIVELY ON © Warner Brothers Records
KANSAS CITY MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM
FRIDAY, OCT. 18 8:30 p.m.
Enclose stamped self-addressed envelope to Municipal
Auditorium Box Office, Kansas City, Missouri.
Tickets: $2.00,$3.00,$3.50,$4.00
A TRIO CONCERTS PRODUCTION
THIS ALBUM NOW AVAILABLE IN STEREO AND HI-FI AT
KIEF'S RECORDS
MALL SHOPPING CENTER
Page 4
University Daily Kansam
Friday, Oct. 18, 1963
Politicians Deceiving In Election Promises
By Lyle C. Wilson United Press International
matter
The moment of truth came for the Kennedy administration when Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy appeared on capitol hill to plead for a softening of proposed civil rights legislation.
THE ACKNOWLEDGED importance of the Negro bloe vote in the great cities has persuaded the major political parties to make impossible promises in their presidential platform statements of policy.
Republicans and Democrats alike have been for years playing politics with civil rights. The prize has been the numerous Negro vote concentrated in the cities of our industrial states. Without that vote in 1960 John F. Kennedy certainly would not have been elected president of the United States.
These promises are not limited to Negroes and to civil rights but extend to all areas of interest. It has come to be that the Republican and Democratic presidential platforms are commonly drafted on a something-for-everyone basis to the disadvantage of the generality of voters.
Some of these promises are impossible of fulfillment. The difference between promise and performance in American politics is so great as to invite speculation as to what would happen if the voters became aware of the hypocrisy being practiced upon them and moved to punish the practitioners.
THEREWOULD be some openings in the top leadership of both political parties if that happy solution were had to the problem posed by this widespread political dishonesty. The morality of American politics is similar to the former morality of American finance on Wall Street and among the big banks. That was before Judge Ferdinand Pecora and a Senate committee in the early 1930's focused public attention on the termites in the financial structure
Out of that investigation came a truth-in-securities act which requires that promises made in furthering the sale of securities be matched thereafter by performance. If the seller makes a dishonest promise the chances are pretty good that he will go to jail.
Perhaps we need a truth-in-politics act. A better way, however, would be to reform our political convention system. The conventions now name presidential tickets and write platforms. In the furious competition for delegate votes and the presidential nomination, candidates are inclined to endorse any kind of phony platform promise, however impossible of fulfillment.
CANDIDATES before and after the nomination endorse whole platforms without really knowing what is in them. This appears to have happened in 1960. The gullible voters accept the promises as legitimate and thus presidents are elected. None of the test Bobby Kennedy applied this week to pending civil rights legislation was applied in 1960 to the civil rights section of the Democratic platform. Small wonder that Negroes expect more in the civil rights bill than they are likely to get.
The needed reform would be this:
The needed reform would be this:
Let the conventions nominate tickets and adjourn. Thereafter, let the party nominees and a small committee of their choice draft the party platform. The personal responsibility of the nominees for the platform promises would be complete and, we could hope, binding.
Ban-The-Bomb
YEOVILTON, England — (UPI) — Rear Adm. Philip Gick ordered 30 sailors to stage a hoax ban-the-bomb sittdown outside the Royal Naval Air Station here yesterday "to test how the station could deal with an emergency."
KU international students plan to participate in a traditional dance of the American West.
International Students Plan Square Dancing
Karl Edwards, professor of education, will instruct the members of the International Club in square dancing at their meeting at 7:30 p.m. Saturday in the Kansas Union.
The meeting will begin in the Forum Room where two films on Mexico will be shown. The purpose of the films is to promote a trip to Mexico for foreign students during Christmas vacation.
Following the films, the members of the club will go to the Union Ballroom where Prof. Edwards will conduct the program of dancing.
Kansas Artists To Enter Show
Entries are now being accepted for the 10th annual Kansas designer craftsmen show.
The show, which will run from Nov. 3-20 at the Kansas Union, will feature works by artists who have lived in Kansas a minimum of one year. The art works must have been done during the last five years.
Prizes totaling $1,000 will be offered to winners of the various divisions in the show. These divisions are: cast, thrown and handbuilt ceramics, metal work, silversmithing jewelry, enameling, furniture, sculpture in stone, wood, metal and fired clay, stained glass and mosaics, woven fabrics, upholstery, drapery, rugs, wall hangings, fashion fabrics, and household linen and printed textiles.
The show is jointly sponsored by the School of Fine Arts, the Department of Design, and the Extension Division.
Participating artists can submit a maximum of four works which must be delivered to the Kansas Union by Oct. 23.
Thomas Gorton, Dean of the School of Fine Arts, will award the prizes on Nov. 3, the opening day of the show.
Two seniors of the School of Business were honored at a luncheon as recipients of Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. scholarships, it was announced today.
Business Majors Win Grants
They were Ronald R. Arnold, Coffeyville, and Clyde R. Harms, Lawrence.
The award winners are chosen on
the basis of academic achievement, financial need, character, and leadership, according to L. M. Jones, assistant dean of the School of Business. This is the seventh year that Goodyear has selected two business school students for the award, Dean Jones said.
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Page 5
Brazil Leader Caught In Left-Right Struggle
University Daily Kansan
By Phil Newsom UPI Foreign News Analyst
Back in April, 1962, when Brazilian President Joao Goulart paid a state visit to the United States, a Brazilian newsman pleaded:
"Give him a chance. He is trying to be a friend."
DURING THE two years of his presidency, Goulart's chief difficulty has been that in the extremes of Brazilian politics, he has been forced to walk a tightrope between right and left. And in the last two weeks there have been definite signs that the rope is becoming frayed.
On both the extreme right and extreme left, Goulart was a man without a friend. Complicating the already chaotic state of affairs in South America's largest nation was the fact that maneuvering already has started for the presidential elections scheduled for October, 1965.
This week Goulart's minister of education, Paulo de Tarso, quit in what was interpreted as a leftwing protest against Goulart's "opening toward the center."
IN RIO DE JANEIRO, capital of Guanabara state, Gov. Carlos Lacerda, militantly anti-communist and an avowed presidential candidate, accused unidentified authorities "directly linked" with Goulart of plotting to assassinate him.
Lacerda freely has predicted total collapse of the Goulart regime.
Whether or not another man might have done better, it must be admitted that Goulart's position has been an almost impossible one.
When the United States bailed him out early this year with a pledge of more than $400 million in aid, it was on the promise that an austerity campaign would at least slow down Brazil's galloping inflation and that
tax and land reform progt ans would follow.
Instead, inflation jumped nearly 50 per cent in the first eight months of the year. Labor unions attacked Goulart for his resistance to wage demands and conservative and right-wing elements in Congress effectively blocked land reform.
AMONG HIS critics, Lacerda has been the loudest.
The enmity between the two is of deep-seated origin.
As a newspaper editor in Rio, Lacerda was a constant critic of President Getulio Vargas, leader of the Labor Party and political mentor of Goulart.
Goulart considers Lacerda at least indirectly responsible for Vargas' death.
In 1954, Vargas followers tried to assassinate Lacerda, an event which 'ed to Vargas' own suicide.
As governor of Guanabara state, Lacerda has established a good record of building schools, clearing slums and pressing public works. Mandatory wage increases and a "13th month" of extra pay has in general kept workers quiet.
LACERDA EXPECTS a swing to the political right and will use his record as governor to help his presidential ambitions.
As for Goulart, there are signs that he is working toward cooperation with the middle-road Social Democrats of former President Juscelino Kubitschek. Kubitschek is an amiable medico who has no personal enemies. It was he who led Brazil into the forced-draft industrialization which plunged it so deeply into debt.
Kubitschek also is a presidential candidate for 1965.
KU Half-way to Goal In United Fund Drive
KU's participation in the Lawrence United Fund Campaign is progressing well, said Capt. Richard Gruber, KU chairman for the drive. "The results to date have been very gratifying," Capt. Gruber said.
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Half of the $10,000 KU goal was reached Thursday morning. Capt. Gruber said that while the results have been good, the latter half of the campaign drive is the difficult part.
The goal set for the Lawrence campaign is $72,900. The drive ends Oct. 22.
Money received from the drive will be distributed to thirteen charity agencies.
Anyone wishing to contribute to the campaign can do so by sending a check or money order made out to the Lawrence United Fund Campaign, to Capt. Gruber at the Military Science Building. Capt. Gruber said all donations will be acknowledged with a receipt.
Plastic Surgery Material Passes Important Test
NEW YORK—(UPI) The synthetic material newly favored by plastic surgeons for a particular beautifying operation sought by some women has passed its most rigorous safety test to date.
BUT SCIENTISTS are not unanimous in believing all polymers so chemically inert that not one could cause cancer, and even if they couldn't do it chemically they might mechanically—by irritation, Drs. Dunaif, Stubenbord and Conway said in reporting to the technical organ of the American College of Surgeons.
And so they implanted discs cut from polyetherurethane sponge into the abdomens of $132^{\prime}$ female mice, beneath the mammary glands. Two discs went into each mouse, for a total of 264 discs.
For one year, which is more than one third of the normal mouse lifespan, the animals were left to their own devices in their comfortable cages. In that time 28 died naturally. The remaining 104 were killed and subjected to meticulous microscopic examination.
The scientific testers found it has no potential for causing cancer when embedded permanently in living tissue. This result was not ultimately conclusive because the testing had to be done in mice rather than in women.
IN THE WORDS of the scientists, the operation is "augmentation of the mammary gland." The material is artificial sponge of varying pore sizes made of the plastic, polyetherurethane.
The testers were Dr. Charles B. Dunaif, Dr. William T. Stubenbord and Dr. Herbert T. Conway of the New York hospital Cornell University Medical Center. They took the assignment because, in their opinion, polyetherurethane has never been thoroughly tested as a possible cancer-causer.
Not one had developed a cancer at the site of implantation or anywhere near a site.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Oct. 18, 1963
New Astronaut List Announced by NASA
HOUSTON, Tex., (UPI) — Fourteen young but experienced jet pilots will make their debut today as America's newest astronauts — each carrying a tentative ticket for a trip to the moon.
The rookie spacemen, all male and including the first bachelor, were chosen one week ago today to make up the nation's third, youngest, and reportedly most highly educated team of astronauts.
They will compete with 16 veterans — the original seven Mercury astronauts and nine others added 13 months ago to the more advanced Project Gemini — for berths aboard U.S. spaceships headed for lunar landings in the next five to seven years.
THE NATIONAL AERONAUTICS and Space Administration (NASA), which is running the $40 billion U.S. program to conquer the moon, planned to introduce the new space pilots at 5 p.m. (EDT) today in the University of Houston's Cullen Auditorium.
The 14 were notified only last Saturday that a top-level team, including NASA administrator James E. Webb and deputies Hugh Dryden and Robert Seamans, had approved their selection.
The slender young jet jockeys, all less than 34 years old, are the cream of 271 applicants who answered the space agency's call three months ago for more astronauts to beef up its pilot team for stepped-up manned flights into space starting in 1965.
Informed sources said the new astronauts probably will be assigned almost exclusively to Project Apollo — the program with the national goal of landing Americans on the moon by late 1968. Assignments aboard the Interim, earth-orbit flights of Project Gemini will
Play Tryouts Set for Monday
Tryouts for "Raisin in the Sun," a play on Negro life in America, will be at 7 p.m. Monday in the Experimental Theatre.
The play will be presented at KU as the third offering in the Experimental Series, Feb. 13-16 and 18-22 and March 1-2 at Battenfeld Auditorium in Kansas City, Kansas.
"Raisin in the Sun" requires a cast of 10 Negroes, according to William Kuhlke, director of the show. This includes six men, three women, and a young boy, 10 to 12 years old. Also to be cast is one white middle-aged man.
"We want to stress that all interested University students are invited to try out." Kuhlke said. "Scripts are available in the script library, above the music library in Murphy Hall. Interested persons may wish to read over the play prior to trvous."
The prior reading of the play is not necessary, but it may help the actor trying out, Kuhlike said.
KU Debate Teams To Manhattan Sat.
Four debate teams will represent KU at a novice debate tournament at Manhattan Saturday, Oct. 19.
Novice teams from five states are expected to attend this tournament.
The question to be debated is: "Should the Federal Government Guarantee Opportunities for Higher Education for all High School Graduates?"
The following teams will participate in the tournament: Jerry Hoskins, Bonner Springs freshman and Judson Briegel, Bethel freshman; Margaret Miller, Red Wing, Minn., sophomore and Louis Floyd, Topeka freshman; Ruth Hatch, Davenport, Ia., freshman and Howard Whitehead, Bonner Springs freshman; and Russell and John Hedge, Cambridge freshmen.
On Oct. 25, two KU debate teams will attend the Emporia Invitational.
go to the 16 previously selected spacemen.
FROM BASES throughout the United States and as far away as Japan, the neophyte space pilots were pouring into Houston yesterday for their formal introduction.
This is a tournament for junior and senior debate teams, and will have teams from all parts of the nation.
The federal space agency steadfastly refused to reveal either the names or the number of members on the new team.
The 271 applications for the new astronaut positions included 26 from the Air Force, 10 from the Marine Corps, 34 from the Navy, one from the Army and 200 civilians, including three women.
Most, including the would-be astronettes, were quickly weeded out when they fell short on one or more of the three basic requirements: no older than 34 years of age, possession of a degree in engineering or physical sciences, and a minimum of 1,000 hours of jet pilot time or experience as a civilian or military test pilot.
Engineering Educators Hold 44th Annual Meet
The Kansas-Nebraska section of the American Society for Engineering Education is holding its 44th annual meeting here today and Saturday.
Dean George R. Waggoner of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, will be the banquet speaker tonight, telling of the KU-University of Costa Rica experiment in international cooperation.
Professor Maynard P. Bauleke will moderate a panel on technical obsolettecence Saturday morning. Panel members will be Dean Paul Russel, Kansas State University; Col. M. L. Wachendorf, U.S. Army Engineers, Kansas City; Don Nigg, Bendix Corp., Kansas City, and Robert Gatts, professor of mechanical engineering at KU.
Floyd Preston, associate professor of petroleum engineering, will moderate a panel which will discuss "Patterns of Participation in International Education."
Convicts Get Hot Bath
MATSUYAMA, Japan — (UPI) Officials of the federal prison in this central Japanese community yesterday dedicated their new hot springs bath for convicts—the first such facility in the country.
NEW YORK — (UPI) — Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower today called for withdrawal of some U.S. troops from Europe and for insistence upon increased defense responsibility by the other NATO powers.
Eisenhower Would Reduce American Army Overseas
Writing in the current issue of the Saturday Evening Post, the former chief executive said that during his eight years in the White House he had told his associates that "A reduction of American strength in Europe should be initiated as soon as European economies are restored." But, he said, the matter was considered "too delicate a political question to raise."
"I believe the time has now come when we should start withdrawing some of the troops," he wrote, noting that the six U.S. infantry divisions sent to Europe as an emergency reinforcement when he was commander of NATO in 1951 are still there "somewhat reinforced."
"One American division in Europe can 'show the flag' as definitely as several," Eisenhower said. "Unless we take definite action, the maintaining of permanent troop establishments abroad will continue to overburden our balance-of-payments problem and, most important, will discourage the development of the necessary military strength Western European countries should provide for themselves."
He said European countries seem more concerned with having the security of American ground troops than with the billions of dollars invested in U.S. bases, the European supply system, and NATO deterrent power. He proposed putting American troops abroad on a "hardship basis," sending them on shortened foreign duty tours without their families.
Gift-'Your Own House'
LONDON — (UPI) — Viscount Astor, who gave his family home, Cliveden, to the National Trust 21 years ago, is to receive a medal from the Trust for his services to it, it was announced today.
Astor and his family still live at Cliveden.
THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES SALUTE: BOB DuBOIS
Bob DuBois (B.S.E.E., B.S.B.A., 1957), Senior Engineer, Transmissions Group for Southwestern Bell in Topeka, Kansas, is part troubleshooter and part prophet.
Bob's job is to maintain the standards of excellence in voice and data transmissions in Kansas. He must predict where trouble might occur so that preventive maintenance procedures can be set up to offset the problem.
As a member of the Transmission and Protection Group, he studies the design and uses of communications equipment ranging from the telephone to complex microwave units.
On earlier assignments Bob was an assistant engineer in inventory and costs, equipment engineering and special projects. After being named senior engineer, he was selected to attend a 12-week comprehensive course at the Bell System's Data Communication Training Program, Cooperstown, New York.
Bob DuBois, like many young engineers, is impatient to make things happen for his company and himself. There are few places where such restlessness is more welcomed or rewarded than in the fast-growing telephone business.
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Friday, Oct. 18, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
GO KU BEAT OKLAHOMA!
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Oct. 18, 1963
Registration Barriers Confront Civil Rights
By Al Kuettner United Press International
In the field of civil rights, registration of Negro voters has been one of the steepest hurdles.
Outright intimidation, subtle pressure and barriers in the form of qualification tests have helped keep the number of Negro voters at a fraction of those qualified to vote. Lethargy has done the rest.
IN THE SOUTH, seven states now provide for testing; Alabama Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina, North Carolina and Virginia.
Bearing down on voting rights, the Justice Department has 26 cases of voter discrimination and seven involving alleged voter intimidation in the courts.
Wednesday, in the state of Georgia, a significant event occurred that may remove the state from the test list by next year. A state election laws study committee voted unanimously to ask the 1964 legislature to abolish the tests as a prerequisite to voting.
Georgia then would have one of the more liberal voting programs in the nation. An applicant would have to be 18 or older, a resident of the state one year and a county three months and have no felony (criminal) convictions.
"Except in the 15 or 20 counties where there has been outright intimidation, the big registration problem has been with the Negroes," according to Sylvan Meyer, chairman of the Georgia advisory committee to the civil rights commission. "Many Negroes have felt they could not pass the test so they didn't bother to try to register."
In the 1960 election, Meyer said, Fayette County had 31 Negroes registered to vote, Terrell 51, Seminole 11, Truetlen 45 and Baker none.
THE JUSTICE DEPARTMENT filed suit in 1958 on behalf of five Negroes in Terrell who flunked the test. One had a Master's Degree. Another suit came in 1962. On Aug. 15 an injunction against the county registrar in the second case was denied and the case is now on appeal.
"What our committee has done is one simple solution to a grave problem," Secretary of State Ben Fortson, chairman of the study group, said. "We have established finally that under the American system of government, everyone has certain rights and privileges learn to read," Fortson said. "We have had compulsory education 40 or 50 years. People should be able to read by now."
Wiley Branton, the Negro lawyer who runs the voter education project which is financed by three big foundations, agreed the Georgia recommendation would have strong effect in rural areas particularly in southwest Georgia.
"But we are also working on something that laws can't do much about," Branton said. "That's the lack of interest in voting. This is our problem in areas like Atlanta where there are no signs of voter intimidation."
Conservatives Consider Macmillan's Successor
LONDON—(UPI)—Out of the British equivalent of the "smoke-filled room" will come the name of the man selected to succeed retiring Harold Macmillan as Conservative party leader and Prime Minister.
With the announcement of Macmillan's impending resignation, influential men in the party began sounding out the three components of Tory power—Parliament members, protective candidates and local party workers.
THE MEN WHO do the sounding are usually eminent figures who, for one reason or another, are considered outside the race themselves. These men include Lord Chancellor Lord Dilhorne and party cochairman Lord Poole.
This sounding-out gives an initial idea of the support each candidate commands within the party. Other leaders—cabinet ministers, elder statesmen and the like, and in this case Macmillan himself—are consulted for their opinions of each candidate's ability. Even though he has been inactive, 88-year-old Sir Winston Churchill's views are among those sought.
When there is a contest for the premiership, as there is now, the party king-makers obviously must find out which candidate is acceptable to the greatest number of persons.
FROM THIS WELTER of conferences, consultations and corridor deals emerges a consensus—the name of a possible new leader.
Then a small group of party eminents, take the decisive step, the visit to Queen Elizabeth II. They tell her the name of their candidate. She in turn calls the candidate to Buckingham Palace and asks him to form a government.
By this time events are moving fast—so fast that the new Premier is often known before the last step is taken. That step is the calling together of the MP's, candidates and party workers in a large conclave to "elect" the new leader.
Books by three faculty members at KU have been chosen as part of the newly formed White House library.
THE NAME of the candidate is presented and ratified. The vote always has been automatic.
White House Library Includes KU Books
Among the 1,780 titles selected after more than a year's screening are:
What would happen if the Queen should reject the party's nominee? Queen Victoria tried it once, when she ignored the selection of Sir William Harcourt in 1894 and chose Lord Roseberry instead. Roseberry's government collapsed in a few months. Elizabeth is expected to accept the party choice.
- "Our National Park Policy" (Johns Hopkins Press, 1961), by John Ise, professor emeritus of economics
- "The Grassland of North America" (Lawrence, 1947), by James Claude Malin, professor emeritus of history
- The books were selected by a committee headed by James T. Babb, Yale University's librarian, who consulted with leading United States scholars, librarians and publishers.
- "Their Brothers' Keepers" (Rutgers, 1960), by Clifford S. Giffin, associate professor of history.
KU Cage Team Displaced; No Bother Says Coach Harp
Ise's and Malin's books are included in the land and agriculture section of the library. Giffin's is in the religion section.
The collection is intended to be a reference library for the Presidents, their families, cabinet officers and advisers.
Dick Harp's cagers are currently part of the world's displaced population. They cannot practice in Allen Field House. In the meantime they are drilling in Robinson Gymnasium.
Coach Dick Harp said that the situation had not been "any real inconvenience to the team."
"There have been a lot of great teams to practice in Robinson," Harp said with a laugh.
THE FIELD HOUSE playing floor was supposed to be ready for last Tuesday's opening basketball practice. It still is not completely assembled, and will not be ready before next Monday.
been working on it for the last six days. Replogle said he has no permanent staff and has to use janitors and student employees.
"We didn't have enough men or enough time to put the floor together," explained Glenn Replogle, head of the physical plant for the athletic department. Six men have
The floor is divided into 196 sections and is stored in the south end of the field house in the off season.
"WHEN IT IS re-assembled the goals must be erected first and placed level with each other," Replogle said. Then runner boards, called "mud sills," are put down and wedge blocks placed on top of them. The wedge blocks can be adjusted to make the floor level exactly 10 feet beneath the goals.
"This is the tedious part," Replogle said. It took surveyors two days to level the blocks before the floor could be mounted, he said.
It must be cleaned and painted before it is ready for use.
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Page 9
KU End Patterns Action After Junior High Hero
A lean junior high school football player from Topeka sits in Memorial Stadium watching KU and Kansas State trv to break a 7-7 tie.
With 18 seconds left in the game, Homer Floyd intercepts a pass for the Jayhawkers at the 15, gets past two would-be tacklers and scores to give KU a 13-7 victory.
The date was Nov. 9, 1957. The junior high school football hopeful watching the game with his father was Mike Shinn.
"IT WAS SUCH a great play, I knew right then I wanted to come to KU and try to play like Homer." Shinn, Ku's No. 1 left end, said. "We came down every chance we could just to see Homer play.
"He really played hard. I admired him a lot for that."
HE AND TACKLE Brian Schweda team to clear the path through which Gale Sayers gains most of his yardage. Defensively, Shinn seldom is blocked out of the way, despite his 6-5. 205 pound build.
Shinn could hardly have picked a better model. Floyd is regarded as one of the greatest football players in KU history. Now, after a few seasons playing pro ball in Canada, Floyd works for the Kansas Civil Rights Commission.
Some observers would tell you Shinn is doing a good job following Flovd.
The Topeka High School all-stater is so strong in the arms and hands he usually holds off blockers without even using his shoulder. He often tackles the same way, fastening his hands on the runner like a set of grappling hooks, then spinning him down with a modified body-slam.
KANSAS
KANSAS
MIKE SHINN
"The hardest play for me is covering punts and kickoffs because of the responsibility you have." Shinn said. "You can't let the runner around you. I did last year against Oklahoma and they ran a punt back about 50 vards.
"Actually, the hardest part of football for me is two-a-days.
There's a lot of mental as well as physical strain. Of course, I get nervous before a game.
"IT ISN'T THAT you're scared. You just worry about mistakes that will hurt the team.
"Even though I wasn't starting last year, I was more nervous than I am starting this year with more responsibility. I feel better now because I'm more used to playing. You get more confidence when you move up to the first club."
At Topeka High, Shinn was the Trojans' leading scorer in basketball as a senior. He was the school's top hurdler. He played freshman basketball at KU but passed up the indoor sport last year so he could concentrate on football—and grades.
SHINN MAKES good grades, too. He's majoring in aerospace engineering.
"Sure, I'd like to build rockets"
he smiled. "At least, work on 'em."
In high school, Shinn was most valuable as a defensive player. Most of the passing was from quarterback John Atkinson (now a KU junior) to Larry Woolridge (who now plays halfback for Washburn University).
Shinn only caught one touchdown pass in high school. He matched that total this year in the Wyoming game when he was on the receiving end of a 51-yard pass play started by Steve Renko.
Against Oklahoma Saturday, Shinn will be depended on more than ever with his alternate, George Worley, sidelined with a fractured hand.
Sooners' Spirit Concerns Mitchell Thinks Recent Events Will Help
By Roy Miller (Sports Editor)
He hadn't played at halfback since high school. But, last year here in a game with KU, Joe Don Looney started at halfback in place of an ailing Oklahoma teammate and many said it was his running that won the game for the Sooners.
From that game on, Looney stayed at halfback. He killed KU—as well as many other teams—with his hardrunning and his long punting. Monday, Looney was dismissed from the Sooner squad.
HIS ABSENCE may be considered a deciding factor if Oklahoma defeats KU this year.
"We'll have to face the most fired up Oklahoma team ever because of their loss Saturday to Texas and the shakeup in their team," Coach Jack Mitchell said. "They'll be so desperate, they'll scatter out so much we won't be able to move the ball."
The two teams meet at Norman in a game beginning at 1:30 p.m. A
sellout crowd is predicted. The game will be broadcast in the Lawrence area on radio stations KANU, KLWN and KMBC.
The game will be the first Big Eight Conference game for the Sooners. They won the conference championship last year and gained a No.1 national ranking early this season.
OU LOST THAT national ranking Saturday when they were defeated at Texas, 28-7.
Mitchell said after practice last night he's received several sympathy calls and letters this week from his friends in Oklahoma.
In view of Looney's dismissal and the loss to Texas, some folks are saying Mitchell, a former OU all-America quarterback, won't be needing the sympathy.
The Jayhawks worked on their kicking game yesterday. Tony Leiker and Steve Renko did the punting.
KANSAS
KANSAS
Renko's talent as a punter was revealed Wednesday when one of his
KU STARTING GUARD TANDEM—Ron Marsh (left) and John Garber will hold down the starting guard positions for KU Saturday. Marsh, a Golden Gloves champion and KU's No. 1 swimming diver, will be making his first appearance in the starting lineup this year at right guard. Garber will be at the left guard spot.
efforts spiraled for about 50 yards.
"Boy, did he ever kick that ball." Mitchell said after practice. "He's been kicking a little before, but never like that."
The KU coach indicated Renko could be used if necessary as a substitute for Leiker, who does most of KU's punting.
DQ
DAIRY
QUEEN
DQ
DQ
DAIRY
QUEEN
THE
WORLD'S
RICHEST
AND
SMOOTHEST
DAIRY
QUEEN
DAIRY QUEEN
THE FINE WELL USED
TO MAKE YOU LOVE IT
DAIRY QUEEN
BEST OF THE WEEK
STORIES OF RICH MEMORY
Malts AND Shakes
Dairy Queen 1835 Mass.
KU's Easton Must Face Former Pupil's Runners
KU will meet Drake in a cross country dual meet here Saturday, bringing together Bill Easton, coach of the Jayhawks, and Bob Karnes, Drake's coach who was the first in the line of outstanding runners coached by Easton.
The meet will be at 10:30 a.m. on the three-mile course at Lawrence Country Club.
KU runners will be seeking their 20th consecutive dual victory after defeating the Chicago Track Club last Saturday.
Drake runners finished 1-2-3 within 35 seconds in a triangular meet
with Iowa State and Nebraska. The Bulldogs won that meet, 18-56-62, and lost an earlier meet with Minnesota, 27-28.
Frosh Gets Honor
Phil Manuel, Kansas City, Mo. freshman, has been named to the 1963 all-America high school track and field team by Scholastic Coach magazine.
Manuel, who was graduated from Southwest High School, set a national indoor record of 13-8 $ \frac{1}{4} $ last winter. He leaped 14-6 $ \frac{1}{2} $ in the outdoor season.
Have you had $ P_{izza} $ lately?
Earl's Pizza Palace
729 Massachusetts 4 p.m. to 12 midnight Friday & Saturday 4 p.m. to 2:30 a.m.
Take Out Orders Are Our Speciality
Call us and have your Pizza Delivered
We not only advertise The World's Best Pizza...
WE SERVE IT!
WIN
IN THE MARLBORO BRAND ROUND-UP CONTEST
PRIZES:
1st—Admiral Console Stereo
Retail—$295.00
2nd—R.C.A. Victor Portable TV
Retail—$139.95
3rd—R.C.A. Victor Portable Stereo
Retail—$84.95
WHOWINS: Any individual or group having the greatest number of Philip Morris Package Products
RULES: Contest Ends Dec. 3, 1963. Packages will be picked up periodically beginning Nov. 15.
For further information Call Dan Vossman VI 3-7212.
★
MARLBORO ★ PARLIAMENT ★ ALPINE
PHILIP MORRIS ★ PAXTON
★
Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Conference Topic To Be Textiles
The third annual conference of home economics teachers sponsored by the KU home economics department will be held Friday, October 18. in the Kansas Union.
Clothing and Textiles."
Teachers from Kansas and parts of Missouri are invited to the discussion of "Current Emphasis in
The keynote speaker will be Dr. Lois Gilmore, associate professor of the school of home economics at Ohio State University. She will speak about "Current Directions in the Study of Clothing and Textiles".
Read and Use Kansan Classifieds
THE SCREEN TAKES ITS MOST FASCINATING JOURNEY OF ALL... and rips bare the souls of an amazing family!
THE TOMB OF THE YOUNG WORLD
MARY-
She was
always the
other woman
in her hus-
band's life!
TYRONE-
He remember
ed when the
spotlight
shone in his
face and
the women
lay at his feet!
JAMIE
He never came home while he had the price of a drink, or a woman!
EDMUND
He was killed by too much of the wrong kind of love!
Joseph E. Levine in association with ElyLandau and Jack J.Dreyfus, Jr.presents
KATHARINE HEPBURN RALPH RICHARDSON JASON ROBARDS JR. DEAN STOCKWELL
One Of The Ten Best Of The Year"
Bobley Crowther, N.Y. Times
Abel Weiler, N.Y. Times
Ackroon Cook, World Tele & Sun
in Eugene O'Neill's
Recommended for
Mature Audiences.
SHOWS SUNDAY AT
2:00 - 4:30 - 7:10 - 9:45
All Shoes $1.00
LONG DAY'S JOURNEY INTO NIGHT Starts Sunday!
All Seats $1.00
VARSITY ART Attractions
PAUL NEWMAN - JOANNE WOODWARD
THE PICTURE THAT TAKES A NEW ATTITUDE
ON LOVE!
TECHNICOLOR
PAUL NEWMAN · JOANNE WOODWARD
THE PICTURE THAT TAKES A NEW ATTITUDE
ON LOVE!
TECHNICOLOR
MELVIE SHAVELSON'S production of
A NEW KIND OF LOVE
E THELMA RITTER / EVA GABOR / and MAURICE CHEVALIER
Written and Directed by MELVIE SHAVELSON / New Theatre composed by FERNIL GARMIN / A PRODUCTION RELEASE
SEE!
... The Grandest fashion Parade of them all wind through the Houses of Dior. .
Cardin . . . and Lanvin
Starts Tomorrow!
2:00 - 7:00 - 9:00
This is an
Adult Picture
Granada
THEATRE...Telephone WI 3-5781
Granada
THEATRE...telephone W1 3-5702
Christie Minstrels To Be Here Dec. 8
The New Christie Minstrels, a folk singing group, will give a concert Dec. 8 at 8:00 p.m., in Hoch Auditorium.
The Special Events committee of SUA took a poll of KU students at enrollment concerning what entertainers they would like to have perform on KU campus. The New Christie Minstrels were the most popular.
Fulbright applications are to be turned in to 306, Fraser by Oct.19.
Official Bulletin
Peace Corps Exam: 8:30 a.m. Oct. 19.
Oblain more information in 228 Strong.
teachers Interviews: 1:30-4:30 p.m.
Oct. 22, Alvin Schumacher, Milwaukee
public schools. Kindergarten — High
School.
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence
College Church, 7 p.m. Lawrence
ARAB-American Club, 7 p.m. Union.
Election of Office
Square and Unsquare Dance at Hicks
oarn - Newman club. Meet at 7:30 p.m.
at St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center,
for transportation.
TODAY
ARAB-American Club, 7 p.m., Union.
Election of executive committee.
Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m. to 5 p.m. St.
Luke Church, 120 West 3rd Street,
Bristol Road. Confessions, 4-5 and 7-8
Catholic Masses, 8 a.m. St. Lawrence
Catholic Chapel, 9 a.m.
9:30 and 11 a.m. at Fraser Hall Theatre.
Faith and Life Seminar, 9:15 a.m.
'Gospel of Christ,' worship,
6 p.m. Westminster Center.
SUNDAY
SATURDAY
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
Oread Friends Meeting, 10:30 a.m. Dan.
Quaker meeting and worship.
Everyone.
Sunday Eveingish Fellowship, 5:13 p.m.
Westminster Center. Church for the
Women's Club.
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
LOST
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 Hail by 2 p.m. on the afternoon of the desired. Not responsible for errors not re-insertion.
Newman Club, 6:30 p.m., Forum Room,
Kansas Union.
Ladies' yellow gold wristwatch, Wyler brand — tear-drop face. Lost Saturday night in the Union. Contact Nancy Brown. GSP 249, VI 3-9123. 10-21
West Side Presbyterian Church, 6th and Mass, welcomes you to attend Sunday services at 11 a.m. and Sunday classes at 9:45 a.m.
10-23
Black handbag last Thursday. 121 Man-
turn to return to GSM, rp 233. Genre:
reward! 10-18
Yellow gold ladies' wristwatch. Contact Sally Moffitt at VI 2-1340. 10-18
Pair of glasses lost between Dyche and Strong Hall on Oct. 14th during morning hours. If found please return to Strong Hall business office. 10-18
MISCELLANEOUS
PARTY TIME: School house available for private parties, dances, meetings equipped with piano, tables, chairs, restroom bar and coolers. V13-7458-431 Forrest. **tt**
TYPING
Experienced typist, fast and accurate.
Call Ms. Hays at VI 2-0057. 10-22
Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter, carbon ribbon keyboard. Email: marlene@mccleary.com 6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley, 408 West 13th, tr
Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mar. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1641.
New electric typewriter. Reasonable rates for themes, term papers, dissertations, and theses. Mrs. Barta, 1955 Miller Drive, VI 3-6994.
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
legal terms. Marsha Goff, VI 3-2577.
Experienced typist for theses and term papers in English and French. Please contact Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Miss. VI 3-10582, tf
MILLIKENS SOS—always first quality typing on I.B.M. Carbon ribbon machines. We also do tape transcriptions. Office Phone V13-5920. 10 p.m.—1212.1 mcallt Phone VI3-5920.
Patronize Kansan Advertiserz
Efficient and experienced typer would like to do work in home. Prompt and guaranteed work. Call at any time. VI 3-2551. 10-31
Typing: Dissertations theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines; 35 special symbols. carbon ribbon kits; 35 service. Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI 2-164 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI 3-3057.
Typing; Desertations, theses, manuscripts,
term papers typed. New Smith-Corona
machines; 35 special symbols, carbon
ribbon—if desired. Prompt, efficient
service. Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI2-1546
or Mrs. Dorothy MOli VI3-3057.
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, books, journals and articles rates. Electric Typewriter. Mrs McEldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568
Large room, single or double, near campus, 1215 Oread. Telephone and parking Rent $35 00, prefer grand senior. Contact Jack Ashmore. VI 3-9833. 1215 Oread. 10-27¹
Apartment for two MEN, bills paid. rough laundry, convenient, reasons 1-3-240, 10-21
Thesis Typ1st. Electric typewriter
English grade. Prairie Village, NI
**NI**
**NI**
**NI**
Prompt, neat and accurate work on wide carriage electric typewriter. Journalism Business and Secretary experience. Charlotte Weber. VI 3-3495.
Very spacious 4 room apartment. Lots of closet space. Fully furnished, carpeted. Close to KU and downtown. Off street parking. Very reasonable rent to nice couple or graduate student. For appointment, call VI 3-6696. 10-21
FOR RENT
Call II 3-2430. 10-21
Two bedroom duplex, unf finished, wall to wall carpeting, fenced yard, indoor storage notable, small children, no pets. One year lease. $95.00 a month. 1607 W. 22nd Terr. Call II 2-1028. tf
BUSINESS SERVICES
English or Speech trouble? Certified English and Speech teacher, will tutor at reasonable rate. Also typing. Call VI 3-2873. 10-23
Classes for Pre-school children ages 3-5
VI 2-1410 for more information. 10-23
Will take in ironing 10 a piece. Also call Ms. James Eberhard, VI 3-6345. Call Mrs. James Eberhard, VI 3-6345.
It's time to make your reservations for the Holiday season. The Thanksgiving dinner must be made ahead. Contact Maupintour at the Mall's Shopping Center, 711 W. 23rd. VI 3-1211.
Dressmaking-alterations, formalis and gowns. Ola Smith, 939½ *Mari* VI 3-5263
Complete line of soles and heels, lacens,
cosmetics and polishes. Have new mermaid-
shells and other purses such purses as
totes. Burgert's One Day Shoe Service =
1113 Mass. St. 11-1
TRANSPORTATION
Want a ride to Prairie Village or vicinity on Fridays after 4:30 p.m. Contact Marty Alderson, 238 Lewis Hall. 10-18
Wan ride from Prairie Village to Law-
nard on Friday, Marty Alderson,
10-18
Riders or car pool from Leawood, Prairie
Area. Classes 8-35 to 2-30. Buses
I V 8-0282
J V 10-22
HELP WANTED
HELP WANTED—Linotype operator, 9 to 3 daily. Must be experienced on newspaper straightmaster. University of Karanikole, 117 Flint Hall. Phone UN 4-3282
WANTED
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart, 1025 Mass. tf
FOR SALE
New stereo multifex GE radio and phono, deluxe model portable with Garrard card and manageable camcorder to $199.97 (reg. list $279.89) Stoneback's, 929 Mass. St. 10-23
Electric alarm clock with nite hands!
Special offer $1.99 plus tax to Kansan readers only. You must bring this ad as coupon to Ray Stoneback's, 929 Maginion
1957 Cadillac, 4-door hardtop. Clean, air-
conditioned. full power. Also 1956 Cadillac,
4-door hardtop. full power.
Auto Service, 012 N. 2nd, VI 3-2
8943.
1952 Cadillac 4-door sedan. Excellent condition. Private owner. See at 19th and Mass. Phone VI 3-1013 Days, VI 3-6506 evenings. 10-23
1956 Chevrolet 4-door sedan, blue and white, carpeting, new tires, 70,000 actual miles. Excellent condition, best in town. By owner. VI 3-0061. 10-21
INCOME PROPERTY — large 2 story house near campus divided into apt. units. Units are approx $450 per month. Full price is $16,000 including furnishing. ROGERS' REAL ESTATE CO. Bus. VI 3-0005, W. 7. W. 14th, Res. ph. VI 3-1029
Five room house on Tenn. St. near campus, basement, garage, needs some paint, full wall. KINGOERS REAL BANK G Bus. Bus. Y i 3-0053, Res. ph. Y i 3-2929, W. 7. w.14th. 10-23
Three component Hi-Fi unit. Wharfdale fan filled speaker, 50 watt Sherwood stereo amplifier, 65 watt Must sacrifice. Call UU 4-3924. Leave number if not in. R. Neely. 10-22
1850 Plymouth 4-dr. Sedan Deluxe, blue,
r and h. Perfect body and paint, very
good mechanically. Passed Official Motor
Vehicle Inspection. 6 cyl., average 19
m.p.g. $150.00. Call VI 3-2528, see it any
time.
10-19
Underwood portable typewriter. Good
price again, price $25.00. CALL
3484 evenings 10-26
NEW Royce ute lightweight bike
up to $29,975. Stonehill's, 929 Mass.
becomes Rockstar.
1956 Buick, H.T. Good condition, new tires, best offer takes. Call VI-2-107.
Underwood portable typewriter with case. In perfect condition. $25.00. Call VI 3-7950 8 to 10 a.m. or after 5 p.m.
10.22
1957 Bel-Air Chevrolet. 8-cylinder hardtop, radio and heater. This car is in A-1 condition. Can be seen at 755 N. 7th Phone VI 3-1319. 10-18
Over 30 modern pistols, rifles and shotguns left. Hundreds of rounds of ammo far below wholesale. Thousands of dollars invested in this collection. All must go! See now at 824 Ark. or call V13-1110. tf
2 baby beds, automatic electric sterilizer
. excellent condition. Phone VI 3517
10-18
Read this terrific deal—1963 A.H. Sprite.
Low mileage. All extras. Phone VI 2-3597 or VI 2-1972. You have to see it to believe it. $1,725. 10-18
Lightweight battery powered portable tape recorder. Many accessories, like new headphones, enclosures, parties, etc. See at 2116 Ohio after .00. This is an cheap Japanese recorder!
New shipment of Pink plink paper. 500 sheet team - $85. Lawrence Outdoor. 603 Mess.
1957 "98" Oldsmobile convertible; white;
excellent condition; power windows.
steering radio, seat, brakes.
cabin lift take offer. Call: Bill Murdock.
V2-42828. tt
Typewriters, new and used portables,
standards, electrics, Olympia, Olivetti,
Royal and Smith Corona portables. Type-
writer and adding machine service and
ental. Lawrence Typewriter, 730 Mass.
VI. 3-3644. tt
Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extensively comprehensive, minimegraphed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
General Psychology study notes. Excellent study aid for all sections. $4.00 per call. Call VI 2-9378. tf
Sure—Everything in the pet field at Grant's drive in pet center. Where your $$ have more cents. 1218 Conn. VI 3-2921. tt
ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLEANERS.
New Electrolix and a limited number of rebuilts, fully guaranteed. All parts available. Equipment picked up for service and delivered. Frank V. Cox Manager-1904 Barker. Call VI3-3277 12-13
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline and line notes; fully illustrated. Formerly known as the Theta notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50.
AUTO LIABILITY INSURANCE, also collision and comp. Most risks covered; under age drivers; scooters; motor bikes; motor cycles; rates avail. Brown Realty Co., Ph. VI 2-0179 — Realtors — 7291¹ Mass.
HOOTENANNY. Guitar Music — have fun—play authentic folk music in Five easy self taught loose leaf lessons for only $3.00. payment in full with Oahu Publishing Co., Box 5110G, Cleveland 1, Ohio.
10-18 Spencer Microscope. Monocular monicle object case. A B.B. condenser mechanical stage. Call V3-5170. 6 to 8:00. 10-23 DVD TVs—we're flooded with trade ins! $1.50. $20.00. $29.95. As is sets, you fix 'em. $5.00 each—Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 10-23
Save on tires! 1,000 tires (snow and regular) at lowest discount prices in Kansas — Ray Stoneback's (Discount tire center)
929 Mass. 10-30
Tape recorders — new compact model,
take it anywhere! Only $29.97–Pay $5.00
per month. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass.
10-23
1958 Convertible—new motor, good tires, top in excellent condition. 4 speed, dual 4 barrel carburettors, radio and heater. Reasonable price. Call VI.3-7102. 10-24
917-258-3000
Phone in your Classified Ad
EERS
owner of
avail-
service
Local
3277.
12-13
complete
outer
all
Theta
$4.50.
also
vered;
bikes;
Realty
729!₂
tf
have
vs. for order.
Cleve-
10-18
manual
10-23
trade
vs. you
your's
10-23
model
vs. $5.00
Mass.
10-23
d tires,
d dual
heater.
10-24
HONN'S COIN OPERATED LAUNDRY
Ad
SPEED QUEEN WASHERS OPEN 24 HRS.
Across from the high school 19th & Louisiana VI 3-9631
STUDENTS
BRAKE ADJUSTMENTS ... $.98
**BRAKE ADJUSTMENTS** ... $ .98
**LUBRICATION** ... $1.00
Motor tune-ups, wheel balancing
**FREE**—one quart of oil with each oil and filter change
— all major brands —
PAGE-CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE
1819 W 23rd VI 3-9694
FRATERNITY JEWELRY
A complete line, including,
● Lavaliers ● Guards
● Fins ● Mugs
● Rings ● Crests
Ray Christian
JEWELERS
JEWELERS
IT'S OK TO OWE RAY
809 Mass.
See Us Before You Buy
NEW AND USED
PORTABLES STANDARDS
ELECTRICS
TYPEWRITERS
Sales — Rentals — Service
LAWRENCE
TYPEWRITER
735 Mass. VI 3-364
University Daily Kansan Page 11
735 Mass. VI 3-3644
Be a master in the art of self-defense.
Expert trainers' secrets can be yours!
No equipment needed. Form a campus
boxing club among your friends for
fun. -Confidence and personal physique
sessions one dollar. Send to: Physical
Arts Gym, 363 Clinton Street, Hempstead,
Long Island, New York.
LEARN TO BOX!!
LEONARD'S
ZLONARD'S
Standard Service
"the best in car care"
706 W. 9th
VI 3-9830
Milliken's SOS
"the best professional service"
One Stop Service
- General typing service
- General typing service
* Notary public
- Notary public
- 24 hr, answeriing service
- Mimeograph & photo-copying
1021 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass., VI 3-5920, 7a.m.-11p.m.
JOE'S BAKERY
new location at
616 West 9th
25c delivery VI 3-4720
THERE ARE 3,000 ITEMS caught in the COBWEB the antique shop at the BOOK NOOK
Specialized Service Parts for All Makes Authorized Schwinn and Honda Dealer
BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass. VI 3-1044
BIKE REPAIRS
701 Mich. BLEVINS VI 3-0581
Tops — Glass & Zippers
Rear Glasses — Headlines —
Pencil Drawings
Tailor Made Seat Covers at
Computerized with the
sewed double lock stitch.
Engine Tune Up
ART'T TEXACO
9th & Mississippi
VI 3-9897
545 Minn. VI 3-4242
Jack's Seat Covers
Patronize Your
Kansan Advertisers
★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M.
- tobaccos
- complete accessories
- pipes
Kermit Hoffmeier special insurance agent VI 2-0266
LOW COST
DX
$8-$20 daily benefit
$300 miscellaneous expense
$400 surgical expense
- Generator & Starter Repair
at George's Pipe Shop
727 Mass. VI 3-7164
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER
"Smoking is our only Business"
Fast Car Wash Minor Tune up Brake Work Mufflers & Tail Pipes
Balfour
DX Servicenter 6th & Michigan VI 2-9410
365 day hospitalization
Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals
FREE PICK-UP & DELIVERY
Fraternity Jewelry
★ TUNE-UPS
★ BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED
★ Lubrication & Oil Change
★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK
★ MUFFLER SERVICE
Brake Repair
THE NAME FOR SERVICE
SKELLY
BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY
★ WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT
WRECKER & ROAD SERVICE
TGIF at the Stables
TGIS too!
OPEN 24 hrs. a day
Camera
Pitchers—75c
Reasonable Prices Prompt Service
HIXON STUDIO
Thursday night at the Purple Pig 810 New Hampshire
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
300 W. 6th VI 3-9271
Gene Bailey — Mark Patton
JACK & GUNN'S
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
SKELLY SERVICE
Your Service Jeweler
838 Mass.
Portraits of Distinction "A Perfect Christmas Gift"
914 Mass. VI 3-2572
JIM'S CAFE
- Watch Repair
- Engraving
- Jewelry Repair
Daniel's
features
Variety of grocery items
Chips, nuts, cookies
Ice cold beverages
HAVING A PARTY?
OPEN TO 10 P.M.EVERY EVENING
Ice cold 6 pacs — all kinds
VI 3-0152
LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY
We are always happy to serve you with
ALLAN EASUM LEROY HADL
O
ACE STEERING AND RADIATOR SPECIALISTS
616 Vt. Ph.VI 3-0350
Bear Wheel Alignment Dynamic Wheel Balancing Brake & Frt. End Parts Auto Glass Installed
Travel Agency
6th & Minn.
VI 3-1300
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
TRAVEL RESERVATIONS NOW!
Make your airline reservations now and be assured of your travel for Thanksgiving and Christmas vacation.
Airline and steamship reservations
746 Mass.
For fast, efficient service call our Mrs. Rose Abels.
PROUDLY PRESENTS HIS MOST UNIQUE
JOHN HOLIDAY
ITALIAN BUFFET
FEATURING FOR YOUR DINING PLEASURE IN A TRUE ITALIAN MANNER
PIZZA
with or without meat
—SPAGHETTI AND
MEATBALLS
CHICKEN CACCIATORS
— FRIED EGG PLANT
— FISH CREOLE
—TOSSED GREENS
COLD CUTS
DEVILED EGGS
CHERRY PEPPERS
—SHRIMP TOMATO ASBIC
ASPIC
AND MANY
OTHERS
SERVED WITH EVERY MEAL
GARLIC TOAST
AUTHENTIC
SPUMONI
ICE CREAM
ONLY $2.00 PER PERSON
$3.50 PER COUPLE
OR RESERVATIONS CALL VI 3-7991
Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Oct. 18, 1963
Home Named —
(Continued from page 1)
with Home in the historic residence. It was anticipated that most, if not all, present ministers would be retained in the new government.
Widely rumored as possible new foreign minister was Edward Heath, best known abroad as Britian's chief negotiator in the nation's unsuccessful effort to enter the European Common Market.
Rarely has Britain experienced so open and prolonged a tussle for the Prime Ministership as it has for the past eight days.
TODAY'S SWIFT climax came when Macmillan's private secretary, Timothy Bligh, arrived at the palace with the letter of resignation.
Home followed shortly thereafter, and the announcement of his selection quickly followed.
To enter the House of Commons Lord Home must renounce a title his family has held since 1605. He is the 14th Earl in the line. An announcement as to his intentions in this respect was awaited.
Under normal procedure Lord Home could run for a seat in Parliament in a by-election, while still titled, and then when elected—a constituency in which his election was assured would be picked—renounce his Earldom. Pending this, he cannot sit in Commons as Prime Minister but would have to run the government from the House of Lords.
HOUSE OF LORD:
PARLIAMENT MEETS again next Thursday to wind up its present session which has been in summer recess. Then on Oct. 29 the new parliament convenes.
Observatory Open Tonight to Visitors
The KU observatory and the planet Saturn will be open to visitors tonight from 7:30 to 10:00 p.m.
According to Prof. N. Wyman Storer, Saturn will be in a very good position for observation.
Prof. Storer said that the observatory would be open to visitors throughout the year on certain nights, when time is available.
Parties interested can reach the observatory through room 500 at the top of the main stairway in Lindley Hall.
The observatory, which has been located on top of Lindley Hall since 1944, has been open in the past when time was available and there was something to view.
The 27 inch telescope which is used for research has been used by the astronomy department since 1337. From 1944 until 1951, the big telescope was in storage waiting for the completion of its present home on top of Lindley Hall.
New German Chancellor Supports Continued U.S.-U.S.S.R. Parley
BONN Germany—(UPI)—Chancellor Ludwig Erhard said today his new government supports continued U.S. negotiations with the Soviet Union aimed at partial agreements to relieve cold war tensions.
Erhard, who replaced Dr. Konrad Adenauer Wednesday, told parliament in his first policy statement that his government believes general and controlled disarmament is the only permanent means of preventing war.
Your Bones—
(Continued from page 1)
tion fit a man, except for one fact,
the person found was 5 months
pregnant when "she" died.
GOING OVER the points of identification, he pointed out what was apparent and what the mysteries are about the woman's death.
To date there has been no positive identification of the woman or any solution to how she came to die and end up along the river's edge. The most promising lead is her unusual dental work — her upper teeth consist mainly of a $2,400 solid gold plate, but all of her lower teeth need filling and others are capped with European wartime stainless steel!
Committee Selects
Books by three KU faculty members have been chosen for the newlyformed White House Library.
Erhard, following closely the policies of his predecessor, said it is the West German government's duty to keep the world alert to the unresolved German question.
"But as we understand that general and controlled disarmament can be realized only step by step, it is in our interest to cooperate also in world-wide partial measures, as long as it is certain they do not change the power relationship between East and West to our disadvantage, and do not discriminate against us," he said.
He said the permanent division of Germany cannot be accepted and warned that as long as the iron curtain extends the length of the nation the German problem will remain one of the chief causes of tension in the world.
He said recognition of communist East Germany would mean recognition of "a tyranny established by foreign rulers" and said West Germany would never consent to it.
In a remark that seemed addressed both to the Soviets and to U.S. politicians who recently have said the
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Germans ought to accept a permanent split of their country, Erhard said:
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reality, but it is an inescapable one . . . The will of the German people to restore its unity is a far stronger reality."
"We are told that the division of our country is a reality which had to be accepted. Of course it is a reality, but it is an unbearable one. The will of the German people
Ehrhard recalled that the Big Four powers are responsible for settling some of Germany's problems and suggested they form "a body . . . which would exercise its functions until such time as a final peace settlement is reached."
Ehardh, who served as Adenauer's economics minister for 14 years, made few changes in the Adenauer cabinet when he announced his own lineup yesterday.
With general elections less than two years away, he wants to share the prestige built up by Adenauer over the years. Erhard's opponent in the elections will be the socialist mayor of West Berlin, Willy Brandt.
"Ridiculous" was the word used by the members of the Student Court last night in answer to a letter criticizing the court and law school.
Student Court Calls Criticism 'Ridiculous'
The court met yesterday to discuss the letter which was printed in "The People Say" column of the Kansan. Most of the members had no comments or else they thought the writer of the letter knew little about the procedure of law.
The letter stated several ideas the writer felt should be corrected in the functions of the court. First, he believed that the court was a mockery if it feels that it is only an arm of the administrative authority.
HIS SECOND POINT was that laws are not absolute or revealed, but are subject to consideration in special circumstances.
His third point was law students are not using the practice of which the court is designed to give them. They are giving the defendants little consideration.
Daugherty said the court is only an arm of the administration made up by the all Student Council. It does not have the power to declare the traffic laws unconstitutional. The laws are written by the Traffic Security office and subject only to the approval of the Board of Regents.
Chief Justice Jim Daugherty Lamar, Mo., third year law student, said contrary to the letter, the traffic pamphlet is the traffic regulation for the campus. It is the law; the job of the court is to interpret it and not change it, he said.
ALTHOUGH THE chief justice said he knew members of the court that thought some of the laws needed to be changed, they can not do so.
The court pointed out that the law students are not required to operate the Student Court. They are doing it on a voluntary basis. Anyone that has the requirements could be on the court without being a student in the law school.
"We have to enforce them just the same," Daugherty said.
"Who else would they (ASC) turn to but law students to operate the court," Daugherty said.
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DAUGHERTY SAID if the author of the letter did not like the court judgment on his case, he could appeal to the Court en banc. If it was denied there, the case could be taken through the disciplinary committee of the ASC and possibly to the Dean of Students.
"There is a law in the state statue book that makes traffic violations a misdemeanor and punishable by law. The fine can be $25. I've never heard of that done here," Daugherty said.
The highest fine that the justice said he knew about on campus was $16 and that is after a person has made several traffic violations.
The letter mentioned a faculty-student committee which would give attention to the appeals rather than the legal jargon. There is a faculty tribunal on campus; however, it hears only the appeals for traffic violations by the faculty.
"THE LETTER was uncalled for," Daugherty said. "Normally a court need not defend themselves but we thought this interview would be an opportunity to clear up some misunderstanding about the court."
The court had little comment about the letter's criticism of law students sitting on the steps and hooting at the passing girls. They said there is no correlation between the Student Court and the law students that sit outside.
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THIS IS A UNIVERSITY NOT A MILITARY INSTALA
MILITARY MEN:
PAID KILLERS
PEACE
NOT
ROTC
Photo By Laird M. Wilcox
PICKETS FOR PEACE—Above are three of the Student Peace Union members who picketed a meeting of the Air Force Reserve Officers Training Corps in the Kansas Union Saturday.
SPU Demonstrates At Area ROTC Meet
By Tom Coffman
"It has never been tried! How do you know it won't work?" a picketeer argued. Both arms were outstretched for emphasis, one hand holding a placard reading, "This is a University, Not a Military Installation."
"Your utopia has been dreamed about," answered the other student, wagging a finger in the picketeer's face, "but it won't ever happen." He shook his head vigorously. "Man is basically mean and selfish and all the dreamers of the world won't change that," he said.
THEY STOOD in the lobby of the Kansas Union Saturday afternoon, talking loudly over the blare of the Kansas-Oklahoma football game broadcast.
A dozen members of the Student Peace Union (SPU), had gathered to picket a regional meeting of the Arnold Air Society, an honorary branch of Air Force Reserve Officers Training Corps (AFROTC).
Khaki-uniformed AFROTC cadet men and Air Angels (women's branch of Arnold Air Society) in blue uniforms with white neck scarves walked through the Kansas Union lobby.
check seat vs walk seat Some stopped to chat with the SPU picketeers. Others argued. Most walked on by, either casting side-long glances at the SPU members or seeming not to notice them at all.
"TOO BAD they can't be realistic," commented Bob Tiezen, McPherson senior and area commander of Arnold Air Society.
McPhelson senior and area commin员 "I think I'm doing more for world peace by supporting the Air Force than these people are if they carry signs for the rest of their damned lives.
GRADE SCHOOL teachers, assembled for a "Kansas Reading Conference," strolled through the lobby. Large groups of Girl Scouts—there for a tour of KU-bustled past in green and white uniforms.
"Some of the boys in the picket line don't seem too upstanding, to me," commented Mrs. Harold Brown, first grade teacher from Abilene, Kan.
"They look sort of seedy," Mrs. Brown said. "I suspect they are the kind who would picket for anything."
"WHAT'S IT ALL about?" twittered a 12-year-old Girl Scout. "Isn't this all fun!" she exclaimed. "Do you think they're right?" she asked a friend.
A Girl Scout master from Topeka, Mrs. Joseph Satten, said: "I think it is fine that these boys have the right to picket."
The SPU picketeers took a break about 2:30 p.m. Relaxing in the Prairie Room of the Union, Carl Bangs, Prairie Village sophomore and president of the SPU, said most of the AFROTC were either amused by the picket or hostile to it.
"Some of them (AFROTC) are very reasonable, though," the SPU president added. "They stopped and talked over our stand on anti-militarism.
Ken Horwege, St. Francis senior and a squadron executive officer in Arnold Air Society, was standing in the lobby chatting with fellow cadets. Bangs—the SPU president-approached them carrying a sign and smiling.
"We are opposed to all kinds of militarism."
"IWOULD advise you not to stand by me," the uniformed Horwege said, motioning Bangs away.
"Come on, let's have our pictures taken together." Bangs joked.
Come on, let's pick up these men again! After the AFROTC men and women left, the picketeers stowed their placards and walked to a near-by tavern to re-hash the day's events.
The Aronold Air Society meeting ended about 4 p.m.
Daily hansan
61st Year, No. 27
The dead are; J. O. (Joe) Gunnels, 77, a KU graduate and former state representative and senator in the Kansas legislature, the pilot.
Catholic Conservative Leader Calls Council Aides Informers
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Monday, Oct. 21, 1963
Two KU alumni were among four Colby, Kan., residents who died Saturday in a plane crash one-half mile from the airport at Norman, Olda.
it specifically asked by the presi-
JOHN W. WOLFE JR., 30, a 1955 KU graduate and member of the KU basketball team. He was an assistant football coach at KU and handled the freshman squad prior to going to Colby in 1959.
VATICAN CITY—(UPI)—Alfredo Cardinal Ottaviano, the leader of Catholic church conservatives, today touched off a clash in the Ecumenical Council by charging "experts" with breaking the rules.
The experts are specially-appointed aides in the council. They are to advise the council fathers on the various subjects, but do not themselves speak or vote.
Ottaviani, the 72-year-old head of the Congregation of the Holy Office, told the gathering that three of the more than 300 council "experts" were passing out to bishops certain documents in favor of a proposal on married deacons that has been under discussion.
THE NEARLY-BLIND Roman baker's son, as the leading church conservative, played a "heavy" role in the first council session last year. But this is the first time he has spoken during the second session.
Jeff D. Young, 40, an oil distributor and University of Oklahoma graduate.
Keane Young, son of Jeff. Keane was a sophomore at Colby Community High School.
According to council sources, Ottaviani's remarks "were not well received." They added that in direct reply to the Roman cardinal's charges, a following speaker addressed himself to the "dear experts"—an unusual if not unheard of move. The speaker was not identified.
Gunnels, who was an avid KU fan, flew to almost all of the KU games. He is survived by his wife Joan and a son.
The plane crashed one-half mile from Max Westheimer Field, in Norman, trapping all four persons as it burned.
Air Crash Kills TwoKUAlumni
YOUNG IS SURVIVED by his wife Gwent, a daughter Virginia and a son Parker, a KU sophomore.
burned. A grass fire ignited by the heat burned over 40 acres of land beside U.S.77 within view of KU-Okla-homa football fans driving toward Owen Field to see the game.
dency of the council, they may speak. COUNCIL SOURCES did not identify the three experts charged by Ottaviani but specified that they were not American.
Ottaviani, who as head of the holy office and top member of the Roman curia held tremendous sway in the church, created a stir in the first council session when he became angry and walked out. While speaking in Latin during the debate he ran over the 10-minute limit and was cut off by the council presidency.
A number of council fathers applauded the move and Ottaviani's abruptly left the council hall, not to return for several weeks.
After his remarks on the experts, Ottaviani suggested that instead of a married diaconate as proposed by the draft under discussion, more use should be made of acolytes. Acolytes are lay helpers during the mass, such as altar boys.
ACCORDING TO a reliable council source, the majority of bishops "did not take this seriously."
Another speaker today was Chicago's Albert Cardinal Meyer, who said that the draft on the role of laymen in the church "loses sight of the important fact that first of all we are all sinners and ven after baptism we suffer from moral weakness.
"The schema," he added, "should not speak only of the privilege of the people of God" but should emphasize that the Roman Catholic Church "is a home for the weak and struggling."
This idea as presented by Meyer undoubtedly would be welcomed by Protestants.
The regents again discussed legislative action to make possible the needed hike in pay. During their meeting in June, the regents voted to ask the legislature for funds to increase faculty salaries at schools throughout the state. This action is expected to come before the legislature in January.
Regents Talk Over Faculty Pay Hike
Higher salaries for KU faculty members was the subject of the Kansas Board of Regents meeting Friday in Topeka.
Wichita University was asked to "hold the line" on salary increases, since they now have the highest pay average of the state universities and colleges.
Other action at the regents meeting concerned the Wichita University annual budget of $4.6 million, which the board tentatively approved and a coordination program between state universities and colleges, which the board approved.
(See related story on page five.)
Earlier, the council fathers heard an eloquent plea from a native African bishop against colonialism under the guise of religion.
ARCHIBISHOP Raymond Teich-dimbro of Conakry, Guinea, told the fathers, "We want only one thing, the pure Gospel. We do not want to be colonists of anyone but Christ."
The African archbishop protested religious colonialism during a debate on the place of the layman in the Catholic Church. He indicated that international Catholic organizations often feel the necessity to try to dominate native laymen working for the Church in missionary lands
The debate followed the first of a series of votes on reforms of the breviary, the book from which priests say their required daily prayers.
UP Slate Picked For ASC Voting
University Party announced 20 candidates last night for seats on the All Student Council.
CHARLES MARVIN, Lawrence senior, and UP co-chairman, said the only competitive primary will be in the freshman women's district, from which UP will run three candidates in the general election. Three women are now running from the district, but Marvin said several more will probably be added later for the primary.
Marvin said the party's platform may be approved this week by the general assembly, which will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Kansas Union.
Candidates for UP and their districts are Cathy Colman, Wichita; Terry Beach, Hays, and Jill Kleinberg, Lawrence, all freshmen; Ray Germonprez, Topea sophomore, small men's residence hall; Fred Hoffman, Topea senior, and Carl Lindquist, Prairie Village junior; Gregory Swartz, Overland Park senior; John Simmons, Hoisington freshman and Craig Twyman, Kansas City sophomore, large men's residence halls.
KAY WHITTAKER, Lawrence sophomore; Sharon Anderson, Topeka junior, and Nancy Lane, Hoisington senior, women's residence halls.
Bob Ritter, Kirkwood, Mo., junior, and Bob Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla., junior, fraternities; Jane Lefebvre, Prairie Village junior, sororities; Bill Panning, Elinwood junior, professional fraternities and co-operatives.
Chuck Marvin, Lawrence senior, and Vinay Kothari, Bombay, India senior, unmarried and unorganized; Mike McDowell, Great Bend junior, married students; and Jeanette Jeffrey, Topeka sophomore, small women's residence halls.
Talkathon Continues Record Pace; Total Reaches 144 Hours Sunday
Talk, talk, talk and more talk.
Much of it about nothing and a little of it about just anything. The "talk-athon" between Margaret Hashinger and Joseph R. Pearson (folo) residence halls goes on.
The talkathon reached it sixth day at 1 p.m. Sunday, (144 hours). The talkers were attempting to better the national record claimed by Lewis and Templin Halls of 421 hours and 52 minutes set in December, 1961.
"The DORM LIFE has picked up quite a bit. You can almost hear the buzz of excitement around here," said A. Lee Cohlmia, Wichita senior and JRP social chairman. Cohlmia is credited with originating the idea for the record attempt as a means to encourage Hashinger and JRP spirit, featured a film of the event on last
"They told me that they're going to investigate the possibilities of cutting into the conversation on their Friday 9 p.m. to midnight broadcast." Miss Phipps said. "I have received no definite confirmation of their plans yet."
Topeka television station WIBW
Weather
Judy Phipps, Wichita junior and Hashinger social chairman, said that she has been contacted by radio station KUOK.
Partly cloudy skies are forecast for tonight and Tuesday with little change in the weather. A high tomorrow of 70 to 75 is expected with a low tonight near 60.
Thursday's 10 p.m. news. The film showed Bill Johnson, Tulsa, Okla, sophomore, and Elizabeth Anthony, Dodge City junior, as they battled the clock in what Johnson called "our team effort to break the record."
THE JRP NEWSPAPER. Inteligentia, said today that, "The target for the two talking dorms is to top the 450 hour mark."
The paper went on to add, "Some words of warning: there have been some fellows who have missed their turn on the phone! This doesn't help the show at all!"
are snow at the
Elsewhere in the paper the following preamed: "It is not really a team effort unless the entire team pitches in and works. . . These girls won't bite, so sign up and have some fun."
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Oct. 21, 1963
Doing Something
The All Student Council created a Frankenstein monster when it formed the eight-member Liaison Committee.
Student Body President Reuben McCornack charges that the group is upsetting the apple cart and butting into affairs with which it shouldn't concern itself. And now Chancellor Wescoe has been "invited" to review the scope of the committee.
But in this age of reason, this ASC experiment gone mad may take on new meaning and, indeed, give a bit of meaning to the ASC itself.
The committee was set up last year under a bill which outlined its responsibilities very loosely. Last spring, Jim Thompson, Hugoton senior, wrote amendments into the bill specifying fields of interest and specific official bodies with which the committee would interact. Among these official bodies are the Governor, the Board of Regents, the State Legislature, Chancellor Wescoe, and the Lawrence city government.
THE BILL reads that the "... committee shall endeavor to meet with the (various state, city, and university groups) upon the direction of the chairman of the committee for the purpose of advising them on matters concerning students at the University of Kansas."
Note that the bill does not mention any ASC power to subject the committee to limitations by the student body president—or, for that matter, by the ASC itself.
One member explained the views of the members of the committee. "We feel that the (Liaison) committee was set up to investigate problems which may exist involving KU students. Our jurisdiction in such matters must, by necessity, be wide. We cannot sit around and wait for all the red tape which 'interested members' inject into general ASC approval of everything we do.
"IF WE FIND that there is a problem in a specific area, we will merely use our influence to bring the problem to the attention of those people who can remedy it.
"There seems to be some misunderstanding that we are trying to act as a little ASC and take over all the functions of the governing body. In reality we are formed, and now operating, to the end that campus problems will be known by persons who can do something about them.
"If there is a special committee of the ASC to handle problems which arise, for instance the Traffic and Safety Committee or the Health Committee, we will work with these committees to remedy the situation. However, if we find the problem and the committee refuses to recognize
He mentioned a long list of questions which already have come before the committee. These include:
the problem and act on it, then it is our responsibility to take further measures."
- Problems with Lawrence High School students roaming about the campus at night, vandalizing some campus buildings and picking fights with University students.
- CHARGES THAT University hospital facilities are inadequate for the number of students now attending the University and that more money needs either to be drawn from State Legislature appropriations or re-appropriated to deemphasize such things as burglar alarms and improve the hospital facilities as quickly as possible.
- Problems of KU students working for too low a wage for the state. Wages should be comparable to wages earned in comparable jobs in the community.
The Liaison Committee has also had a substantial effect on other committees. Both the Health Committee and the Traffic and Safety Committee, for instance, are now issuing reports, this being an unusual acceleration of interest.
This catalytic action the Liaison Committee seems to have on the other committees is enough in itself to warrant the committee's freedom and to guarantee longevity.
But in addition to urging other committees to action, it has in three short weeks:
- Opened lines of communication between political and University officialdom which allows the student body-finally-a chance to do something about University inadequacies. There is nothing like people to convince a State Legislature-or the hierarchy under it—that changes need to be brought.
- Made it clear that it is interested in problems of the student body and not problems some ASC members are "convinced" the ASC should consider.
- Focused its attention on University problems which would, had the committee not been formed, have been carefully avoided in the usual ASC docket of mundane nothingness.
No, Mr. McCornack. Neither you nor the ASC has the right to limit this committee and subject it to red tape and influence from above. If you do, you will be guilty of insubordination yourself —to your responsibility as an ASC member. And that responsibility is, to work in the best interests of the student body.
Dennis Bowers
Epic Poem of Civil War Gives Exciting Theater
In presenting "John Brown's Body" the Experimental Theatre has successfully avoided the vacuous prattlings of absurdism and has brought us the sentiment of an American poet and his love for his country.
James Pearce
"John Brown's Body" is exciting theater.
"John Brown's Body" is a sentimentalist's interpretation of the Civil War. An epic poem by Stephen Vincent Benet, it deals not with any specific aspect of the war but rather with the aspects of war tied together by the moving and powerful language of the poet.
Marcia Dalen and Nancy Vunovich all succeed in transforming themselves with virtuosity in equally contrasting roles.
The execution of the play requires an articulate sense of theater and drama. The director, Mr. Rea, is to be congratulated for not relying on some gimmick to overcome the difficulties of maintaining continuity throughout the play. Although the chain of events progresses rapidly, they are loosely knit together by way of the Civil War and Mr. Rea's precise manipulation of lighting, processed background, chorus and actors. The audience never gets lost.
"JOHN BROWN'S BODY" provides a severe test for the actor's versatility. Set against a single historical background the play requires the actor to depict convincing roles in numerous effusive emotional situations and contrasting personalities. Richard Kelton, a powerfully eloquent young actor, gives an outstanding performance. In his portrayal of various characters, Kelton moved with apparent ease from such roles as Jack Elliott, a docile, pleasant country lad, to a righteous fanatic John Brown.
The chorus, although not playing a single role within the play, maintains the emotional tempo, and in addition plays an essential part correlating the different locations and the change by one actor from one character to another.
Dailij Hänsan
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EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
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Plaine King ... Editorial Editor
Blaine King
Business Manager
Bob Brooks Business Manager Joanne Zabornik, Advertising Mgr.; Alice Rueschhoff, Circulation Mgr.; Brooks Harrison, Classified Adv. Mgr.; Jim Evilsizer, National Adv. Mgr.; Donald Dugan, Promotion Mgr.; Jerry Schroepfer, Merchandising Mgr.
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
SO I WAS IN LOVE WITH
THIS BOY WHO I WAS
TWO YEARS OLDER
THAN AND HE WANTED
TO GET MARRIED BUT
HE WAS STILL MARRIED
TO HIS FIRST WIFE. SO
I WROTE TO DEAR
ABBU.
AND
DEAR
ABBU
SAID
I
COULDN'T
SO WE BROKE OFF, TWO
YEARS LATER I FELL
IN LOVE WITH AN ELDERLY
MAN WITH A DAUGHTER
MY AGE WHO DIDN'T
WANT US TO GET
MARRIED. SO I WROTE
TO ANN LANDERS.
AND ANN
LANDERS
SAID
IT WAS
UNWISE.
---
AND ANN LANDERS SAID IT WAS UNWISE.
AND ANN LANDERS
SAID
IT WAS
UNWISE.
S
DR
FRANZ-
BLAU
WAS
LIVID
AGAINST
IT.
SO WE BROKE OFF FIVE YEARS LATER I MET A MAN MY AGE EXACTLY AND WE FELL IN LOVE BUT HE CAME FROM A DIFFERENT FAITH. SO I WROTE TO DR. FRANZBLAU.
DR.
FRANZ-BLAU
WAS
LIVID
AGAINST
IT.
SO NOW IM NEARLY SIXTY. I'M ALONE ALL THE TIME AND DON'T KNOW WHAT TO DO WITH MYSELF. SO I WROTE AND ASKED DR. BROTHERS.
DR
FRANZ-
BLAU
WAG
LIVID
AGAINST
IT.
SO NOW I'M NEARLY
SIXTY. I M ALONE
ALL THE TIME AND
DON'T KNOW WHAT
TO DO WITH MYSELF.
SO I WROTE AND
ASKED DR. BROTHERS.
10:20
SHE SAID
I SHOULD
GET OUT
AND MEET
PEOPLE.
@MARGARET
FOFFER
Monday, Oct. 21, 1963
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Another Diem Tells of Viet Nam Crises
Madame Nhu is not the only woman in the Diem family who has something to say about Buddhists and Communists. She also has a niece with some opinions.
Agnew Anh-Tuyet Nguvn-Thi, Madame Nhu's niece and the grand-daughter of Ngo Dingh Diem, president of South Viet Nam, presi- with a KU exchange student, Fraulein Beate Kohler of Essen, Germany.
In June 1963 the 19-year-old Vietnamese girl wrote: "In my country there was a coup. It was caused by Vietnamese communists. Always those scoundrels! They disguise themselves in the forms of Buddhist monks to be better able to hide and travel among us. The faithful, those who are Buddhist listen without knowing they are falling into a trap."
THE GIRL comes from a family of three sisters and three brothers. The oldest sister is involved in Saligon politics, participation in various organizations headed by Madame Nhu.
One of her brothers is a priest in Hue in South Viet Nam. She is a Roman Catholic.
Last year Miss Nguyen-Thi attended school at Westliff-on-Sea near London, England, living with her uncle who is the Vietnamese ambassador to England.
MISS NGUYN-THI has also attended school in Rome, Paris, Vienna and Cologne, and has traveled all over the world since she left her country in 1588. Fraulein Kohler was attending the university at the time.
In July 1963 Miss Nguyn-Thi again wrote concerning the worsening conditions in South Viet Nam. "Without doubt you have already heard about the subject of the religion? Well, I assure you that the coup that occurred in June was by the Vietnamese communists. Many of them put on disguises as monks and live among the other monks! The affair is very complicated for the most part, and there are those who do not know the truth. The faithful ones are so very ignorant! They believe only in God!"
"THEY (the monks) throw the
grenades and later tell the faithful that it is the government that is determined not to let them be free to practice their religion. The people hear the monks and fall into their traps, they do not know or want to believe that they are in disguise."
In discussing the recent suicidal burnings by several Buddhist priests Agnes said: "... I know that it was a trick by the communists who gave the poor man something to drink and told the people that he burned himself because the government would not let him practice his religion. It must be realized that among the monks in Viet Nam, there are communists. It is easy to become a monk. For them it suffices to lower the head and put on the gray and yellow robe. For Catholics it is not so easy; they must study for years before they may become ordained priests."
IN SEPTEMBER MISS Nguyn-Thi wrote: "... The newspapers exaggerate very much if they do not like my country and say bad things, which is normal. The affair of the Buddhists is already regulated, unfortunately there are always those who choose to annoy us. But the important thing is that the other Vietnamese like our country and our present government. They are united to struggle against the communists who wish us evil."
Increase In Bicycle Accidents Causes Restriction of Traffic
An increase in bicycle wrecks involving KU students has resulted in the restricting of motor traffic on the campus. One student died from injuries in a bicycle wreck and two others have been hospitalized since the fall term began.
Students who want campus transportation faster than shoe leather have adopted the bicycle. The distances between some dormitories and classrooms have also added to the bicycle's utility.
Bumper scratchings have been the only traffic accidents on the campus since traffic was cut down this summer. Student bicycle wrecks, so far, have all occurred off-campus.
Both Lawrence and campus police departments regard bicycle safety with the same attitude as Henry Brinkerhoff, a New York traffic specialist, who says, "The cyclist is best protected if the law exacts a high standard of the behavior."
Joe G. Skillman, chief of the campus police, said if bicycle accidents do not abate, the KU police were going to "shower down on safety offenders."
Bicycle Ordinances;
- It is unlawful to ride an unlicensed bicycle in Lawrence or on the KU campus.
- Licenses for bicycles cost 25 cents and can be purchased from the
KU Traffic and Security Office, or the Lawrence Police Department
- Your bicycle license should be clearly visible.
- Every bicycle, when it is ridden at night, should have a white head-light and a red light or reflector that can be seen from 300 feet.
- Bicycle brakes should be able to skid on dry pavement.
- Stay within five feet of the curbing except when passing vehicles.
- Use the proper hand signals.
- Yield right of way to pedestrians, and to all vehicles when entering a public street or highway.
- Do not carry a passenger.
● Ride at a reasonable or imprudent rate of speed.
ACCORDING to Fraulein Kohler the niece of the controversial first lady of South Viet Nam looks quite a bit like Le Thu, her cousin.
- Do not ride a bicycle on the sidewalk in the business district or when within 100 feet of any business or place of assembly.
- It is illegal to carry packages, etc., which prevent riding safely.
- If involved in a bicycle accident and someone is injured or the damage is greater than $10 you must report the accident to the police within 24 hours.
"She is intelligent and beautiful and loves to talk about her country and the problems there. She has studied in many foreign schools to learn as many languages as possible since she must participate in many state functions when she is at home in Saigon," Fraulein Kohler said.
In other letters the girl gave her impressions of Madame Nhu. She said her aunt was very beautiful but ruthless in her influence on politics in South Viet Nam.
- The violation of any of the above rules carries a fine of up to $25, or the revocation of your license, or both.
Miss Nguyen-Thi does not want to get involved in its politics. On October 24 she will enter a convent in Viet Nam to take vows to become a nun.
TODD MOBIL HOME, INC.
738 N.2nd.
Special new 10' wide
2 bedroom furnished
mobil home . . . $3795.
Choice of three models
in stock.
$400 down
$57 per mo.
Delivery and set-up included.
VI 3-8846 Open evenings
VI 2-3111 and Sundays.
MID-EVENING STUDY BREAK?
or a complete evening of fun and relaxation where FUN IS KING-PIN
Bowl in pleasant surroundings, with newest equipment and features, with HILL-CREST CAFE ready to satisfy that appetite.
BOWLING
AT ITS
FINEST
HILLCREST BOWL
Hillcrest Shopping Center
Coffee Break
Today!
UNION BEVERAGE BAR
Fresh Rolls
WHAT YOU WANT IS HERE
UNION
BEVERAGE
BAR
WHAT YOU WANT IS HERE
KANSAS UNION FOOD SERVICE
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Monday, Oct. 21, 1963
Barry Lashes News Handling
SAN BERNARDINO, Calif. — (UPI)—Sen. Barry Goldwater, addressing a National Newspaper Week observance over the weekend, accused the Kennedy administration of endangering the nation's security through what he called "flagrant news management."
The Arizona Republican issued the accusation at a newspaper week meeting sponsored by the San Bernardino Sun-Telegram.
HE SPECIFICALLY attacked the administration's handling of the announcements of four recent international developments — the nuclear test ban treaty, the deal to sell surplus wheat to Russia, the United Nations resolution banning nuclear weapons in outer space, and the Geneva disarmament plan.
Terming the U.N. resolution "the most flagrant mismanagement of all because it made us close the door to real military use of space," the potential GOP presidential candidate said U.S. agreement to any of the four events should never have been given without more bargaining to this nation's advantage.
Goldwater said the American people would have demanded changes in all four of these international developments had they known about them far enough in advance. But he said the announcements came too late for opposition to be mustered.
AT A NEWS CONFERENCE earlier in the day, Goldwater said he has in the past advocated U.S. withdrawal from the United Nations—"I'd have to say that at best I'm lukewarm about the U.N. now."
"If we're going to have an international debating society," said Goldwater, "then I believe we should make it the best one possible. I believe members should be required to pay the dues or get out."
Asked again if he is running for the Republican presidential nomination now, Goldwater repeated that he is not, but is considering it.
"Actually, I'm trying to think of reasons why I should become a candidate and I'm coming up with some negative answers," he said.
P-t-P Plans Visit To Holton Families
The Holton chapter of People-to People will sponsor a foreign student weekend Oct. 26-27.
Foreign students interested in the trip may sign a reservation list in the P-t-P office in the Kansas Union until 5 p.m. tomorrow.
Students will be met at the Kansas Union at 2 p.m. Saturday. They will spend the weekend with P-t-P families in Holton and return to KU at 4 p.m. Sunday.
Last weekend's trip to Olathe was cancelled because nearly half of the sponsoring Rotary club members were ill. Foreign students who signed up for the Olathe trip will have first choice of the 35 places open for the Holton trip.
Official Bulletin
Interviews: Continental Oil-AB or MA's may sign up in 202 Summerfield Hall.
Continental Pipe Line—Administrative solution; AB or MA's in Business Administr.
Bocing Co. Airplane, aero-space, and Vertol divisions.
Alvin Schumacher, Wisconsin Public
School System
1:30-4:30 p.m. Tuesday, 117 Bailey
TODAY
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m., St. Lawrence Catholic Chanel, 1910, Stratford Road.
Graduate Student Discussion group, 7
ford Road, Lawrence Chapel, 1974.
20th Street
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses, 6:45 am, 5 p.m. St.
Lucienne Catholic Chapel, 1191 Stratford
Road.
All Student Council. 7 p.m., Sunflower Room, Union, Budget Session.
Catholic Inquiry Forum, 7 p.m. St.
Lawrence Catholic Student Center, 1915
*Western City. Discussion. 9 p.m.* St.
*Pleasantville Student Center. 1915
Strafford Road
Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
English Tattoo Craze
NOTTINGHAM, England — (UPI)
—Nottingham school officials said today they are fighting a tattooing eraze in which teen-age girls decorate their friends' arms with sewing needles and shoe polish.
JANE TURNER
Of course there's a difference in SANITONE Dry Cleaning!
That's why Dalton, Serbin, Handmacher and many other garment manufacturers recommend Quality SANITONE Dry Cleaning for your nicest clothes. The Quality SANITONE process
is Exclusive at
"Quality Guaranteed" LAWRENCE
launderers and dry cleaners 10th & N.H. VI3-3711
"Specialists in Fabric Care"
University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Regents Give Green Light to U.S. Loan For Construction of Largest Dormitory
A three million dollar federal loan for building the biggest dormitory on the KU campus has been approved by the Kansas Board of Regents.
The Regents also authorized an inquiry to Washington, D.C., to see if construction can begin immediately. The dormitory will be between Ellsworth Hall and Stouffer Place.
THE DORMITORY is being financed through the Housing and Home Financing Agency of the Community Facilities Administration in Washington, D.C.
Monday, Oct. 21, 1963
Total cost will be $3.8 million. It will be designed to house 976 students and will be almost one and one-half times as big as Ellsworth Hall—the biggest hall on campus to date.
Review of the final enrollment figures put KU enrollment 11,194 equivalent full-time students, up 793 or 7.6 per cent from last year. The Board computes the "equivalent" number of students by taking the total hours enrolled for and dividing by 15, which is considered an average work load by the Regents. Graduate hours are divided by nine.
Following are the equivalent enrollments of the four other state colleges and universities. Kansas State University: 8,932, down 136 or 1.5 per cent. Pittsburg State College: 3,962, up 190 or 5 per cent. Emporia State Teachers College: 4,588, down 130 or 3 per cent. Fort Hays State College: 3,450, up 260 or 8.1 per cent.
WICHITA UNIVERSITY, which will be changed from a municipal to a state institution next year, has an equivalent enrollment of 4,766, up 550 or 14.3 per cent.
$20,106,000 in Taxes
LONDON — (UPI) — Government officials said today they have picked up $20,106,000 in the last two weeks in inheritance taxes on the estates of four men—motoring pioneer Lord Nuffield, insurance magnate Lord Ennisdale, philanthropist G. Northcott and Woodworth's President W. L. Stephenon.
The Regents also approved a plan designed to strengthen the extension education program in Kansas. The plan calls for a coordinated extension program under the supervision of a commission composed of President James McCain of Kansas State
University, chairman; Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, vice chairman; and President Leonard H. Axe of Pittsburg State College.
The committee will identify and analyze new needs and demands for off-campus instruction.
BALDWIN Art THEATRE
Art THEATRE
BRITISH FILM
"The Lonliness Of A Long Distance Runner"
TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY OCTOBER 22, 23, 24 7:30 P.M.
Free Coffee Fine Music
GEM THEATRE
BALDWIN CITY, KANSAS
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ALLEN'S NEWS 1115 Mass.
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified
SENIOR COFFEE
UNION BALLROOM
Wednesday, October 23
9:30 until 11:30 a.m.
(Seniors are excused from 9:30 and 10:30 classes)
- FREE REFRESHMENT
- SENIOR QUEEN ELECTION
- COMMITTEE REPORTS ON SENIOR CLASS FUNCTIONS
- REMAINDER OF SWEATSHIRTS AND PINS GIVEN OUT
- PRACTICE SENIOR YELL FOR
SENIOR DAY-OCTOBER 26
OKLAHOMA STATE GAME (Led by ULTRA-CLASSY Senior Cheerleaders)
Present Senior ID's At Door
THOSE WITHOUT ID'S...25c
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Oct. 21, 1963
KU Changes Character Of Sooners' 'Snake Pit'
Bv Bob Jones
Yes, it was going to be a fine football game. The Sooners were on the rebound after an embarrassing loss to Texas, and they were going to tear that team--uh, KU wasn't it—to shreds.
These thoughts were uppermost in the OU fans' minds as they filed into Owen Stadium, and anyone who was a Jayhawk rooter had these thoughts expressed to them in no uncertain terms.
About 30 minutes later, 60,826 fans sat stunned. Gale Sayers had just run 61 yards for a touchdown, and the 1,000 Jayhawk fans who attended the game were going wild.
Distance Men Defeat Drake
KU's cross country team will be trying for its 21st consecutive dual meet victory when it opens Big Eight Conference action at Oklahoma Saturday.
The Jayhawk distance men defeated Drake here Saturday, 15-48.
Paul Acevedo placed first in 14:59
over the three-mile course. The rest
of the KU team finished within a
one-minute span.
Acevedo, John Lawson, Tonnie Coane, Herald Hadley, and Chick Fero gave KU a 1-2-3-4-5 finish. George Cabrera placed seventh and Ken Holm finished eighth.
THEY PROCEEDED to let every Sooner sympathizer in hearing range know, in no uncertain terms, who was going to win the game.
As a matter of fact, some of the KU fans approached hysteria in telling the Oklahomans the Sooners were overrated, washed up, and could not get along without Joe Don Looney.
It is not normal for the average passive KU football fan to react so violently in such a manner. The story behind this is the attitude of OU football fans toward their team.
To the average football fan from another Big Eight school, there is nothing in the world more obnoxious than a Sooner fan.
At football games, they make so much noise that Owen Field, the Sooners' home stadium, has come to be known as the "Snake Pit."
When the Sooners took the field, a roar went up that almost shook the foundations of the concrete bleachers, and loud shouts of "Go get 'em OU" filled the air.
FOR YEARS these OU fans have seen nothing but winning football and have become convinced there is no finer team in the nation. They have good reason to believe this, (Wilkinson's record to date 134-26-4) and they also tell everyone in loud strident tones.
THE KU FANS were still a little bit scared the OU football team might run over the Jayhawks so only mild shouts of encouragement were offered.
After Sayers made his long run, the scene changed. Except for the
one time the Sooners scored, things in the "Snake Pit" were not quite normal.
For one glorious half KU fans saw their team lead the defending league champions. They screamed and raved and drew woeful looks from the OU fans trying to decide what kind of madmen had been turned loose in the stadium.
SUA
announces
THE S.U.A. CHESS CLUB announces
In that first half, Owen Field was strangely silent. Only on brief occasions did the Sooner faithful find something to cheer about. There were boo's whenever OU was penalized and groans when they fumbled.
FALL CHESS TOURNAMENT
THE FIRST TWO GAMES BEGINNING OCTOBER 27,1 p.m.
Final Two Games November 3,1 p.m. ALL GAMES IN THE KANSAS UNION
NO ENTRY FEE REQUIRED
ANY KU STUDENT OR FACULTY MEMBER IS ELIGIBLE
--only
$1488
PRIZES
1st...3 3/4'' Chess Set 2nd...Two Chess Books
3rd & 4th...One Chess Book Each
IN THE SECOND HALF, the mood of the crowd began to change. OU took the lead in the ball game on a third quarter touchdown, and by the fourth quarter, the "Snake Pit" was normal again.
To enter, contact Charles Gish at VI 3-4043 (after 5 p.m. weekdays) before noon on the 27th.
Frosh Play Today
KU's freshman football prospects will receive their first taste of competition in Memorial Stadium today in a game with the varsity "scout" squad beginning at 4 p.m.
Now! 7:00 & 9:00
PAUL NEWMAN JOANNE WOODWARD
A NEW KIND OF LOVE TECHNICOLOR*
An Adults Picture Admission 90c
--only
$1488
KATHARINE HEPBURN
JASON ROBARDS JR.
RALPH RICHARDSON
DEAN STOCKWELL
LONG DAY'S JOURNEY INTO NIGHT
Recommended for Mature Audiences.
Now Showing!
7:00 & 9:40
ALL SEATS $1.00
--only
$1488
STANLEE EWILAND PARKER
SIMATRA ROBBINSON CORPORATE
JONES RITTER WYNN
FRANK CAPRAS
"A HOLE IN THE HEAD"
FRANK EWARD O. ELEANOR
SMATRA ROBINSON PARKER
CAROLINE MUTUAL JONES RITTER WYNN
" FRANK CAPRAS'S "A HOLE IN THE HEAD"
In Color At 7:00 — PLUS —
BOB LUCILLE HOPE BALL
THE FACTS OF LIFE
BOB LUCILLE
HOPE BALL
THE
FACTS
OF
LIFE
THE
FACTS
OF
LIFE
Shows At 9:30
Tonight & Tues.
Adults 85c — KIDS FREE
Open 6:30 — Start 7:00
--only
$1488
KR
ALL-IN-ONE RAIN-SHINE COAT
- ZIP OUT LINING
- FULLY WATER REPELLANT
- THREE COLORS
OYSTER NATURAL OLIVE
740 Massachusetts
All popular sizes in shorts, regulars, and longs.
This is the bargain you have been looking for. Snug, warm ZIP-OUT lining changes this fall or spring raincoat to an allweather coat.
LOST
Ladies' yellow gold wristwatch, Wyler brand — tear-drop face. Lost Saturday night in the Union. Contact Nancy Brown. GSP 249, V1-39123. $10-$91
LAWRENCE SURPLUS
TYPING
Thesis Typist, Electric typewriter
English degree. Prulele Village. NI
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, reports. Electric Typwriter. Mrs. McEldgowan. 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8584.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers—They Are Loyal Supporters.
Prompt, neat and accurate work on wide carriage electric typewriter. Journalism, Business and Secretary experience. Charlotte Weber. VI 3-3495.
VI 3-3933
-Classified Ads-
Experienced typist, fast and accurate.
Call Ms. Hays at VI 2-0057. 10-22
Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter, carbon ribbon specimen box. Inspection for 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Marienne) Higley, 408 West 13th. tt
MILLIKENES SOS—always first quality typing on I.B.M. Carbon ring machines. We also do tape transcriptions. Often we mark it in t.m. p124—p1021. Mass Phone VI3-5920.
Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typriter fast accurate service. Reasonablerates. Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1644.
Typing: Dissertations theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines; 35 special symbol carbon ribbon—call desired higher efficient service. Call Suzanne Gilbert 1546 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI-3257 1546 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI-3257
Experienced typist for theses and term
books in mathematics, accounting,
Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Miss. VI 3-1585, tf
Efficient and experienced typer would like to do work in home. Prompt and guaranteed work. Call at any time. VI 3-
2651. 10-31
Typing; Desertations, theses, manuscripts,
term papers typed. New Smith-Corona
machines; 35 special symbols, carbon
ribbon—if desired. Prompt, efficient
service. Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI 2-1546
or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI 3-3057.
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast, accurate, reasonable rates. Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577. tt
BUSINESS SERVICES
English or Speech trouble? Certified English and Speech teacher, will tutor at reasonable rate. Also typing. Call VI 3-2873. 10-23
Classes for Pre-school children ages 3, 4,
VI 2-1410 for more information. 10-23
Dressmaking-alterations, *formals* and
gowns. Ola Smith. 9391 % 35% Mast
VI 3-16
Complete line of soles and heels, laces,
cosmetics and polishes. Have new mer-
chandise. Use such purse as a coat.
Notes: Burgert's Day One Shoe
Service — 1113 Mass. St. 11-1
TRANSPORTATION
HELP WANTED
Riders or car pool from Leawed. Prairie
VI a 0282 VI a 0282 Classes 8:30 to 2:30 VI a 10-22
OVERSEAS OPPORTUNITIES for qualified people in Rural Development and Education Southeast Asia. 103 N. St. Washington, D.C. $10-25
HELP WANTED - Linotype operator, 9 to 3 daily. Must be experienced on newspaper straightmatter. University of Chicago Press, 117 Flint Hall. Phone UN 4-3281.
WANTED
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart, 1025 Mass. tf
FOR SALE
Abington Book Shop 1015 $ _{1/2} $ Mass.
LEWIS, SINCLAIR
Dodsworth $5.00
Ann Vickers $5.00
It Can't Happen Here $6.50
Bobhel, Merriday $6.50
8 vo. and 12 mo.. cloth, all in dust jackets
LEWIS, SINCLAIR
Bookplates. FIRST EDITIONS
Main Street
$5.
Elmer Street
$10.
to cloth. FIRST EDITIONS
---
CLASSIFIED ADS
FOR SALE
MGA $1,600.00. Roadster—1960—Just over
16,000 miles. Wire wheels, white walls,
terriors. Excellent. White with rear vis-
terion. Excellent condition. Phone VI
3-8221 today.
10-25
You can own your own clean used mobile home for as low as $200.00 down and $34 per month delivered. Large selection of new and used mobiles is available now. OBJH HOMES, N 2nd Lawrence, Kansas. Call VI 3-8846 or VI 2-3111.
New stereo multiflex GE radio and
phono, deluxe model portable with Gar-
rardson damage covered to $199.97 (reg. £275.35) may
Stoneback's, 929 Mass. St.
Electric alarm clock with nite hands! Special offer $1.99 plus tax to Kansan readers only. You must bring this ad as coupon to Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass.
1957 Cadillac, 4-door hardtop. Clean, air-
conditioned, full power. Also 1956 Cadillac,
4-door hardtop, full power. New
Auto Service, 612 N. 2nd. VI 3-8
8443.
1952 Cadillac 4-door sedan. Excellent condition. Private owner. See at 19th and Mass. Phone VI 3-1013 Days, VI 3-6506 evenings. 10-23
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results
1956 Chevrolet 4-door sedan, blue and white, carpeting, new tires, 70,000 actual miles. Excellent condition, best in town. By owner. VI 3-0061. 10-21
INCOME PROPERTY - large 2 story house near campus divided into apt. 1, 2, and 3. Free rentals of approx $450 per month. Full price is $16,000 including furnishing. ROGERS' REAL ESTATE CO. Bus. ph. VI 3-0005, W. 14th. Res. ph. VI 3-2929
Five room campus, basement, garage, needs some paint,
WEDS CO. WEDS CO. WEDS CO.
TATE GO. Bus. phi VI 3-0095. Res. phi
VI 3-2929. W. 7. 14th.
10-23
Three component Hi-Fi unit. Wharfalde Fand filled speaker, 50 watt Sherwood and Dual power transformer for new changer. Must sacrifice Call UN Series Leave number if not in. R. Neeley. 10-23
NEW Royce Moon lightweight bliker
equipped to cost $29,950.
Stoneback's' 929 Mass. 10-23
Underwood portable typewriter. Good
price again. price $25.00. Call
3845 evenings. 10-26
Over 30 modern pistols, rifles and shot-
guns, are available for sale far below wholesale. Thousands of dollars invested in this collection. All must be seen now at 824 Ack, or call VT1110
Lightweight battery powered portable tape recorder. Many accessories, like new use for lectures, languages, parties, etc. Save 50% on this 300. This cheap Japanese recorder! 10-21
1956 Bulk. H.T. Good condition, new tires, best offer takes. Call VI-1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8-9-10-11-12-13-14-15-16-17-18-19-20-21-22-23-24-25-26-27-28-29-30-31-32-33-34-35-36-37-38-39-40-41-42-43-44-45-46-47-48-49-50-51-52-53-54-55-56-57-58-59-60-61-62-63-64-65-66-67-68-69-70-71-72-73-74-75-76-77-78-79-80-81-82-83-84-85-86-87-88-89-90-91-92-93-94-95-96-97-98-99-100-101-102-103-104-105-106-107-108-109-110-111-112-113-114-115-116-117-118-119-120-121-122-123-124-125-126-127-128-129-130-131-132-133-134-135-136-137-138-139-140-141-142-143-144-145-146-147-148-149-150-151-152-153-154-155-156-157-158-159-160-161-162-163-164-165-166-167-168-169-170-171-172-173-174-175-176-177-178-179-180-181-182-183-184-185-186-187-188-189-190-191-192-193-194-195-196-197-198-199-200-201-202-203-204-205-206-207-208-209-210-211-212-213-214-215-216-217-218-219-220-221-222-223-224-225-226-227-228-229-230-231-232-233-234-235-236-237-238-239-240-241-242-243-244-245-246-247-248-249-250-251-252-253-254-255-256-257-258-259-260-261-262-263-264-265-266-267-268-269-270-271-272-273-274-275-276-277-278-279-280-281-282-283-284-285-286-287-288-289-290-291-292-293-294-295-296-297-298-299-300-301-302-303-304-305-306-307-308-309-310-311-312-313-314-315-316-317-318-319-320-321-322-323-324-325-326-327-328-329-330-331-332-333-334-335-336-337-338-339-340-341-342-343-344-345-346-347-348-349-350-351-352-353-354-355-356-357-358-359-360-361-362-363-364-365-366-367-368-369-370-371-372-373-374-375-376-377-378-379-380-381-382-383-384-385-386-387-388-389-390-391-392-393-394-395-396-397-398-399-400-401-402-403-404-405-406-407-408-409-410-411-412-413-414-415-416-417-418-419-420-421-422-423-424-425-426-427-428-429-430-431-432-433-434-435-436-437-438-439-440-441-442-443-444-445-446-447-448-449-450-451-452-453-454-455-456-457-458-459-460-461-462-463-464-465-466-467-468-469-470-471-472-473-474-475-476-477-478-479-480-481-482-483-484-485-486-487-488-489-490-491-492-493-494-495-496-497-498-499-500-501-502-503-504-505-506-507-508-509-510-511-512-513-514-515-516-517-518-519-520-521-522-523-524-525-526-527-528-529-530-531-532-533-534-535-536-537-538-539-540-541-542-543-544-545-546-547-548-549-550-551-552-553-554-555-556-557-558-559-560-561-562-563-564-565-566-567-568-569-570-571-572-573-574-575-576-577-578-579-580-581-582-583-584-585-586-587-588-589-590-591-592-593-594-595-596-597-598-599-600-601-602-603-604-605-606-607-608-609-610-611-612-613-614-615-616-617-618-619-620-621-622-623-624-625-626-627-628-629-630-631-632-633-634-635-636-637-638-639-640-641-642-643-644-645-646-647-648-649-650-651-652-653-654-655-656-657-658-659-660-661-662-663-664-665-666-667-668-669-670-671-672-673-674-675-676-677-678-679-680-681-682-683-684-685-686-687-688-689-690-691-692-693-694-695-696-697-698-699-700-701-702-703-704-705-706-707-708-709-710-711-712-713-714-715-716-717-718-719-720-721-722-723-724-725-726-727-728-729-730-731-732-733-734-735-736-737-738-739-740-741-742-743-744-745-746-747-748-749-750-751-752-753-754-755-756-757-758-759-760-761-762-763-764-765-766-767-768-769-770-771-772-773-774-775-776-777-778-779-780-781-782-783-784-785-786-787-788-789-790-791-792-793-794-795-796-797-798-799-800-801-802-803-804-805-806-807-808-809-810-811-812-813-814-815-816-817-818-819-820-821-822-823-824-825-826-827-828-829-830-831-832-833-834-835-836-837-838-839-840-841-842-843-844-845-846-847-848-849-850-851-852-853-854-855-856-857-858-859-860-861-862-863-864-865-866-867-868-869-870-871-872-873-874-875-876-877-878-879-880-881-882-883-884-885-886-887-888-889-890-891-892-893-894-895-896-897-898-899-900-901-902-903-904-905-906-907-908-909-910-911-912-913-914-915-916-917-918-919-920-921-922-923-924-925-926-927-928-929-930-931-932-933-934-935-936-937-938-939-940-941-942-943-944-945-946-947-948-949-950-951-952-953-954-955-956-957-958-959-960-961-962-963-964-965-966-967-968-969-970-971-972-973-974-975-976-977-978-979-980-981-982-983-984-985-986-987-988-989-990-991-992-993-994-995-996-997-998-999-1000-1001-1002-1003-1004-1005-1006-1007-1008-1009-1010-1011-1012-1013-1014-1015-1016-1017-1018-1019-1020-1021-1022-1023-1024-1025-1026-1027-1028-1029-1030-1031-1032-1033-1034-1035-1036-1037-1038-1039-1040-1041-1042-1043-1044-1045-1046-1047-1048-1049-1050-1051-1052-1053-1054-1055-1056-1057-1058-1059-1060-1061-1062-1063-1064-1065-1066-1067-1068-1069-1070-1071-1072-1073-1074-1075-1076-1077-1078-1079-1080-1081-1082-1083-1084-1085-1086-1087-1088-1089-1090-1091-1092-1093-1094-1095-1096-1097-1098-1099-1100-1101-1102-1103-1104-1105-1106-1107-1108-1109-1110-1111-1112-1113-1114-1115-1116-1117-1118-1119-1120-1121-1122-1123-1124-1125-1126-1127-1128-1129-1130-1131-1132-1133-1134-1135-1136-1137-1138-1139-1140-1141-1142-1143-1144-1145-1146-1147-1148-1149-1150-1151-1152-1153-1154-1155-1156-1157-1158-1159-1160-1161-1162-1163-1164-1165-1166-1167-1168-1169-1170-1171-1172-1173-1174-1175-1176-1177-1178-1179-1180-1181-1182-1183-1184-1185-1186-1187-1188-1189-1190-1191-1192-1193-1194-1195-1196-1197-1198-1199-1200-1201-1202-1203-1204-1205-1206-1207-1208-1209-1210-1211-1212-1213-1214-1215-1216-1217-1218-1219-1220-1221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Typewriter, new and used portables.
Typewriter, and adding machine service and Royal and Smith Corona portables. Typewriter and adding machine service and Typewriter, 750 Mass cell VI T-3-3644 tff
New shipment of Pink tying paper. $00
Stream-$85 Lawrence Outdoor
1005 Mass
1957 "98" Oldsmobile convertible; white;
excellent condition; power windows,
stress radio, tie, brakes. Four new
Wire. take offer, call: Bill Murdoff
V 2-4228
Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extensively comprehensive. mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
General Psychology study notes. Excel-
cells. Contact details. $4.00 per
copy. Call VT1-9378.
Monday, Oct. 21, 1963
Printed biology notes: 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outlining of biology classes. Formerly known as the Theta notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50.
Sure--Everything in the net field at
$$$ have more cents. 1218 Conn. VT I-32-291.
University Daily Kansan Page 7
ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLEANERS.
New Electrolux and a limited number of rebults, fully guaranteed. All parts available. Equipment picked up for service and delivered. Frank V. Cox, Local Manager-1904 Barker. Call V 13-3277.
Save on tires! 1,000 tires (snow and regular) at lowest discount prices in Kansas —Ray Stoneback's (Discount tire center)
929 Mass. 10-30
Tape recorders — new compact model,
take it anywhere! Only $24.99—Pay $5.00
per month. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass.
10-23
Spencer Microscope. Monocular triple
stage. Call VI 3-5710, 6 to 800. 10-23
stage.
USED TV'S—we're flooded with trade ins! $15.00, $20.00, $29.95. As is sets, you fix 'em $5.00 each—Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 10-23
5 room, entire first floor apartment fur-
nished; utilities paid; off street parking
$85.00 per month. 1905 Mass. Call V
3-6011 or VI 3-0570. 10-2
1958 Convertible—new motor, good tires,
top in excellent condition, 4 speed, dual
4 barrel carburettors, radio and heater.
Reasonable price. Call VI 3-7102. 10-24
FOR RENT
Very spacious 4 room apartment. Lots of closet space. Fully furnished, carpeted. Close to KU and downtown. Off street parking. Very reasonable rent to nice couple or graduate student. For appointment, call VI 3-6696. 10-21
Spacious 2 room, newly decorated, second floor apartment clean and quiet. Private bath. Near KU. $65.00. Bills paid except electricity. Call VI 2-2583. 10-25
Apartment for two MEN, bills paid, rough
convenient, convenient, Call VI 3-2400. 10-21
Large room, single or double, near campus,
1215 Oread. Telephone and parking
amount $35.00, prefer graduate or
senior. Contact Jack Ashmore. VI
1215 Oread.
10-23
Two bedroom duplex, unfurnished, wall to wall carpeting, fenced yard, large storage and utility room. 2 small children acceptable, no pets. One year lease. $5.50 a month. 1607 W. 22nd Terr. Call VI 2-1028. tf
MISCELLANEOUS
West Side Presbyterian Church, 6th and Mass. welcome you to attend Sunday services at 11 a.m. and Sunday classes at 9:45 a.m. 10-23
PARTY TIME: School house available for private parties, dances, meetings-recessed with piano, tables, chairs, refreshment bar and coolers. VI. 3-7453 - 431 Forrest. tf
$3.00
$3.00
S
Drive-In Pet Center
GRANT'S
Sure —
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
Sure — Everything in the Pet Field 1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921
THERE ARE 3,000 ITEMS caught in the COBWEB the antique shop at the
BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass. VI 3-1044
LEONARD'S
Standard Service
"the best in car care"
706 W. 9th
VI 3-9830
-BUSINESS DIRECTORY-
STUDENTS
JOE'S BAKERY
new location at
616 West 9th
25c delivery VI 3-4720
BRAKE ADJUSTMENTS ... $.98
LUBRICATION ... $1.00
Motor tune-ups, wheel balancing
FREE—one quart of oil with each
oil and filter change
Milliken's SOS
BRAKE ADJUSTMENTS ... $.98
"the best professional service"
Tops — Glass & Zippers —
Rear Glasses — Headlines —
Door Panels —
- General typing service
- 24 hr. answering service
Tailor Made Seat Covers at
Compete with the seat with
sewed double lock stitch.
Specialized Service Parts for All Makes Authorized Schwinn and Honda Dealer
PAGE-CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE
1819 W 23rd VI 3-9694
1021 $\frac{1}{2}$ Mass., VI 3-5920, 7a.m.-11p.m.
all major brands
- Mimeograph & photo-copying
BIKE REPAIRS
★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M.
9th & Mississippi VI 3-9897
Jack's Seat Covers
Jack's Seat Covers
545 Minn. VI 3-4242
BLEVINS
701 Mich. VI 3-0581
BLEVINS
★ BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED
★ MUFFLER SERVICE
ART'S TEXACO
TYPEWRITERS
See Us Before You Buy
NEW AND USED
PORTABLES STANDARDS
ELECTRICS
Sales - Rentals - Service
LAWRENCE
TYPEWRITER
735 Mass. VI 3-3644
★ TUNE-UPS
One Stop Service
Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals
Fast Car Wash
Minor Tune up
Brake Work
Muffiers & Tail Pipes
FREE PICK-UP & DELIVERY
Engine Tune Up
Generator & Starter Repair
★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK
Portraits of
Balfour
WRECKER & ROAD SERVICE
DX
HIXON STUDIO
Portraits of Distinction "A Perfect Christmas Gift"
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER
THE NAME FOR SERVICE
Fraternity Jewelry
Brake Repair
★ Lubrication & Oil Change
摄影
SKELLY
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
300 W. 6th VI 3-9271
SKELLY SERVICE
★ WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT
365 day hospitalization
LOW COST
$8-$20 daily benefit
$300 miscellaneous expense
$400 surgical expense
- complete accessories
JACK & GUNN'S
Kermit Hoffmeier special insurance agent VI 2-0266
- pipes
- tobaccos
at George's Pipe Shop
Pitchers—75c
727 Mass. VI 3-7164
"Smoking is our only Business"
TGIF at the Stables TGIS too!
Gene Bailey - Mark Patton
Thursday night at the Purple Pig 810 New Hampshire
Reasonable Prices Prompt Service
features
Daniel's
- Watch Repair
- Engraving
- Jewelry Repair
Your Service Jeweler is at 914 Mass. VI 3-2572
JIM'S CAFE
838 Mass.
OPEN
24 hrs. a day
BREAKFAST OUR
SPECIALTY
EVERYONE READS AND USES WANT ADS
HAVING A PARTY?
We are always happy to serve you with
lce cold beverages
Cips, nuts, cookies
Variety of grocery items
five cold 6 pacs—all kinds
Crushed ice, candy
OPEN TO 10 P.M. EVERY EVENING
616 Vt. Ph.VI 3-0350
LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY
TRAVEL RESERVATIONS NOW!
Make your airline reservations now and be assured of your travel for Thanksgiving and Christmas vacation.
For fast, efficient service call our Mrs. Rose Abels.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
746 Mass.
Travel Agency
VI 3-0152
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Oct. 21, 1963
Campus Politician's Life Hurried, Hectic
Rv Clare Casev
With KU expanding in the classrooms and in the living districts every semester, the role of activities and politics is coming to play an increasingly important function in student affairs.
The need for organization in conducting campus activities and human relations is giving added importance to student organizations.
The students that take an active leadership role in these activities must conform to a busy schedule and maintain a high enough grade standing to be considered as possible leaders for future high ranking positions not only at KU, but also after graduation.
One person who is taking an active role in the various phases of campus life is Bob Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla., junior.
Bob is a member of the Sigma Chi fraternity, where according to him, he eats and sleeps during his spare time. His room is crowded with lockers, files and book shelves. His desk is covered with dirty clothes, folders, a few books, and a lot of cigarette butts. Where the book shelves do not cover the wall there are calendars with hurriedly scribbled notes, and United Party material hanging in every possible position.
"Actually, it looks pretty good," Stewart said, lounging in an old easy chair in one corner of the room. "One of the pledges just cleaned it up. It might look unorganized to most people, but at least I know where everything is."
On the shelves are books such as "The Ninth Wave" by Eugene Burdich, "Fail Safe" by Wheeler and Burdick, Goldwater's "Conscience of a Conservative," "Advise and Consent" by Drury, and others of the same nature.
"I like to read." Stewart said. "My folks encouraged my reading ever since I can remember. They always said they would buy my books if I would actually read them. This has worked well, but they forced me to buy the Playboy Yearbook out of my own money."
When the ringing of one of the two phones in the room interrupted the interview, Stewart talked quickly with his caller, hung up and began putting on a clean white shirt and tie.
"Let's go on with our talk," he said. "I'm not running out, but I do have a meeting in an hour."
His roommate, John Smith, Atchison junior, asked Stewart when he planned to study for his accounting test the next morning.
He said he would do it after the meeting.
what is Smith's opinion of Stewart?
"He really is amazing when you consider everything he does," Smith said. "He makes speeches about twice a week somewhere on the hill and is a good speaker too. He won the speech Potpourri in '62."
Some of the activities that Stewart is now in and has been in include freshman class president, Dean's Honor Roll, UP Greek Co-chairman, Peace Corps, SUA Summer Board Chairman, All Student Council Committee, SUA Carnival Ticket Chairman, Foreign Institute Program, Owl Society, Junior Men's Honor Society, Alpha Kappa Xi Business Fraternity, Newman Club, and UP Campaign Chairman.
He has also traveled extensively. As a senior in high school, he was a foreign exchange student spending the fall and winter of 1961 in Innsbrock, Austria. He also went to summer school in Germany in 1962.
Stewart said his interest in politics began the summer before his senior year in high school when he was elected Governor of Boy's State.
"When I came to KU I wanted to keeey my participation up so I ran for Freshman Class President," he said.
"You know that many people say guys who are running for these campus offices are self centered and conceited." Stewart went on to say, "but when a person is trying to influence people, he has to sell himself."
Stewart begins his actual campaigning this fall when he will run for a fraternity seat on the ASC.
As for running for student body president in the spring, Bob had this to say:
"Right now all my attention will be focused on getting that ASC seat. As for the spring elections, I will of course leave the Party's choice up to the members. I will only say that I will help in the best way I can. Whether I should be a candidate or not is too early to tell."
10
You've Never Known Such Comfort
And at such a modest cost . . .
One or Two Bedrooms $75 and $85
"Representing Far Places" will be the subject of his reading and commentary on his own poetry, which has been published in Atlantic Monthly, Harper's, and Nation magazines and several poetry anthologies.
Mr. William Stafford, winner of the 1963 National Book Award for Poetry for his book "Traveling Through the Dark," will speak at 3:30, October 23, in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Actor Disavows "Eve"
Edwards, however, told me that they would pick it up and they obviously have . . . they're really enjoying themselves."
These units have been newly
disposals, etc.
All Units Air-Conditioned
A KU graduate, Stafford has been associate professor of English at Lewis and Clark College in Portland, Oregon, since 1948. He received his Ph.D. from the State University of Iowa.
decorated — with new draps, carpets
Provincial Furniture Available
Prof. and Mrs. Edwards came dressed for the evening's activities. Prof. Edwards wore a western shirt and trousers, a string tie and cowboy boots. Mrs. Edward wore a red and white checked dress.
DURING intermissions, the club members gathered in groups and discussed the instruction which Prof. Edwards was giving them.
Poetry Prize Winner To Speak Here Oct.23
Karl Edwards, professor of education, assisted by his wife, instructed the club members in the fundamentals of square dancing. Some members of the group seemed nervous about the prospect of learning the strange dance. Prof. Edwards proceeded slowly in his instruction, however, and put the unsure members of the group at case.
Prof. Edwards said he and his wife have been square dancing for several years. He has recently started to "call" dances himself. He frequently calls dances for various groups on the campus and around Lawrence.
LEARN TO BOX!!
Few of the club members had ever done any dancing of this type before but under the direction of an experienced teacher, they were soon enjoying themselves doing the traditional folk dance of the American West.
SOON, THE steps and movements of the dance began to come naturally, and laughter began to ring out in the room. Prof. Edwards acted as the dance "caller" as well as dance instructor.
PARK PLAZA SOUTH
Be a master in the art of self-defense.
Expert trainers' secrets can be yours!
No equipment needed. Form a campus
boxing club among your friends for
fun, self-confidence and real play.
Learn less lessons one dollar. Send to: Physical
Arts Gym, 363 Clinton Street, Hempstead,
Long Island, New York.
During an intermission, Rab Malik. Pakistan graduate student and president of the club said, "I was afraid before that the club members might not be able to do the dance. Prof.
LONDON—(UPI)—British movie star Stanley Baker said he had asked that his name be removed from all publicity for the movie, "Eve," because the finished film "doesn't make sense."
Baker said his co-star, French actress Jeanne Moreau, and American director Joey Losey also had sent a "strongly worded request" to producer Raymond Hakim asking that their names be removed.
Day or Night
1912 W. 25th
Ph. VI 2-3416
About 150 members of the International Club attended an evening of square dancing Saturday night in the Kansas Union.
International Club Members Learn American Square Dance
"I'm having
clothes
cleaned at
all my
Independent
Laundry."
For the best in cleaning and laundering services, it's
- Independent Drive-In 900 Miss.
- Independent Downtown Plant 740 Vt.
Lion
Independent
LAUNDRY AND
DRY CLEANERS
K
I
—Photo by Dwight Egbert
HOSTILE MACHINE—This warlike German import apparently has a mind of its own. It hopped the curb of the parking lot in back of Flint Hall, charged down the hill and attacked the KU greenhouse. The battle was a draw. Ronald Edwards, N. Kansas City, Mo., sophomore and the car's owner, said he didn't know what prompted the vehicle's action. It was unoccupied at the time.
Blood, SLC Items to be On Council Agenda
Blood will flow freely prior to tonight's meeting of the All Student Council, but it will be for the interest of charity, not because of political convictions.
national convict Nineteen ASC members were to donate a pint of blood this afternoon at Lawrence Memorial Hospital to begin a blood donation drive by the Council's Health Committee.
LANCE Hearn Don Nelson, Clay Center junior and chairman of the subcommittee in charge of the drive, said last night he is "happy to see ASC members taking the lead."
"WE THINK students will respond better if they see that the ASC is backing the project," said Nelson.
Nelson said the Health Committee will schedule donations every two weeks until January. Theta Chi fraternity will donate blood Nov. 5 and either Joseph R. Pearson or Templin Hall Nov. 19.
Memorial scholarship funds to honor four men who died Saturday in a plane crash at Norman, Okla. are being started by their survivors to aid KU students.
Funds Honor Colby Dead
Two of the victims, John W. Wolfe Jr., 30, and J. O. (Joe) Gunnels, 77, were KU graduates. The other two were Jefferson D. Young, 40, and his son, Keane Young, 15.
All were from Colby and were on their way to the KU-Oklahoma football game.
A memorial for Wolfe, who was an assistant KU basketball coach before becoming Colby High School basketball coach in 1959, will be used to help KU students on the Lawrence campus.
A memorial will be organized in Gunnels' name for medical research at the KU Medical Center. Gunnels was a former state senator.
A "combined memorial for educational purposes" will be formed in the names of Young, an area distributor for Phillips Petroleum Co. and his son.
Contributions may be sent to the two banks at Colby or to radio station KXXX, Colby.
Beginning early next year, the Douglas County Blood Center will send a mobile unit on campus to accept donations, Nelson said.
The chief topic of discussion at the ASC meeting proper promises to be over the Student Liaison Committee.
Reuben McCormack, Abilene senior and student body president, and Jim Thompson, Hugoton senior and liaison committee chairman, met last night to prepare amendments to the bill which created the committee. McCormack said the amendments will probably be ready for presentation to the ASC tonight.
McCORNACK AND Thompson had earlier disagreed over the scope of the new committee, with McCornack saying the group over-stepped its bounds in announcing an investigation of the student health service and traffic control policy.
"I want to voice opinions on what we as a committee wanted to do or neglected to do, why the problem over the committee arose and if these problems are not manifested in the council as a whole." Miss Conner said.
A member of the liaison committee. Peggy Conner, Wichita senior, said last night she would like to hear a discussion by council members on the group.
In another ASC development, John Stuckey, Pittsburgh senior and ASC chairman, said the council has asked the University for an additional appropriation.
"MORE ORGANIZATIONS applied than expected and they asked for more money than expected," Stuckey said.
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe, who must approve any addition to the council's operating funds, will not return to Lawrence from a New York meeting until early next week. Stuckey said.
The ASC has been allotted $7,150 by the University from student activity fees.
The ASC will consider its budget at a special meeting next Tuesday. Charles Portwood, Shawnee Mission senior and ASC treasurer, said he hopes the Budget Committee's recommendations can be given to council members prior to the meeting.
Daily hansan
61st Year, No.28
Tuesday, Oct. 22, 1963
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Vietnamese Special Troops To Be Cut From U.S. Aid
But When the Buddhist opposition to the Ngo family reached crisis proportions last summer, the special forces troops were used on Nuh's orders to raid the Buddhist pagodas and arrest religious leaders.
The senior class will launch preparation for Senior Day with a coffee at 9:30-11:30 a.m. tomorrow in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
The Senior Queen will be elected at the coffee. Seniors are urged to wear their sweatshirts.
SINCE THEN, Nhu has kept almost all the special forces troops in and around Saigon, presumably to prevent demonstrations or any attempted coup.
SAIGON, South Viet Nam, —UP] The United States has informed President Ngo Dinh Diem's government that the 2,000 Vietnamese special forces troops, used in the crackdown on the Buddhists, will be cut off from their $3 million annual U.S. allowance until they return to combat.
Reliable sources said U. S. officials told special forces commander Col. Le Quang Tung that his units, originally trained to fight the Communists, will receive no pay or supplies from the United States as long as they remain around Saigon as security troops for the regime.
THE ACTION was expected to anger Diem and his brother and political adviser, Ngo Dinh Nuu, who is believed to run the special forces through Tung.
Tung's six battalions of troops were formed about two years ago with the help of the U. S. Central Intelligence Agency, the sources said. Their purpose was to infiltrate Communist North Viet Nam and neutral Laos, where Viet Cong guerrillas were entering South Viet Nam, and to work with mountain tribesmen in the guerrilla-infested central highlands.
Senior Coffee
The sources said the CIA made "under the table" payments of $250,000 a month to Tung for upkeep of the forces, which also received U. S. communications, transportation, and supply support.
Seniors will be excused from classes to attend the coffee.
The sources said some CIA and other U. S. agency officials opposed giving Tung the September payment a few days after the raids on the pagodas. They felt continued payments would link the United States to measures against the Buddhists. The October payment was delayed.
The sources said the decision to cut off payments was made in Washington.
The cutoff was not expected to get the troops back into the war against the guerrillas immediately. Such a sudden move would weaken Diem's security setup at a time of great unrest.
BUT IT DID make it clear that the United States considers the enemy here the Communist guerrillas, not the Vietnamese Buddhists.
The sources said Tung was told both funds and support would be restored when the special forces are
returned to combat duty or American-approved combat training.
They said he was warned that even after his troops return to the guerrilla war, he will have to inform his American counterparts in advance of where and why any units are being shifted.
Funds will be determined by what proportion of his troops are in combat or combat training, the sources said.
THE SOURCES said Nhu probably will find other means of paying Tung's troops, but they believe the political and psychological effect will be important in any case.
The Ngo family is expected to interpret the cutoff as a personal affront, they said, and may become angry enough to take retaliation steps. They did not elaborate on what form such retaliation might take.
Hurricane Ginny Still Battering East Coast
CAPE HATTERAS. N. C. — (UPI) — Hurricane Ginny drifted sluggishly off the North Carolina coast today battering a disabled Navy ship with its 80-mile-per-hour winds and causing beach erosion as far north as New Jersey.
"Ginny appears to be drifting slowly towards the south or southwest," the Washington weather bureau said in an 8 a.m. EST advisory which placed the storm about 165 miles southeast of Cape Hatteras.
This was roughly the same position the hurricane, seventh of the season, had held since Sunday night when it sprang up as a menace to the Eastern coast of the United States.
A TURN to the north was indicated for tonight, the weather bureau said.
"Rough seas and heavy pounding surf will cause erosion to continue along the outer beaches of North Carolina to New Jersey," the weather bureau said.
Two rescue vessels reached the
decommissioned Navy destroyer escort Fogg, heaving on 40-foot swells, at about 9 o'clock last night to end a two-day air-sea search for the drifting vessel and its 10-man caretaker crew.
THE FOGG was enroute to a mothball fleet in Texas when its tow line snapped and it drifted near the center of the hurricane. It was located off Point Lookout, N.C., to the south of the turbulent center of the storm which sent gale winds 450 miles to the north and 170 miles in other directions.
The Fogg's crew blinked out a signal saying "everything's okay" and "watertight integrity is good." Assisting ships stood by to try to take her in tow when the heavy seas subsided.
WEATHER
Tomorrow's high is expected to reach 85 after a low tonight of about 60. No rain is forecast for Wednesday. Fair weather is to continue this afternoon.
MARK TWAIN
WHICH ONE??—The senior class will select one of these coeds Wednesday as their Senior Queen and she will be crowned during half-time at the Oklahoma State-KU football game. The Queen will reign as official hostess for the class for the remainder of the year. Candidates are: front row, left to right, Barbara Higginbottom, Sharon
Nusser, Susan Schraeder, Sandra McHardy and Judith Waterman. Second row, Judy Strafer, Loretta Marcoux, Kay Cash and Scottie Ragsdale. Third row, Carol Tholstrup, Lesley Hagood, Rosalina Young and Linda Malson. Fourth row, Ruth Bramble, Charlene Kay Arnold, Carolyn Hines, Suzanne Fisher and Mary Lynn Cooper.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Oct. 22, 1963
Bug to the Light
I, for one, had hoped South Vietnam's Madame Ngo Dinh Nhu would be able to visit the University of Kansas.
Not that she would have said anything of earth-shaking importance, but, since we're spending about $10 million a week to keep her brother-in-law's government from collapsing, it would have been interesting to hear her apologize (or whatever she calls it) for having interfered so deeply in affairs of state in that Southeast Asian bastion of enforced democracy when she had no business getting her dainty fingers into the political pie.
No, she's not likely to sound apologetic, but I believe she is coming to the United States to try to impress away as well as she can the adverse image most Americans have whenever her name is mentioned.
Madame Nhu is not happy about the idea.
SHE RECENTLY explained that for the next few weeks she will be like "the dragonfly of the Vietnamese song. When it's happy, it stays; when it's unhappy, it flies away."
This is not the first time the talkative oriental beauty has been sent flitting.
In 1954 her family shipped her to a convent in Hong Kong to keep her quiet lest she upset their plans to gain power through conciliation with rival forces. Madame Nhu had been urging a get-tough showdown.
And it wasn't so many weeks ago that the U.S. ambassador to South Vietnam, Henry Cabot Lodge, diplomatically suggested to President Diem that his brother, supposedly the country's chief of secret police, and fiery wife leave the country until the crisis in Saigon was over and a fresh understanding between the government and the population established.
Diem flatly rejected that suggestion. Whether a one-woman face-saving excursion across the world to anywhere but South Vietnam was a compromise, one can only guess.
THE BASIC PROBLEM which inspired this diplomatic maneuvering is relatively simple. Most observers agree that South Vietnam has been saddled with a national leader who is unpopular and whose family is detested.
When the Buddhist trouble erupted into flaming personal sacrifices, President Diem refused a policy of moderation and followed his brother's advice: martial law and news suppression. He echoed Madame Nhu in labeling the self-immolation of a Buddhist monk "a murder." Then the Vietnamese students began to riot and government troops arrested thousands of boys and girls.
One doesn't need slanting eyebrows to imagine the reactions of the native population to such injustices as these.
As one interviewer put it, "The Ngo Dinhs are simply despots. Madame Nhu holds no official position other than of member of the rubber-stamp national assembly. Yet she has had far more power than any cabinet minister, and in some ways more than Diem himself.
"If (the ruling family) had sat down to work out ways and means of depriving themselves of popular support, they could scarcely have planned better."
Madame Nhu upset the traditional Vietnamese family pattern with a measure she championed through the national assembly banning everything from dancing to polygamy and divorce.
OF COURSE, IT is possible that conditions today may be improving both domestically and militarily.
Secretary of Defense McNamara returned from his recent tour of the battlefront predicting the American involvement in South Vietnam's anti-Communist guerrilla war would be ended by December, 1965.
But, he also said; "It is entirely possible that the Diem government has alienated an important element in the population; unless the government and population can work together in a unified effort . . . the Communists won't be defeated."
This places the blame for any possible failure squarely on the shoulders of the ruling family; and, should the puppet get out of hand, the U.S. scissors will be ready to begin snipping the economic strings.
In the meantime, however, our government has chosen to live with the entanglement that already has cost us some 125 American lives, as well as billions of dollars.
SO, WHILE McNamara's dust settles in South Vietnam, a group from the House Foreign Affairs Committee and a U.N. fact-finding team go to stir up more. And Madame Ngo Dinh Nhu and her 17-year-old daughter come here.
In her own words, her trip "is a sincere effort to determine if freedom of expression is a reality in America."
With some 25 uncensored speaking engagements already planned, I hope this female "dragonfly" will be at least mildly sung by the fascinating flame that is American democracy in action.
— Larry Schmidt
Editor:
Poor Secger
In our years here we have become immune to most of the consistent inaccuracies in the University Daily Kansan. We were not, therefore, surprised when you rose to your usual standards in appraising the Hootenanny performance and the accompanying "protest" by campus folk song devotees. However, we do wish that you would do the honor to Mr. Pete Seeger of spelling his name correctly the next time his name might appear in your distinguished paper.
John Wahl
Mary Pat John
Tim Miller
Ron Jones
Marty Knight
R. J. Smith
The People Say...
Questionable Court Editor:
I gather that the meeting held by the student court to discuss my letter of criticism (UDK, Oct. 18) was in vain, as they could do little more than become abusive, calling my comments "ridiculous." Their other responses indicate that they did not fully understand my letter.
My main point was that the court interpreted the laws too rigidly, as if they were absolute and unquestionable (nowhere in my letter do I suggest that the laws be changed, as the chief justice seemed to think). The student court apparently forgets that as the very foundation of the judicial system
is the premise that circumstances of a particular case may make a given law of questionable application.
The student court, in their zeal to play like real lawyers and judges, also forgets that they are operating a court of appeal in the case of traffic tickets, not a trial court. Only a tiny fraction of those issued traffic tickets appear before the court. This small group of people have reason to feel that there are circumstances which made the issuance of a ticket unjust. One fellow, for example, was told by a faculty member that he could park in a zoned section close to Allen Field House because of a class being held there; the faculty member would take care of it if a ticket should be issued. When the student went to have the ticket he received cancelled, he was told he would have to appeal, so he brought it before the student court. The court ruled against the appeal. The student had to pay the fine. My question is, aren't these circumstances in which the student should have his fine suspended? The court thinks otherwise. The rule book says No Parking in zone so-and-so. The student parked there. Therefore he must pay a fine!
A recent graduate of the law school suggested that the court may be afraid to set precedents, or perhaps they have no power to suspend sentence in the case where the law is broken but there are mitigating circumstances. If the court is concerned about setting
precedents and thus tends to be too strict, then it becomes clear that the court is operated as an end in itself, with the interests of the appellants relegated to a secondary level. If the court is not empowered to suspend fines, then its ostensible function as a court of justice is pure fiction.
Lastly, the student court would disclaim any "correlation" to the law students that sit outside. In my last letter I mentioned that a string had been rigged across the sidewalk, apparently designed to harrass passing women students. When I walked by one day last semester, one end of that string was being operated by the chief justice of the student court! No court in the country exists—or could exist—in which the members sit on the steps of the courthouse hooting, hawking, taunting or lifting the skirts of passing wives, girl friends, and other women.
Stephen Goldarb
San Diego, Calif.
graduate student
Daily Hansan
111 Flint Hall
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904,
published weekly 1936.
UUniversity 4-3646, newsroom
UUniversity 4-3198, business office
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Mike Miller Managing Editor EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Blaine King Editorial Editor
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Bob Brooks Business Manager
EXECUTIVE AGENCIES
STAFF MEMBERS
U.S. CONGRESSMEN AND SENATORS
ETHICS INVESTIGATIONS
CONFLICTS OF INTEREST
©1963 HERBLOCK
"Down, Boy—Not That One—Down, You Dumb Mutt"
Could Be We Need The Mather Approach
This is the scene: Time is running out on the scoreboard. The Jayhawks have momentum on an offensive thrust that has carried them to within a few yards of a touchdown which could win the game. Jack Mitchell sends his ace place-kicker into the game.
The kick is up—one of the most miserable efforts football has ever seen. KU fails to score and another victory goes down the drain.
After the game Mitchell discussed his decision to go for the field goal. "I'm really sick," he said. "I'll live with that decision for a long time. . . If the line of scrimmage was inside the one, it was a poor decision. . . I'm not defending the decision, it was obviously the wrong one."
Sound familiar? Well, it's not the recent KU-ISU contest. It's the KU-OU game of 1960.
THE JAYHAWKS failed to win that one when John Suder's field-goal attempt somehow managed to go straight up, from the one-and-a-half yard-line.
The Jayhawk mentor went on to say, "Under pressure during the critical period of the ball game, we just don't perform." He explained the team's strange performance by saying, "A nervous mother has nervous children." He said the boys had better get used to him because he wasn't going to change.
These could be standard Mitchell statements for almost every KU loss.
Following the Iowa State fiasco, Mitchell said. "The biggest mistake in the game probably was mine after we intercepted that pass in the fourth quarter and had the ball on Iowa State's 38."
Jack takes the rap again. Big deal
If he's covering up for the inabilities of his team, he has no one to blame but himself—he recruits the players. If he's really personally responsible, what's the matter with him?
Of course, two games in a four-year span don't tell the whole story. Mitchell has a winning record. His teams have packed fans into Memorial Stadium in record numbers. These facts speak for themselves.
The question is, why do KU teams with consistently fine material, players who go on to make names for themselves in the pro ranks, fail to do better in the clutch? Why can't Mitchell get more out of his material?
The UDK sports editor pessimistically, yet probably realistically, asserts the Jayhawks will have trouble winning half their games this year.
Isn't there anything Mitchell can do to avoid a losing season? Perhaps not, but I'd like to suggest he try the Chuck Mather method.
Mather was the KU coach before Mitchell. His team wasn't doing well at all, and he announced at mid-season that he was quitting at the end of the year. Guess what? Yep, the team perked right up and won four straight games.
Give it some thought, coach.
Ralph Gage
Tuesday, Oct. 22, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 3
'Absolutely Everything Lectures Start Tonight
"Keeping Up With Everything" will be the topic of a panel discussion today in the first of the Philosophical Bases of Absolutely Everything Lecture series.
The SUA-sponsored discussion will be at 7:30 p.m. in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
THE MEMBERS of the panel discussion will be Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism; Eldon J. Fields, professor of political science; W. Eugene George, professor of architecture; Francis Heller, associate dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
EACH MEMBER of the panel will give a four- or five-minute talk on how they keep up on the new developments in their particular fields.
Earl S. Huyser, associate professor of chemistry; Charles Landesman, associate professor of philosophy; Stuart Levine, assistant professor of English; William R. Reardon, professor of speech and drama; Stanley Shumway, assistant professor of organ and theory, and Robert J. Squier, assistant professor of anthropology.
After the talks, Dean Heller will moderate a discussion among panel members on how individuals might keep track of developments outside
David White, Prairie Village senior and producer of the 1964 Rock Chalk Revue, said nine teams have entered themes for the review.
Rock Chalk Production To Include 9 Teams
The main theme for the show is "Lacerated Legends." The following living groups have entered with these script ideas:
Sigma Chi-Gamma Phi Beta, Vampires; Templin-Lewis, Hansel and Gretel; Phi Delta Theta-Kappa Alpha Theta, King Arthur's Court; Alpha Tau Omega-Chi Omega, Robin Hood; Delta Upsilon-Kappa Kappa Gamma, Snow White; Battenfeld-Hashinger, Trojan Wars; Kappa Sigma-Delta Gamma, Faust Legend; Phi Kappa Psi-Delta Delta Delta, Vikings, and Ellsworth-Carruth-O'Leary, Pandora.
their fields.
Don Igelsrud, Minneapolis, Minn. senior and chairman of the series, presented his idea to SUA because he thought there was little correlation between classroom subject matter and the problems faced by students.
THE MAIN PURPOSE of the program is "to acquaint people with the human side of the professions so that one can have an understanding of why people study what they do." Igelsrud said.
The series will also try to repeat outstanding lectures or parts of lectures.
He also said he hoped the series would facilitate discussions about problems with which students and citizens are faced.
WEYMOUTH, England — (UPI) — Anthony Pettiford, 22, was fine $5.60 yesterday for cutting up his girl friend's skirt with a knife—while she was wearing it—because he thought the skirt was indecent."
Iglersud also said the series would attempt to summarize thought in certain areas which are of wide interest to the students. ___
Skirt-cutter Gets Fine
"I cut her skirt," he said, "simply to establish the right of the individual to wear what she pleases within reason."
Petitions and ASC Nomination Petitions Are Available
FRESHMAN CLASS OFFICERS
NOW
in the ASC Office or from Mike Miner, ASC Elections Chairman
Due Friday at 5:00 p.m.
The Classical Film Series
presents
"GREED"
a film of uncompromising realism directed by Erich von Stroheim in 1924 from a novel by Frank Norris
Wednesday, October 23
Fraser Theater - 7:00 p.m.
Admission 60c
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds
SENIOR COFFEE
UNION BALLROOM Wednesday, October 23 9:30 until 11:30 a.m.
(Seniors are excused from 9:30 and 10:30 classes)
- FREE REFRESHMENT
- SENIOR QUEEN ELECTION
- COMMITTEE REPORTS ON SENIOR CLASS FUNCTIONS
- REMAINDER OF SWEATSHIRTS AND PINS GIVEN OUT
- PRACTICE SENIOR YELL FOR
SENIOR DAY-OCTOBER 26
OKLAHOMA STATE GAME (Led by ULTRA-CLASSY Senior Cheerleaders)
Present Senior ID's At Door
THOSE WITHOUT ID'S...25c
Page 4
University Daily Kansan Tuesday, Oct. 22, 1963
'Third Party' SPU Judges US, Soviet Positions
By Rick Mabbutt
The Student Peace Union (SPU) is essentially in a third camp position. Laird Wilcox, a former regional coordinator for SPU and now a student at KU, said.
The SPU stands back and evaluates both the Soviet and American positions in the area of armaments since we feel their actions have not been in the best interests of peace and the people of the world, he said.
Saturday the group pickedet the area convention of the Arnold Air Society, the honor society of Air Force ROTC, and its auxiliary branch, the Angel Flight.
"ARMED FORCE is not the way to peace." Wilcox said.
The purpose of the picketing was to "bring the issues to the forefront here at the University of Kansas.
"The SPU" he said, "is an organization of young people who believe that neither war nor the threat of war can any longer be successfully used to settle international disputes and that neither human freedom nor the human race can long survive in a world committed to militarism."
Predictably, Wilcox said the nuclear test-ban treaty is "a very good step" toward easing world tensions and the threat of nuclear war.
He also expressed approval of the American-Russian wheat purchase negotiated within the past several weeks as being another step toward understanding the pace.
here is a book
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SCIENCE
AND HEALTH
with
Key to the
Scriptures
by
Mary B. Chase
SCIENCE AND HEALTH
with
Key to the
Scriptures
by
Mary Bates
Athens Edition 103
Like most of us, you probably feel pressured at times with the demands made on you for original thinking. — for fresh ideas that will lift your work above the commonplace. Through the study of this book, Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy, we are learning how to turn to God for the intelligent ideas we need. You can do this, too.
We invite you to come to our meetings and to hear how we are working out our problems through applying the truths of Christian Science.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE
ORGANIZATION
UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Lawrence
Meeting time: 7:30 p.m. Thursdays
Meeting place: Donforth Chapel
Science and 12th is available at all
Christian Science Reading Rooms and at many
college bookstores. Paperback Edition $1.95.
"He (Goldwater) is a threat to world peace in terms of his foreign policy. He believes in a 'tough' line policy towards the Communist nations and this is not the way to peace." Wilcox said.
Wilcox pointed out that a surge of peace movement activity developed during 1961 when the U.S. and Russia resumed nuclear testing in the atmosphere, but recent developments have eased anxieties and as a result many of the peace movements have slowed down.
Three years ago a small group of students at the University of Chicago began the Student Peace Union (SPI).
"HOWEVER, if Barry Goldwater runs for the presidency and wins there will be an upsurge of the peace movement," he said.
The SPU now claims 200 chapters
and 4,000 members, with thousands more in affiliated groups. These affiliated groups range from local campus clubs to other national peace organizations. High school chapters also participate in the activities of the SPU, Wilcox said.
Local chapters elect delegates to the national convention which is held each summer. The National Council, elected by the local delegates, serves as an interim governing body of the group. However, local groups are under no obligation to follow the policy of the national or regional bodies as long as they adhere to the SPU statement of purpose, he said.
TO PARTICIPATE in effective action the SPU believes that a knowledge of the issues involved is necessary. To achieve this goal the group
organizes or sponsors debates and lectures; conducts polls and surveys about aspects of nuclear war, and publishes literature on the findings of the polls and surveys.
In addition, Wilcox said, to these activities the group acts in four other general areas:
- Cultural exchanges, or exchanges of ideas and solutions to problems of world peace.
- Co-sponsorship of national peace research centers which coordinate the peace movements of the many peace groups.
THE SPU ON this campus is two years old. In that time they have participated in several "peace marches" both on campus and in downtown Lawrence. These marches protested the resumption of nuclear testing by the U.S. The local group also sponsored the appearance of Peter Allen, field secretary for the SPU, at KU last spring.
- Participation in the integration movement in the U.S. This activity includes helping in voter registration of Negroes in the South and helping to organize and to participate in rallies and demonstrations sponsored by groups such as the NAACP.
- Declared stands against the House Committee on un-American Activities (HUAC) and support of the American Civil Liberties Union.
Officers of the KU Student Peace Union are Carl Bangs, Prairie Village sophomore, president: Willem Helms, Rotterdam, The Netherlands sophomore, vice-president, and James Masters, Kansas City junior, secretary-trea-uer.
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results
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YOU have heard us mention Miss Revera Afflerbach who has been Forelady here at Eagle Shirts since 1918. It is not often that one sees such allegiance, and we appreciate it. Also, she has been very nice to allow us to bandy her name about in ads, books, etc. So we would like to proclaim something to honor her and also give us another excuse to bandy her name: The Afflerbach Golden Jubilee Year. Now, ordinarily this wouldn't occur until 1968, but why wait until the last moment? Besides, we have already struck a medal (see above). The cloth in the shirt upon which the medal is hanging is also named after her: Afflerbach Cloth. It is made in Switzerland to her specifications, which are $20\%$ wool and $80\%$ cotton. Her reasoning is interesting. She wanted enough wool to make it very soft, but enough cotton to make it light and washable. Any more wool than that and it's not a shirt so much as a nice, if bulky, garment for woodchopping or other hearty activities. Additionally, it is mothproof; if for no other reason than that no moth would be willing to go to all that work for such scant nourishment. Afflerbach Cloth is the moth equivalent of pomegranates. The Afflerbach Jubilee Shirt comes, complete with medal as shown, in solid colors (flame red, midnight navy, loden green, winter white, smoke blue) at about $13.00; and tartans, district checks and blazer stripes at about $14.00, wherever Eagle Shirts are sold. If you're not sure where that is in your town, write Miss Afflerbach, Eagle Shirtmakers, Quakertown, Pa. It might be nice if you said congratulations.
Eagle Shirts are available at Woolf Brothers Varsity Shop in Kansas City
Page 5
Castro Requests U.S. To Remove Embargo
HAVANA — (UPI)— Premier Fidel Castro, facing a staggering rebuilding job because of hurricane Flora's devastation, asked the United States last night to lift its economic embargo against Cuba immediately.
The bearded Cuban leader made the request in the midst of a three-hour Havana radio and television speech. After disclosing that "starvation killed as many persons as floods" following the hurricane, Castro said he did not want American help.
"WHAT WE ASK for is an end of the economic blockade of our country, especially at this moment," he said.
"We don't want Yankee imperialism aid nor do we need it. What we want is that they halt their hypocritical policy and their attacks. That's why the Cuban people did the right thing in rejecting their hypocritical aid."
Officials Say No To Stadium Bell
The Tau Kappa Epsilon bell which has for several seasons been on the football field at Memorial Stadium to ring out touchdowns and extrapoints will not be placed on the field this season, Arthur C. Lonborg, athletic director, said.
Lonbong said the decision was made before the first football game at a meeting of the KU and Lawrence police, the highway patrol, Keith Lawton, vice-chancellor in charge of operations, and himself.
"It's for security reasons," he said. The decision came as a result of a near riot over the bell at the last Nebraska-KU football game.
In their efforts to get the bell on the field, the TKEs have talked to Lonborg, Laurence Woodruff, dean of students; Lawton; and Joseph G. Skillman, chief of the Campus Police; Rod Lennard, Ottawa senior and TKE president said.
But a proposal to put the bell in front of the student section where the TKE's thought it would be less likely to cause trouble was also turned down. Lennard said.
Castro's appeal came as the United States was reportedly stepping up pressure on free world nations to restrict shipping to Cuba.
Reviewing Flora's devastation among some three million persons—half of Cuba's population—in the eastern half of the island, Castro suggested the United States was partly to blame for "refusing" to allow hurricane hunter planes to fly over Cuba.
CUBA'S KNOWN death toll from Flora is 1,157 and all but 31 deaths were in Oriente Province, Castro said. "But of course the actual toll is even greater because many persons are missing," he added.
The flood waters and rains unleashed by the hurricane were so terrible that "it was as if the Amazon River had engulfed Oriente," he said.
But Castro bragged that he did not "run to Guantanamo Naval Base and ask the Americans for help." A Cuban "bourgeois capitalist regime" would have done that, he said, "and then the politicians would have stolen all the relief money."
Castro announced sugar rationing—only six pounds per month per person—must prevail because of Flora and a new five-cent tax will be added to cigarettes and beer. Meat prices are also being increased, he said.
HE SAID CUBA must raise 200 million pesos to cover hurricane damage and better flood control construction.
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Three Men Fined For Stealing Sign
University Daily Kansan
Three Ellsworth Hall residents were fined $25 each yesterday by William Pendleton, Lawrence police court judge, for removing a "no parking" sign from 1516 Crescent Road. The men are John T. Katzenberger, 18, Wilmington, Dela, freshman; Raymond H. Dahlberg, 17, Almhurst Ill., freshman, and Benno Lederer, 18, Queens, N.Y., freshman.
They were charged with removing and carrying away," a misdemeanor.
The annual Kansas Editors' Day, sponsored by the William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information, will be held Saturday, featuring "Two Kansas Journals in Africa."
Editors' Day Set for Saturday
Burton W. Marvin, dean of the School of Journalism, and John McCormally, editor of the Hutchinson News, will be the featured speakers of the program, which begins at 10:30 p.m. in 205 Flint Hall.
The two men were part of a four-man team of American journalists
which conducted three two-week workshops for African journalists in Africa this summer.
The announcement of the election of a Kansas editor to the Kansas Newspaper Hall of Fame will follow the program.
The editors will be the guests of Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe for a buffet luncheon at 11:45 a.m. in the Kansas Union Ballroom.
The day's activities will conclude at the KU-Oklahoma State football game in the afternoon.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Oct. 22, 1963
Rushing Battle Grows Tighter
That two-way race for the Big Eight Conference rushing lead between Iowa State's Tom Vaughn and Kansas' Gale Sayers is even closer, there's a five-way scramble for total offense honors and a new leader has emerged in passing as Big Eight foot-ball hit the midway mark this past week.
Conference football statistics released today show Vaughn and Sayers a scant nine yards apart in individual rushing with the Cyclone fullback ahead, 460 to 451 yards. Their performances Saturday were the best among Big Eight runners, Sayers gaining 110 on 16 carries (including a 61-yard touchdown dash) against Oklahoma and Vaughn 96 on 25 in his team's triumph over Colorado.
Vaughn, the Conference's busiest ball-carrier with 97 rushes, has averaged 4.7 per carry and Sayers has averaged 6.1, but the best per-carry production has been by the No. 3 runner in the league, Colorado's Bill Harris.
Harris. Included a 78-yard touchdown run in his 90-yard effort against Iowa State Saturday to run his total to 371 and average to 8.1 in moving ahead of Nebraska's Willie Ross in the Conference rankings. Ross is fourth with 360 and a 6.7 average and his teammate Rudy Johnson is fifth with 310 and a 7.4 standard.
KANSAS STATE senior quarterback Larry Corrigan his 16 of 32 passes for 174 yards against Nebraska to hike his season passing
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total to 460 and post a 92-yard margin over last week's leader, Steve Renko of Kansas, in that department. Renko, however, ran and passed for 102 against Oklahoma to gain the total offense lead from Missouri's Gary Lane with a 494 total—a yard ahead of Corrigan—while Lane dropped to third with 480. Vaughn and Sayers are tied for fourth in total offense with 460 yards.
Corrigan's performance produced the most notable shift in Conference rankings. He moved from fifth to second in total offense with a yard separating him from the top spot in that department and overcame a 48-yard deficit in passing to run his lead there to nearly 100 yards—460 to Renko's 368.
It was his second straight day over the 125-vard mark as he had connected on 15 of 34 for 146 against Missouri the previous week after sitting out most of the Wildcat's conference opener against Colorado with injuries.
Rankin Drug
DAVE LIMERICK of Iowa State is the league's only double leader. Limerick booted a 41-yard field goal—his fourth of the season—caught a touchdown pass and place-kicked two extra points to wrest the scoring leadership from Colorado's Bill Harris with 38 points.
VI 3-5440
1101 Mass.
Bird eating a snake.
The early bird catches the worm WILLIAM CAMDEN
For young men interested in being in business for themselves, with no ceiling on potential earnings, Provident Mutual offers a chance to start now. Our training program for life insurance sales and sales management will begin while you're still a student.
By finding a career while you're still in college, you can get a jump ahead of the competition.
Jack Mitchell. KU's football coach, may hawk copies of a national magazine this week.
We're looking for initiative and imagination, for young men who want to grow with their careers. Stop by or phone our campus office for a talk. Or write for the free booklet, "Interning for the Future"
Mitchell, it must be explained, is one of the nation's severest critics of the present substitution rule. The KU coach recently called it injurious to players and proposed it be scrapped at the mid-season mark.
Col. Earl (Red) Blaik, long-time Army coach, predicted today that colleges would return to two-platoon football in 1964.
Kermit D. Hoffmeier
WRITING IN the current issue of Look Magazine, Blaik declared:
"When the rules committee (of the National Collegiate Athletic Association) meets at Fort Lauderdale, Fla., next January, they will very likely legislate for free substitution. This will open the way to two platoons and the caliber and tempo of play that the college game deserves."
Ex-Coach Predicts Rule Change
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Blaik noted that in the period between 1949 and 1952 when colleges played separate units for offense and defense, this two-platoon football "proved to be the most effective, most exciting and safest football in the history of the college game."
Blaik characterized the present substitution rule as "merely another in a series of complex, ineffectual, tedious compromises."
1722 W. 9th VI 3-5692
IN HIS ARTICLE. Blak based his prediction about the return of the free-substitution rule to college football on three developments:
- A growing conviction among the members of the rules committee that continued opposition to the free-substitution rule in the face of the strong wishes of 75 per cent of the coaches would intensify discontent and antagonism, and almost certainly hurt the game.
- The request of the Ivy League for a free-substitution rule . . . The about-face of the Ivy League will influence faculty people everywhere.
- Increasing realization among coaches that they probably can help their chances of gaining free substitution with the approval of professors by also proposing safe-guards for current ceilings on player recruitment. One of the principal, and invalid, arguments of the anti-platoon group is that the two-platoon game requires more players, more recruiting, more coaches and inflated budgets.
Five of the eight NCAA district representatives on the 18-man rules committee who have been against two platoon football, as listed by Blaik, are:
Norm Daniels of Wesleyan, Rip Engle of Penn State, Abe Martin of
Texas Christian, Fritz Brennecke of Colorado Mines and Tom Hamilton, ex-Navy and Pittsburgh coach and now commissioner of the Athletic Association of Western Universities.
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Page 7
University Daily Kansan
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
ature
FOR SALE
PARKER
ALEXANDR
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Abington Book Shop 1015 $ _{1/2} $ Mass.
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'63 HONDA SUPER HAWK 305ce, 2H.P., 4-speed, electric starter, 2 carbs, dual exhaust, western bars, one month old. 400 miles, must sell. Call Vi 714-820-1028
Great Sea
Entertainment Productions
One 12 string guitar and 6 string
one 12 string new, excellent tone
I 3-4087
10-28
LAWRENCE FIREARMS COMPANY
we're buying weapons,
ammo, Lugers, Mausers, ammy
trades welcome — we also reb利e. 1026
V I-21241 — evenings and
ends.
FREE
7:00
MGA 1600 model Rondster—1600—Just over 16,000 miles. Wire wheels, white tires and heater. White phone interior. Excellent condition. Phone VI 3-8221 today. 10-25
You can own your own clean used mobile home for as low as $200.00 down and $34 per month delivered. Large selection of new and used mobil homes available now.
OBALE HOMES, JOBE
reidence, Kansas. Call VI 3-8846 or
VI 1-2111
New stereo multiflex GE radio and
phone, deluxe model portable with Gar-
nard connectors managed charge-
cut - cut $199.97 (reg. list $275.93) Ray
Stoneback's, 929 Mass. St. 10-23
Electric alarm clock with nite hands!
Special offer $1.99 plus tax to Kansan readers only. You must bring this ad as coupon to Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass.
1952 Cadillac 4-door sedan. Excellent condition. Private owner. See at 19th and Mass. Phone VI 3-1013 Days, VI 3-6506 evenings. 10-23
Tuesday. Oct. 22. 1963
INCOME PROPERTY — large 2 story house near campus divided into apt. units. On purchase, approx $450 per month. Full price is $16,000 including furnishing. ROGERS’ REAL ESTATE CO. Bus. ph. VI 3-0005, W. 14th. Res. ph. VI 3-0023, 0-23
Five room house on Tenn. St. near campus, basement, garage, needs some paint,
BURKE MEMBERS "WORKS" REH. TATE CO. Bus. ph. VI 3-005, Res. ph.
VI 3-2929, W. 7. W.14th. 10-23
Three component Hi-Fi unit. Wrardhalfe Fand filled speaker. 50 watt Sherwood and Dash speaker. Must sacrifice. Changer. Must sacrifice. Call UN 4-3924 Leave number if not in. R.Neeley. 10-22
NEW Royce Union lightweight bike-
from Rocky Mountain to $29.99,
Stoneback's; 929 Mass.
10-23
Underwood portable typewriter. Good
price. Underwood price $25.00. CD.
3845 evenings. 10-26
Over 30 modern pistols, rifles and shot-
guns for sale are available far below wholesale. Thousands of dollars invested in this tison collection. All must be seen now at 824 Ark, or call V15 1110.
Typewriters, new and used portables,
standards, electrics. Olympia, Olivetti.
Royal and Smith Corona portables. Typewriter and adding machine service and rental. Lawrence Typewriter, 730 Mass.
Call VI 3-3644. tf
1957 "98" Oldsmobile convertible; white;
excellent condition; power windows.
radio, seat, brakes. Four nets.
Will take offer. Call: Bill Murdock
I V 2-4282.
Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $425 per copy. Call VI 1-2901 for free delivery. tf
New shipment of Pink typing paper. $50
ream—$ 85 Lawrence Outdoor
1005 Mass
General Psychology study notes. Excel-
torial pages. sections $4. 00 pdf.
Call VI-92-9788.
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outlining of courses in biology classes. Formerly known as the Theta notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50
Sure—Everything in the pet field at Grant's drive in pet center. Where your $$ have more cents. 1218 Conn. VI 3-2021.
ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLEANERS New Electrolux and a limited number of rebuilt, fully guaranteed. All parts available. Equipment picked up for service and delivered. Frank V. Cox. Local Manager - 1904 Barker. Call VI 3-327-7.
Spencer Microscope. Monocular triple
stage. Call VI T-3-5719, 6 to 8:00. 10-23
USED TV'S—we're flooded with trade ins! $15.00, $20.00, $29.95. As is sets, you fix 'em. $5.00 each—Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 10-23
Save on tires! 1,000 tires (snow and regular) at lowest discount prices in Kansas —Ray Stoneback's (Discount tire center)
929 Mass. 10-30
Tape recorders — new compact model,
take it anywhere! Only $24.99—Pay $5.00
per month. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass.
10-23
1958 Corvette Convertible—new motor, good tires, top in excellent condition, 4 wheels, starrel carburators, rack and heater. Reasonable price. Call Brown, VI 7-2102. 10-24
FOR RENT
Dunley. 2 bedrooms. stove, refrigerator.
Lancaster, except electricity paid. Carl VI 3-2281
5 room, entire first floor apartment furnished; utilities paid; off street parking $85.00 per month. 1905 Mass. Call VI 3-6011 or VI 3-0570. 10-23
Spacious 2 room, newly decorated, second floor apartment clean and quiet. Private bath. Near KU. $65.00. Bills paid except electricity. Call VI-2 25393. 10-25
Large room, single or double, near campus, 1215 Oread. Telephone and parking at $3.00, prefer graduate senior. Contact Jack Ashmore. VIII, 10-23, 1215 Oread.
Two bedroom duplex, unfurnished, wall to wall carpeting, fenced yard, large storage and utility room. 2 small children acceptable, no pets. One year lease. $95.0 a month. 1607 W. 22nd Terr. Call VI 2-1028. tf
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
Sure一
all major brands
STUDENTS
TYPING
1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921
LEONARD'S
Everything in the Pet Field
Standard Service
"the best in car care"
706 W. 9th
VI 3-9830
LUBRICATION $1.00
Motor water wheel balancing
MISCELLANEOUS
Drive-In Pet Center
JOE'S BAKERY
Motor tune-ups, wheel balancing
West Side Presoyeronian Church, 6th am
Mass., welcome you to attend Sunday
services at 11 a.m. and Sunday classe
at 9:45 a.m.
10-2
new location at
GRANT'S
FREE—one quart of oil with each oil and filter change
oil and filter change
616 West 9th
BRAKE ADJUSTMENTS ... $.98
PAGE-CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE
PARTY TIME. School house available for private parties, dances, meetings—branded with piano, tables, chairs, freshment room and coolers. V1-743-451-431 Forrest.
1819 W 23rd
25c delivery VI 3-4720
Experienced typist, fast and accurate.
Call Mrs. Hays at VI 2-0057. 10-22
Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter, carbon paper, manual typewriter. VI 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley, 409 West 13th. tt
HELP WANTED
TRANSPORTATION
VI 3-9694
Riders or car pool from Leawood. Prairie
Class 8:30 to 2:30 VI 8-0282 10-22
Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1648.
Dressmaking-alterations, formats and
gowns. Ola Smith. 93%₃ Mastf
VI 3-5283.
New electric typewriter. Reasonable rates for themes, term papers, dissertations, and theses. Mrs. Barta, 1955 Miller Drive, VI 3-6994. tf
OVERSEAS OPPORTUNITIES for qualified people in Rural Development Southeast Asia International Voluntary Services, 1905 N.W. Washington, D.C. 10-25
Thesis Typist, Electric typewriter
English degree. Prairie Village, NI
18
HELP WANTED -Linetype operator, 9 to 3 daily. Must be experienced on newspaper straightmaster. University of Kan-23282, 117 Flint Hall. Phone UNT tt
Experienced typist for theses and term
work. Must have MS in Medical or
Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Miss. VI-3-0588, tt
Need 4 men with cars to work one night each week. Good pay. Contact Tom Dixon, Dixon's Drive-In restaurant. VI 3-7446. 10-28
Prompt, neat and accurate work on wide carriage electric typewriter. Journalism Business and Secretary experience. Charlotte Weber. VI 3-3495. tf
Complete line of soles and heels, lacés,
cosmetics and polishes. Have new merm-
sure coatings, such purses, smoke totes, Burgert's Day. Shoe Service — 1113 Mass. St. 11-1
BUSINESS SERVICES
Efficient and experienced typer would like to do work in home. Prompt and guaranteed work. Call at any time. VI 3-2651. 10-31
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, publications, Electronic Typewriter, Mrs. Eldowney. 2521 Ala. ph. VI 3-8568. tf
MILLIKENS SOS—always first quality
typing on LB M. Carbon ribbon machines.
use tape transcriptions. Office
hours: 7 a.m. to 10 a.m. 422-1011. *Mal*
phone VI 3-5920
WANTED
★ WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT
THE NAME FOR SERVICE
★ BRAVES ADJUSTED AND RELINED
★ STARTER AND
GENERATOR WORK
English or Speech trouble? Certified English and Speech teacher, will tutor at reasonable rate. Also typing. Call VI 3-2873. 10-23
Classes for Pre-school children ages 3. 6. VI 2-1410 for more information. 10-23
Typing: Desertations, theses, manuscripts,
machines; 35 special symbols, carbon ribbon—if desired. Prompt. efficient ser-
vice. If you need prompts or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI3-357-125f
or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI3-357-125f
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
In writing, use standard legal terms. Marsha Glover, VI 3-2577.
Troop 673 Senior Girl Scouts will baby sit for KU games at Lawrence Community Nursery School. 654 Ala. Ages 3 to 8. Phone VI 3-0606. 10-24
Typing: Dissertations theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines. 35 special symbols. Mail resumes to: SS special serviceservice. Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI-1546 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI-3057. tf
9th & Mississippi
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart. 1025 Mass. **if**
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Oct. 22, 1963
Armor, Men Begin Texas-Europe Shift
ABOARD LEAD JET TRANSPORT — (UPI) — The "hell on wheels" division is streaming over a 5,600-mile aerial bridge from Ft. Hood, Tex., to Europe today to show enemy and ally alike how fast the 1963 U.S. Army can rush into action overseas.
The plans for this $20 million project calls for the entire 2nd Armored Division plus 3,000 support troops—10,000 men in all—to fly from Texas air bases in less than 72 hours.
Kick-off for the gigantic effort came when this military version of the 707 jet passenger liner jumped from a Bergstrom Air Force Base runway at Austin with Maj. Gen Edwin H. Burba, division commander, elements of his headquarters and four newsmen aboard.
Scheduled flying time for jet transports is $10^{\frac{1}{2}}$ hours and, for the slowest planes, C124 Globemasters, $31^{\frac{1}{4}}$ hours.
Preparations for the enormous movement were weeks in the making and infinitely detailed.
Everything from making of wills to instructions about avoiding the no-man's land at the Iron Curtain was drilled in the troops, probably half of them are going to Germany for the first time.
For the past two weeks, Ft. Hood, home of the 2nd Armored, bore resemblance to German bases and towns where the troop will spend the next month. German road signs were posted everywhere—like "Einbeinstrasse" for one-way street—and drivers were carefully trained under German traffic regulations.
Troops were drilled on the standard operating procedures of the U.S. 7th Army in Europe under whose jurisdiction they will maneuver. They learned about German-American relations and their legal rights under status of forces agreements. Medical, legal and financial affairs were arranged.
Four hundred men of the division remained at Ft. Hood to care for the division's 300 tanks, 429 armored personnel carriers, 76 howitzers and other heavy equipment. Counterpart equipment is stored in Germany and it is part of the exercise to see how rapidly it can be taken from depots, made ready and rushed into action.
There was a movement over the week-end of 500 2nd Armored men to Germany to inventory the equipment and be ready to feed the thousands of soldiers and airmen streaming in.
House Committee Nears Civil Rights Bill Decision
WASHINGTON,-UPI- The House Judiciary Committee today approached a decision on civil rights.
The 35-member committee scheduled a meeting today to start voting on the stepped-up version of President Kennedy's civil rights bill approved last month by a subcommittee.
It was the second time the committee was supposed to begin nailing down provisions of the controversial bill. On the first occasion last week, committee leaders abruptly cancelled the meeting and went into a series of private strategy talks.
The reason for the first postponement was that the committee is split at least three ways on what kind of civil rights bill should be sent to the house.
THE FIRST GROUP, led by Chairman Emanuel Celler, D-N.Y., and Rep. William McCulloch, R-Ohio, was trying to soften the most controversial provisions of the bill and reach an agreement that would unite both liberal and moderate northern Democrats and Republicans. Estimated strength of the Celler-McCulloch group is about 12 members. Its effort was spearheaded by Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy, who told the committee last week that the subcommittee bill was too tough to pass.
Official Bulletin
Interviews for Oct. 23 (Sign up in 202
Summerfield); Quaker Oats—Sales Managemen-
agement and production management
Business Administration; Liber-
ial Arts grads.
Skelly-Oil—Accounting majors.
Skellery - Account Majors
Washington - Skellery - Finance and Commerce - Graduate Division
TODAY
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910, Stratford Road.
All Student Council, 7 p.m. Sunflower Room. Union. Budget Session.
ROCHESE. (805) 234-7600.
Catholic Inquiry Forms Center, p. 115.
Catholic Student Center, p. 1915.
Stirford School
Western Civ. Discussion, 9 p.m. St.
Lawrence Catholic Student Center, 1915
Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses 6:45 a.m. 5 p.m.
St. Louis Catholic Chapel, 1910 Strat-
road
Timely Topics, 7 p.m. St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center, 1915 Stratford Road. "What Can We Know About God?" Brandon Downey, O.S.B.
**Russian Club**, 7:30 p.m. Jayawhk Room,
election room. Candidates cordially invited.
Campsites cordially invited.
Newman executive meeting, 8:30 p.m.
s. Sheridan College Student Center,
1815 Strassford Road
Le Cercle français se rénumira mercredi le 23 octobre à 16 h. 30 dans la salle 11 de Fraser. M. Gaulpeau fera une causserie sur le Cinema français. Tous ceux cuil s'interressent au français sont cordialement inviots.
15 Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
The second group is led by Reps. Robert Kastenmeier, D-Wis., and John V. Lindsay, R-N.Y., who are fighting to retain the subcommittee bill with only minor changes. This faction may have as many as 15 members, but some of them are believed ready to switch to the Celler-McCulloch axis if the two leaders can come up with a bi-partisan bill.
THE THIRD GROUP is made up of the committee's eight southern members--six Democrats and two Republicans—who oppose the bill from top to bottom. The southerners have the most completely united group and, depending upon their willingness to gamble, have the best strategic position.
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
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According to this publisher, many people do not realize how much they could influence others simply by what they say and how they say it. Whether in business, at social functions, or even in casual conversations with new acquaintances there are ways to make a good impression every time you talk.
To acquaint the readers of this paper with the easy-to-follow rules for developing skill in everyday conversation, the publishers have printed full details of their interesting self-training method in a new book, "Adventures in Conversation," which will be mailed free to anyone who requests it. No obligation. Send your request to: Conversation, 835 Diversey Parkway, Dept. 3247, Chicago 14. Ill. A postcard will do.
To Start Program For Episcopalians
A study program for Episcopalian students will begin next week. The courses will be taught by Father Woodward at the convenience of those students who are interested.
"The purpose of the course is to train college students as Catechists who are qualified to teach confirmation classes in local parishes," explained Father Woodward. "This is a unique program in the life of the American Episcopal church."
The final candidates are Patricia Kendall, Holton senior; Sherry Zillier, Shawnee Mission senior; Priscilla Osborn, Stockton junior; Joyce Neadheriser, Davenport, Ia. senior; Karen Vice, St. John senior; Susan Merrick, Prairie Village junior; Pamela Rice, Wichita senior; Patricia Behen, Kansas City senior; Joan Ashley, Chanute sophomore, and Nancy Edwards, Lawrence sophomore.
Finalists for the 1963 KU Homecoming have been picked The ten girls were selected from a field of 25 candidates.
Homecoming Finalists Announced by Judges
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Interviews will be held on October 28,1963 on the campus. See your placement office now for an appointment
FISHER GOVERNOR COMPANY Marshalltown, Iowa
Manufacturers of Automatic Control Equipment
You've Never Known Such Comfort
And at such a modest cost . . .
One or Two Bedrooms $75 and $85
These units have been newly decorated — with new drapes, carpets disposals, etc.
All Units Air-Conditioned Provincial Furniture Available
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PARK PLAZA SOUTH
Ph. VI 2-3416
1912 W. 25th
Day or Night
SUA Presents the
Philosophical
Bases
Of
Absolutely
E everything
Lectures
This evening's Lecture
"Keeping Up With Everything"
A Panel Discussion With
Dean Francis Heller Moderator
Prof. J. Eldon Fields Political Science
Prof. Elmer F. Beth Journalism
Prof. W. Eugene George Architecture
Prof. Stuart Levine English
Prof. Earl S. Huyser Chemistry
Prof. William R. Reardon Theatre
Prof. Charles Landesman Philosophy
Prof. Stanley Shumway Music
Prof. Robert J. Squire Anthropology
7:30 P.M.
Jayhawk Room Kansas Union
October 22
Daily Hansan
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
61st Year, No. 29
Wednesday, Oct. 23, 1963
ASC Student Liaison Committee Abolished After Month's Work
The All Student Council's Liaison Committee died last night at the request of its chairman exactly one month after it began work.
The ASC voted, 17-6, to abolish the committee after Jim Thompson, Hugoton senior and its former chairman, said it was unnecessary.
Discussion of Thompson's resolution to end the Student Liaison Committee prompted criticism of the ASC committee system and the function of the ASC itself.
REUBEN McCORNACK. Abilene senior and student body president, responded to the criticism by announcing he will appoint a "little Hoover commission" to study the council's committees and to suggest revisions if it finds them necessary.
Principals in the disagreement over the scope of the committee were Thompson, who wanted it to try to solve problems affecting students on the campus, and McCornack, who felt the committee should have confined its activities to informing off-campus governmental bodies of student feeling.
The liaison committee was enveloped in controversy almost since its first meeting last month.
den't seeing.
Thompson—who resigned from the committee yesterday with three other members—said last night he now agrees with McCornack's concept.
ep.
"But if McCormack and the chancellor feel we should work off campus on advice of the ASC only and on advice of the chancellor, then I don't think that what we were trying to do can be done in this framework," he said. "That is why most of us resigned.
"THE POINT OF our resigning is not that we are mad about what has been said of us. We have decided that the things we were doing were outside the scope of our committee."
In asking that the ASC abolish the liaison committee, Thompson said its functions would be "few and far between" and could be handled by a special committee.
Others who resigned were Larry
Bast, Topeka sophomore; Peggy Conner, Wichita junior, and John Sapp, Havana, Ill., sophomore.
BAST SAID THE committee had become "practically a do-nothing committee."
"I believe we have enough of these already." Bast said. "The liaison committee has tried to work in the interest of students, but we have been rebuffed in our attempts to do this. We have been reduced to messenger boys between the University and the city of Lawrence."
A member of the committee who did not resign asked that the ASC not vote it out of existence.
"Our scope is different than what it was two weeks ago, but I think it till has a function," said Mike Miner, Lawrence junior. "We still exist as a liaison between the University and groups off the campus.
I cannot agree with Thompson that its uses will be few. I think there are going to be incidents arising re-quiring the liaison committee."
EXPLAINING HIS position, McCornack said the ASC's 25 committees are "children" of the parent body, formed to fill specific needs.
"The Student Liaison Committee was created to serve a definite need—to provide a liaison between the students and the city of Lawrence, the State Board of Regents, the Legislature and the governor," McCormack said.
He said in assuming the functions of other committees, the liaison group had "diluted the functions of the ASC and threatened to make it less effective."
Interwoven into the discussion on the liaison committee were ques-
(Continued on page 12)
Rights Meeting Off; Showdown Avoided
WASHINGTON —(UPI)—Administration forces, apparently facing defeat in an effort to keep President Kennedy's civil rights bill from being toughened, today abruptly postponed a showdown in the House Judiciary Committee.
Committee Chairman Emanuel Celler, D-N.Y., cancelled a meeting at which the committee was to vote on a civil rights bill far stronger than the President and many of his congressional supporters believe can be passed. Celler said the meeting would be held tomorrow.
THE VETERAN New York Democrat announced that a meeting at which the crucial vote was to be taken had been postponed until tomorrow.
It was the second time in less than a week that Celler called off a meeting at which a major civil rights
vote was scheduled. In the earlier instance last week, he said the reason was that he was trying to assure himself of sufficient support to carry out President Kennedy's civil rights bill—that is, to tone down sections of the bill regarded as too tough by the administration.
A bipartisan group supporting the strong measure apparently caught the administration napping yesterday when it offered a motion to adopt unchanged the strong bill approved last month by a Judiciary subcommittee.
CELLER, conceding that the move "took everybody by surprise," said committee members "who are trying to get a bill that can be passed felt time was required to realign our forces."
Seniors Meet for Coffee; Votes Are Cast for Queen
With their hands full of coffee and doughnuts, the Class of 1964 met today.
This was the first meeting of the year for the seniors.
Leaders of the group backing a strong bill at first appeared angry about the postponement. But they said later that they still expected to win.
year for the seting Those neglecting to pay their class dues were given a last chance at the business office.
The senior cheerleaders led the class yells. They demonstrated the yells and practiced for Senior Day Saturday. The class will sit in a block at the Oklahoma State-KU game.
The 20 candidates were selected from senior women's living quarters and presented individually to the cla's. The Queen will be the official class hostess for the remaining functions throughout the year.
The class voted for the Senior Queen. The queen will be crowned Saturday before the kick-off of the Saturday's game.
The Senior Day activities Saturday will feature the class gift dedication and class party. The dedication of the eight speakers given to the university will be after the crowning of the Queen. Vice-chancellor James Surface will accept the eight loudspeakers for the university.
The six-hour senior party begins at 5:00 p.m. in the Big Barn. Seniors will be admitted to the party by showing their identification cards. Other students and guests will be charged an admission of $1.50.
"The Flippers," a rock n' roll band, will furnish the music," Bill Anderson, Park Ridge, Ill., senior and
John Stuckey, Pittsburgh senior and gift committee chairman, reported that the committee will weigh ideas and then submit the outstanding ones to the class for a vote on Dec. 1.
"More seniors than ever before paid their dues this year." Anderson said. "Approximately 1,500 paid and we are expecting 1,000 at the party."
senior day committee chairman, told classmates in his report.
The official ring of the Class of 1964 can be ordered at the Union Bookstore or at the Balfour Jewelry store in Lawrence, Susan Smith, Lawrence senior and ring committee chairman, told classmates.
Stuckey said the amount spent for a class gift depends on other senior class activities throughout the year. The amount could vary between $2,000 and $5,000.
A gift committee of faculty and students has been selected to process ideas and present suggestions for additional class gifts.
Dean Francis Heller, associate dean of the liberal arts college, told the seniors they have advanced from freshman to seniors and back to freshman as alumni. The role of an alumni is more difficult than that of a student because he is away from the university, he said.
The purchase of each ring pro-
vides $2 for the senior class treasury for class functions. A rough
estimate of the cost per ring was $30.
"You have a stake in KU and its value in the future depends on your support as an alumni."
"It will have no effect on the outcome," said Rep. Robert Kastenmeier (D-Wis.).
The militants said they had 12 Democratic and seven Republican votes in the 35-member committee, or one more than a majority. But their count was believed to include some wavering members.
THE MILITANTS appeared somewhat troubled, however, by reports that the White House was telephoning members of their group in an effort to win votes for a more moderate bill. The administration believes the strong bill would alienate needed moderate and conservative Republican and Democratic votes on the House floor.
Wescoe Attends Meeting in East
Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe has flown to the East coast for a weeklong series of meetings.
MOSCOW — (UPI) — The Soviet Community party today accused Peking of "defying" Chinese Communist Leader Mao Tse Tung in a willful attempt to split the world Communist movement.
Yesterday he attended a meeting of the board of trustees of the American University Field Staff in New York City.
Today and tomorrow Chancellor Wescoe is attending an Association of American Universities meeting in New York.
Late tomorrow through Sunday the Chancellor will take part in the 24th American Assembly in Harriman, N.Y.
Sunday night he will fly to Chicago for a meeting of the Midwest Universities Research Association. Chancellor Wescoe is a member of the association's board of directors.
Kommunist, theoretical organ of the Soviet Party's central committee, branded Chinese "subversive" actions as unprecedented since the times of the Leftist schism of Leon Trotsky in the 1920's.
Reds Say Peking Guilty of Heresies
PREMIER NIKITA Khrushchev, according to informed sources, intends to summon a world Communist conference—similar to that of 1960 in Moscow at which 81 Communist parties were present—to read the Chinese out of the international movement unless they recant.
The publication, "bible" of Russian Communism, declared that 65 Communist parties have thrown their support to Moscow in the bitter Sino-Soviet dispute and that Leninism-Marxism as interpreted here would triumph.
The Chancellor will return to KU Monday night.
The Chinese are not expected to retract their theses which Moscow regards as "heresies."
The groundwork for this world Communist conference is likely to be laid during the forthcoming Nov. 7 celebrations commemorating the 46th anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution.
TRADITIONALY, top foreign Communist leaders make the pilgrimage to Moscow for this annual event. Informed sources said they were expected to gather afterwards specifically to discuss the ever widening split between Moscow and Peking.
The Chinese were not expected to send any representatives to the Red square ceremony next month—Moscow ignored Peking's anniversary celebrations Oct. 1.
KHRUSHCHEV, after conferring with party leaders gathered here in the next weeks, was expected to make known to Peking his willingness to have his ideological experts meet with their Chinese opposites for a final reconciliation attempt.
A Sino-Soviet meeting with that purpose ended in deadlock here in July.
Predictions are that another meeting would end the same way after which Khrushchev would feel justified in summoning the world's Communist parties to Moscow to read Peking out of the international fold.
KOMMUNIST TODAY said that
Chinese reluctance to approve Soviet de-Stalinization is "an appeal for the deification of Mao Tse Tung."
"The attempt to substitute Marxism-Leninism with the ideas or Mao Tse-Tung is resolutely opposed by all Communists," it said. "Marxism-Leninism is and will be our banner."
"We may say quite definitely that the Communist movement is confronted with an attempt to replace Leninism with Mao Tse Tungism."
KOMMUNIST, heightening the bitter Sino-Soviet dispute to a new point, bluntly declared;
"The conceptions of the Chinese Theoreticians in many respects coincide with those of the Trotskyists."
This charge is one of the bitterest in the Communist Lexicon and refers to the extreme Leftists position espoused by Trotsky in his theory of permanent world revolution.
MOSCOW HAS been particularly critical of the Chinese refusal not only to accept de-Stalinization but also to endorse fully the theory of peaceful coexistence between Capitalism and Socialism.
Peking has advocated the use of force, possibly even nuclear war, in order to achieve the triumph of Communism in the world.
Kommunist specifically touched on this hotly disputed issue:
"THE CHINESE propaganda is falsifying the position of the Soviet Communist party . . . alleging they have made absolute the peaceful road.
"Actually, it is precisely the Chinese Theoreticians who are making absolute only one way (to Communism) . . . that is the armed way."
"In Peking they are not too far away from the theory of permanent revolution." Kommunist said.
"The view of the Chinese Theoreticians that as long as imperialism exists the possibility of averting war is an illusion coincides with the views of the "Trotskytes."
Kommunist again also flatly rejected Peking's claim to a "special" relationship to the peoples of Africa, Asia and Latin America which it said "fully contradicts Marxism-Leninism."
Weather
It was mostly fair today with continued warm temperatures tomorrow. It will be partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow. The low tonight should be in the middle 60's.
LADY HANNA KENNEDY
IS IT A SCAFFOLD?—It's just the beginning of the Alpha Omicron Pi homecoming displays, one of many which will be exhibited Nov.1. This year in addition to prizes in four divisions, an overall award will be presented to the best homecoming display on the campus.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, Oct. 23, 1963
We Must Go On
Two of the usual pre-election polls now have been completed and their results published for the nation. These two polls have clearly indicated that the Democratic Party has lost or is losing one of its most stalwart fortresses, the Deep South. According to the findings, Goldwater, or almost any Republican, could carry the South against Kennedy in the 1964 election.
Why? The omnipresent reason is, of course, civil rights. Kennedy has carried out a vigorous anti-segregation campaign during his term of office, and it has not exactly made him enamored of Southerners.
It is almost taken for granted that Kennedy will be nominated for a second term. He has been a controversial President, but he has carried out his office and reasonably well. He has suffered defeats and gained victories. Most important, he has carried out the law of this nation.
AMERICA'S UNIQUE system of checks and balances within three separate arms of government explicitly states that the function of the President is an executive one. He is charged with the responsibility of enforcing the laws as set down by the Congress and the Supreme Court. This is stated in the Constitution. It is part of the solemn vow taken at inauguration. It is the heaviest responsibility an American can undertake. Kennedy has tried to do this and, in the main, has done a good job.
Every President of this nation has at least tried to do this job. This nation would not still be thriving had not these Presidents enforced the law.
In the same manner, no President of the future can fail to enforce the law. If he does, then this nation will fail with him. No President must fail, whatever his name or party affiliation.
The makers of the Constitution stated that every man is guaranteed his rights as an American citizen. The Supreme Court has stated that segregation is a basic denial of human rights and is, therefore, against the law. It is now the task of the President to enforce that decision. This he must do to be worthy of the office, the responsibility, the trust that has been placed in him.
FOR SOME REASON, the South's voters seem to feel that if Kennedy is eliminated from office, some of their troubles will be over. The Negro will have lost an ally, desegregation will be slowed considerably, and all will be much better. Maybe the whole problem will be disregarded for another hundred years.
This is patently foolish!
The tide cannot be turned now. The Negro has arisen and demanded that he be made whole. Segregation is finally and irrevocably dead. It is no phoenix that can arise from its own fire.
The next President, no matter who he may be, will be as committed to a policy of enforced civil rights as Kennedy is. Every President thereafter will be committed.
THE SOUTHERNER will find no relief in casting off a Democratic tradition of a hundred years. The situation cannot change, because it must not. It is the law of the land.
No matter to what party the next President belongs, no matter what he says in his campaign speeches, no matter how he feels personally, he will have to uphold the law and, because of this inevitable conclusion, the civil rights battle will continue. If he should attempt to disregard his responsibility in this area, if he should shirk his duty, even try to focus attention on something else, then he will have violated the law himself. He will have violated the sacred trust 180 million people have placed in him. He will be unworthy to hold office and he must be impeached.
— Larry Knupp
Editor:
What State Missouri?
In what state is the nation's economy? In what state are the nation's morals? In what state is our political system? And speaking of states, in what state is Missouri?
The recent arrival of GEM III at the University of Kansas was considered by many people interesting but really quite uneventful. The GEM III is a Ground Effects Machine which has been made available to the Mechanics and Aerospace Department on a research grant from the Marine Corps.
In order to transport the GEM III from its former station in Virginia, it was necessary to obtain special permission from the various states through which it would pass. This permission was necessary due to the extreme width of the GEM III, about eleven feet wide, which would require certain precautions in transporting it on the highways. Virginia granted permission to transport it; Kentucky granted its permission; Tennessee granted its permission; Arkansas granted its permission; Oklahoma granted its permission, but Missouri denied permission! Just what is so alightly Godly about the state of Missouri? Was it beneath them to grant permission for transportation of such an important mechanical instrument? In what state of affairs are things in the state of Missouri?
Robert B. Miller Grantville, Kan., junior
Liaison All Wet
Editor:
The Kansan has done it once again. Several weeks ago you published an editorial saying that the Student Liaison Committee of the All Student Council was to spell an end to "Mt. Apathy." Since the editorial was incomprehensible, I am not entitled to comment on it.
You outdid yourself in Monday's issue, however. Now you charge Reuben McCornack, the student body president, with trying to gag the group with "red tape and influence from above."
Such makes a lively editorial page. It would have been much
The People Say...
more to the credit of your distinguished publication, though, if you had devoted a little thought to the issue, instead of rushing in with tommyhawk in the heat of battle.
The Student Liaison Committee was established to advise certain off-campus governmental bodies of the opinion of KU students on matters of concern to them. So far as I can see, that is all the committee is to do.
But in a display of power that would make McCormack blush, the committee's chairman, Jim Thompson, believes he was given a mandate to form a "do-everything" committee. The committee was first going to carry out its own investigation of the hospital service and traffic control situation. Someone finally pointed out to them that the ASC has committees whose responsibility it is to look into such matters, and Thompson agreed to let these committees work with his in the investigations. How sweet of him.
Yet clearly the liaison committee has no business whatsoever delving into such matters. Thompson claimed that the proper ASC committees were not doing their job—so his would. Well, if the Health and Traffic and Safety committees aren't doing their job, then replace the members of these committees. Or if that isn't good enough, then create a "Committee to Do Everything."
Defenders of the Student Liaison Committee say they—and not the All Student Council—are best able to interpret student opinion to convey to these outside groups. Yet
Dailij Hansan
111 Flint Hall
University of Kansas student newspaper Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
UUniversity 4-3646, newsroom
UUniversity 4-3198, business office
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Mike Miller Managing Editor
UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Blaine King Editorial Editor
Thompson is clearly going off the wet end. He envisions his committee as a problem-solving committee, while it was created as an informative body. The Student Liaison Committee seems to have abandoned the responsibilities which were envisioned for it when the ASC passed the bill and Chancellor Wescoe signed it. It's time Thompson and Company be brought back to earth.
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Bob Brooks ... Business Manager
Name Withheld by Request
For an example, take the controversy over Wichita University last winter. Had the Student Liaison Committee been functioning then, it might have decided that it should oppose the admission of WU to the state school system. Yet a majority of the student body might have favored the proposal. So while students would have gone to ASC representatives with approval of admitting WU as a state school, the liaison committee would have been in Topeka telling the Legislature that KU students were opposed. This didn't happen, but it could have and may, unless we begin thinking realistically.
what is more representative of the KU student body than the ASC? And whose committee is the liaison committee, its own or the ASCs? The ASC is justly entitled to tell the Liaison committee what to say.
Why No Memorials?
Editor:
I cannot understand why there is no visible recognition at KU to the memory of Professor Charles S. Skilton and Professor Carl A. Preyer, such as naming a room in Murphy Hall or framed portraits of them.
Mr. Skilton was Dean of the School of Fine Arts for many years and head of the pipe organ department, as well as a composer of national standing. Mr. Preyer was head of the piano department for more than 50 years, and a composer of international fame.
These two great men did much to raise the standard of music in the Middle West to the high plane it is today.
Mrs. James M. White Scott
Mankato, Kan.
Class of 1919
MILITARY COURS
LATIN AMERICAN DEMOCRACIES
ABST. SEC. MARTIN
GEORGE McBUNGLE
U.K.
HERBLOCK
THE WASHINGTON POST
"We're Sure Overcoming That Old Reputation Of Being The Colossus Of The North"
BOOK REVIEWS
HORIZON (September 1963, $4.50).
The lush magazine of the arts has a dialogue this month of considerable significance. The theme is religion, and the dialogue concerns the belief of the Anglican bishop of Woolwich, England, that our idea of God is dead and has no meaning for 20th century man, and the reply from the bishop's superior, the Archbishop of Canterbury.
Bishop Robinson, the stormy churchman behind the controversy, says Christianity must relinquish myths begun in a pre-scientific age. He says God is not "up there" in heaven or "out there" in the universe. In a comment on the discussion, Douglas Auchincloss writes that the concept of God as "grandfather," or "Super Superman," or "Universe Tender," or "even as Catcher in the Rye," is dead.
This article keynotes a rich issue, which includes another topic that could cause a lot of discussion. Jacques Barzun deals with today's academic world in which professors must produce, even if what they produce won't be read by another living soul. Barzun views the whole process as a ritual, and a mighty expensive one at that.
A third article of considerable interest concerns the return of the nude as a theme in painting, even though the nude might be somewhat difficult to identify as a nude, as in a work by the late Jackson Pollock. Still another article, one that is particularly delightful, deals with the one-time "sun never sets" colony of Britishers in Hollywood, the Ronald Colmans and C. Aubrey Smiths and Clive Brooks, who have vanished with the British empire and who have been replaced by American Englishmen like Cary Grant and James Mason.
Other articles: a discussion of fabulous and unbelievable architecture represented in painting, the confrontation of Napoleon and Alexander I, portraiture on Roman coins, Captain Bligh and the question of whether he was martyr or martinet, Vittorio de Sica providing a document of life in Naples, dance forms in India, and cartoons depicting one man's view of "The Epic of Man."—CMP
* * *
A SEPARATE PEACE, by John Knowles (Delta, $1.45).
One of the most beautifully and movingly sustained pieces of writing in this country in years is John Knowles' "A Separate Peace." To this reader it is the equal of, if not superior to, "A Catcher in the Rye" as a perceptive picture of adolescence.
Knowles won the William Faulkner Foundation Award for "A Separate Peace." Its setting is a boys' school in New Hampshire—Phillips Exeter, we may assume, for that is Knowles' school. Its time is 1942 and 1943, when school boys all over the land were living in a strange world quite different from the world of boys two and three years older.
Its story is largely that of two boys, one of such deep, winning magnetism that almost with no effort he can control his circle (a type most students and most teachers will recognize), and one, the narrator, more inclined to follow, though he too has his qualities. Tragedy overcomes these boys who are living their "separate peace" as the world outside fights a savage war.
Knowles never resorts to sensationalism, though his boys are real boys and not prudes. They all seem quite normal, a condition that almost shocks one who has read considerably of late in Baldwin Updike, Roth, Styron and others who merit no more than John Knowles recognition as literary leaders of their time.-CMP
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Read, Listen to All, Advises Faculty Panel
Read the New York Times book review section and attend lectures and professional meetings if you want to keep up with everything.
These were some of the suggestions given by a faculty panel speaking on "Keeping Up With Everything" in the Kansas Union last night. The panel discussion was the first lecture in a series sponsored by the SUA on the Philosophical Bases of Absolutely Everything (PBOAF).
"I am forced to turn myself intensely to areas where I can devote myself full time," said Robert J. Squier, assistant professor of anthropology. This is due to more specialization, the increased amount of published data on the specialized areas, and the lack of time to cover this vast amount of new material in the field of anthropology, he said.
THE TEN PANEL members agreed that keeping up with current events and becoming the "informed man" is nearly impossible. This is because of the recent trend of specialization in all areas of study and the vastly increased number of professional journals and papers in these areas of specialization.
Eldon J. Fields, professor of political science, said one must strive to be the "informed man." To do this, one must read a variety of sources. These sources include "high brow, middle brow and low brow" literature, he said.
"THE MOST effective way to keep on top of things is to attend professional meetings," said Earl S. Hughes, associate professor of chemistry.
"The student can learn by listening to people who know," Prof. Beth said.
Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism, advised the student "to listen" if he is interested in knowing what is going on.
In addition, educators must communicate effectively between academic areas, said Stuart Levine, assistant professor of English. They not only must address themselves to others outside their own fields, but they must deal with the outside field on its own terms, he said.
ALTHOUGH EIGHT of the panelists greed that keeping up was good, Charles Landesman, associate professor of philosophy, disagreed.
"We don't have a general obligation to learn everything. Ask yourself why you want to know about the field," he said.
Dr. William R. Bright, president and founder of the Campus Crusade for Christ International, Inc., will speak at 9 p.m., tomorrow in the Kansas Union.
Religion Organizer Speaks Tomorrow
Dr. Bright, who owned a national manufacturing firm, was graduated from the University of California at Los Angeles and did his graduate work at Princeton and Fuller theological seminaries.
Campus Crusade has spread to many colleges and universities across the nation and in many foreign countries. Recently Jeonbuig National University of Korea conferred upon him an honorary degree of Doctor of Laws.
Wednesday, Oct. 23, 1963
Dr. Bright speaks to about 60 college audiences each year. Last spring he spoke at the Kansas Governor's breakfast. He has also spoken at other governors' breakfasts throughout the country.
Dr. Bright is the author of various books including "The Sound Mind Principle" and "The Priority of Praver."
OKLAHOMA RANKED FIRST on the Associated Press football poll in 1950, 1955 and 1956. The Sooners were first according to United Press International in 1950, 1955 and 1956.
New Grant To Junior
Terry Alan Miller, Baxter Springs junior, has been awarded the Grace Caroline Eaton Scholarship for being the outstanding junior man in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
The award, comparable to the Paul B. Lawson award to the outstanding College senior, was made by the Summerfield scholarship committee.
The scholarship, given for the first time this year, was established in honor of Miss Grace Caroline Eaton. Before Miss Eaton's death in 1961, she was one of the oldest living KU alumni, having graduated in 1893.
Miss Eaton left a portion of her estate to KU, the income from which is to be awarded to an outstanding male student in the College. The award is based on the recipient's first two years of work at KU. The scholarship will assist him in his last two years in school.
THE NEW YORK YANKEES and Los Angeles Dodgers, leaders in the American and National League pennant races, were the pre-season choices of the United Press International's board of baseball experts.
Help us celebrate our 38th birthday backwards!
We give you a free gift with each purchase of $1.00 or more because you made us 38 years old.
LAWRENCE BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass. VI 3-1044
FRESHMAN CLASS OFFICERS
Petitions and ASC Nomination Petitions Are Available
NOW
in the ASC Office or from
Mike Miner, MINC Elections
Chairman
Due Friday at 5:00 p.
Due Friday at 5:00 p.m.
looking for a gift?
have you tried us?
wide selection of domestic and imported gifts.
FREE GIFT WRAPPING
ELRING'S Gifts
924 Massachusetts VI 3-5160
SLJA
INTRAMURAL BRIDGE TOURNAMENT
1:30 p.m., Sunday, October 27 Student Union
Representatives from each Campus Living Group will compete For the Hill Bridge Championship.
For Information, Call John Casady — VI3-4811 or Bruce Warren — VI3-6400 Before Thurs., Oct. 24
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, Oct. 23, 1963
Costume Collection Is Catalogued
By Linda Ellis
The costume shop in the University Theatre is only six years old, but already it is stacked full of history.
The history is in the thousands of costumes stored in rows of metal cabinets on the bottom level of the building.
Since 1957, when the costume shop was transferred from the old Fraser theatre to the then new Murphy hall, the amount and variety of costumes has multiplied many times.
CHEZ J. HAEHIL, assistant professor of speech and drama, said the costumes are catalogued by historical period. The costumes are stored in tall metal cabinets with labels such as "Men's Coats Renaissance," "Women's Lingerie—1920's."
Along with the clothes, there are boxes of accessories to go with the costumes. Gloves, scarves, belts, shoes, hats, artificial flowers, petticoats, and uniforms are filled in the shop according to time and usage.
Some authentic pieces of clothing, shoes and uniforms have been donated to the shop by people who
live in Lawrence. These pieces are not used for actual performances but are used as examples for studying the history of costume in classes.
Mrs. Ida Conroy, who is employed in the costume shop said, "Most of the costumes we have that are authentic are from the 1890's period and are too small for the smallest student we have here. The dresses and the shoes are so tiny that we simply cannot use them."
AN ORIGINAL COSTUME donated by a retired professor is a kimona that was used as a pattern for the rest of the kimonos to be worn in the coming production of "Madame Butterfly."
As in other productions, the kimono was a guide pattern for the rest of the show. It was measured and copied in many other fabrics for the show.
For "Madame Butterfly," the staff and costume students have created a whole new period of costumes to be added to the present collection. The closest one available is in the Chinese period. "Madame Butterfly" is Japanese.
Jonathan Logan
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The costumes must be designed for easy, quick changes. Therefore, the head costumer, director and producer must approve all costumes. The head costume designer must study the play, know all changes of costume and the time allowed for changes before he is able to design the costumes.
VI 3-2241
THE SHOP IS responsible for all accessories and personal properties to be used by actors. It must create the costumes and store them.
For the production, they have made 30 kimonos, 2 Navy lieutenant uniforms and a dress characteristic of the 1900 period. In addition, the shop is redressing 25 wigs in Japanese fashion for the geisha girls to wear in the show.
All clothes are made so that they will last to be used in other shows. The costumes in "Madame Butterfly" will reflect the happy or tragic moods in the play by the use of color. In the gay scenes, the cos-
803 Mass.
THE COSTUMES to be used in "Madame Butterfly" were started before the production of "Emperor Jones" about October 7.
tunes will be constructed of rich fabrics in bright colors. In the sad parts, the kimonos will be in more sombre colors.
Usually the staff and student assistants make everything for a play, but when reproducing an article is impossible, it must be rented from a rental service in San Francisco, Denver, New York City, Chicago or Kansas City.
The costumes being made for the next show will be stored afterwards to be included in another page of the costume-shop history.
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Wednesday, Oct. 23, 1963
University Daily Kansan
Page 5
US Support Needed In Germany
The United States may endanger the Erhard government if it fails to support German reunification, a visiting German professor of political science told a University Lecture audience last night.
PROF. BESSON SAID there has been a feeling that Germany could not get along without Adenauer, since the country has been controlled by Adenauer's one-man "chancellor democracy" since 1949.
The speaker was Waldemar Besson, of the University of Erlangen, Germany. His topic was "The Bonn Republic of Konrad Adenauer—The End of an Era."
The alternative is that French President De Gaulle will become an extremely tempting figure to whom the German fancy may well turn.
Adenauer himself had felt that he was indispensable to the German government hence he remained too long as chancellor, Prof. Besson said.
"Adenauer's party (the United Christian Democrats) is a party of successes. That is, it is not the kind of party which had been found in Germany in previous years. The party grew through a series of successes, not because it represented any particular idea."
Two things have inflicted severe damage upon Adenauer's party, Prof. Besson said: East and West Germany are not yet unified, and Adenauer's party has taken no active steps to secure unification.
"I don't think the government of the United States has sensed the growing feeling among the German people that unification should be sought quickly," he said.
"On the other hand. De Gaulle is very well aware of this feeling in
Germany. He advocates unification and is, therefore, a logical person to attract the German people's fancy.
PROF. BESSON SAID Germany is at a turning point where it will no longer accept the status quo position Adenaera held so long.
"De Gaulle is not a funny figure," Prof. Besson added. "He is not a dreamer or a romantic. He is interested in forming a continental European power. He appeals to the German people through his praise of German power."
"If the United States cannot convince the German people that the interests of America and Germany are the same, the German people may well turn to De Gaulle and join in his plans for a European power. If this happens, the present form of government in Germany will come to an end."
KU DIDNT HAVE ANY FOOTball all-America until 1947. Ray Evans, halfback, and Otto Schnellbacher, end, were selected for the honor that year.
DOES GOD UNDERSTAND ENGLISH?
Is the Curia kaput? Will deacons be allowed to marry? How does this council differ from Pope John's Ecumenical Council? Will scientific advancement change the Church's stand on birth control? Will Catholics and Protestants marry without signing promises? Will the Church really change?
Fr. James Blumeyer, S.J., Fr. David Schmidt, S.J., Fr. James Finnerty, S.J., all of St. Mary College, St. Mary, Kansas will hold a panel discussion on "Vatican II: Second Spring," the revolutionary changes emerging from the Ecumenical Council.
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University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, Oct. 23, 1963
Tackle Follows O-State's Nickname
Take it from a genuine cowboy, it's easier to bulldog an 850-pound steer than it is to move a 225-pound tackle. That's what Oklahoma State's promising sophomore tackle Rusty Martin, who spends some of his off season time in rodeos, says after three varsity appearances.
"Heck yes," Martin says, "football is a lot tougher than bulldogging or roping, but both of 'em are fun."
Contrary to most lanky figures the chunky Checotah all-stater stands "a hair over six feet" and packs 224 solid pounds on a powerful frame. He is the son of the Checotah rancher, D. F. Martin, Jr., and confesses that "I've always liked to work outside and with livestock."
HE HAS ALSO found a new aspect in football and says that all he wants "is to win some football games—and we'll do it, too, as soon
as we stop making all of these darn mistakes.
"When I first came here I couldn't believe I couldn't block and tackle as well as the coaches were pointing out,' he says. "But, now I'm beginning to see what they mean. I've improved but, oh brother, I've got a long way to go before I'm good enough."
The knocks taken by Martin in State's first three games were rough ones, to be sure, but there is little doubt about the improvement made. In State's disappointing 25-0 loss to Colorado the block-built Martin was in on eight tackles, three unassisted and behind the line of scrimmage, recovered a fumble that one of his jarring tackles induced and added a key block on a 55 yard punt return.
Martin is majoring in animal husbandry at OSU but he hardly has the appearance of the weather-
beaten range rider. He just turned 19 last month and his apple-cheek appearance, usually accompanied by a large smile, disguises his agility and strength.
HIS POWERFUL neck (which has grown an inch and a half to $ 17 \frac{1}{2} $ inches) is accompanied by broad shoulders and a stout build. Many admit his impressive start is reminiscent of another Cowboy interior lineman Dale Meinert, who continues his ranching interests at Lone Wolf when not starring for the St. Louis football Cardinals as a middle linebacker.
Both Martin and his roommate, fullback Walt Garrison, are rodeo enthusiasts.
"Walt rides broncs," Martin relates, "and he's real good. I met him when I came to OSU and I don't think weve ever spent more than a
weekend, or two, not doing things together.
"The steers I've bulldogged range from 500 to 850 pounds. My best time is 4.9 seconds, which is usually good enough to win. It's a matter of timing, more than anything else, and it sure isn't as tough as football."
To keep up with the pace of the rodeo circuit Martin works his own quarterhorses. He admits that he usually centers his training on two or three horses, as "you must have a spare ready at any time just in case the horse you are using turns up lame.
"Really, it's a lot like football. You've got to practice. You've got to work the horses. Just like football, you've got to work on yourself but you've got to work with the team."
ENGINEERS-SCIENTISTS
ENGINEERS-SCIENTISTS
J. R. DEMPSEY
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KRAFFT A. EHRICKE
Director of Advanced Studies
KAREL J. BOSSART
Technical Director
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Listen to the voices of three men who have played key roles in forging Astronautics into a complex of technical and management skills that has become a national resource. It's all on a 33-1/3 r.p.m. recording and it's yours for the asking. See your placement office for a copy, or visit our representatives who will be on campus soon. If you miss us, write to Mr.R.M.Smith,Chief of Professional Placement and Personnel,Dept.130-90, General Dynamics | Astronautics,5871 Kearny Villa Road, San Diego. California 92112.
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Wednesday, Oct. 23, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Politics Meet Starts Nov.15
About 60 political scientists from colleges and universities in Kansas and western Missouri are expected here Nov. 15 and 16 for a workshop in politics.
State party chairmen from both major political parties will speak at the workshop. Richard Rogers, Republican chairman from Manhattan, and Jack Glaves, Democratic party chairman from Wichita, will discuss their 1964 campaign plans in Kansas.
This is the 10th annual meeting sponsored by the National Center for Education in politics.
John G. Grumm, associate professor of political science and assistant dean of faculties, said the workshop will help the political scientists to meet prominent men in the field and exchange ideas with the hope that the teaching of political science will become more practical.
Also speaking at the workshop will be University of Wisconsin Prof. Austin Ranney who will discuss the 1964 national elections. Prof. Ranney is the author of several books, including "Democracy and the American Party System," and is editor of the recently published "Essays in the Behavioral Study of Politics."
PROF. GRUMM is also director of the Kansas-Missouri Center for Education in Politics.
The Missouri-Kansas center is one of 19 state or regional affiliates of the National Center for Education in Politics.
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When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classifieds
They helped make a major advance in medical technology
OO
...yet there's not an "M.D." in the house
These six men were members of a team that developed an x-ray system so advanced that, even with exposure to x-radiation reduced by 80%, images come out much sharper on the diagnostician's viewing screen. By bringing to the task the unique talents, experience, and educational background of each member, this team of experts has made it possible for radiologists and physicians to do a better job of medical diagnosis.
Of these six men from General Electric's X-Ray Department, Milwaukee, four have degrees in engineering, one majored in physics and math, and the sixth in economics. Not one was trained primarily in medical science although, of course, their Department works closely with the medical profession. Nor did any of them anticipate, when in college, that their major subjects would be put to use in providing improved tools for diagnostic medicine. But they did recognize as their record shows-that better-thanaverage performance could qualify them for challenging jobs with a forward-looking company like General Electric.
There are hundreds of such teams at General Electric today. Their make-up varies, and almost every field of specialization, technical and non-technical, is represented somewhere in the Company. The projects are just as varied: nose cones for missiles, desaliniza-
tion of sea water, computers,or power plants to squeeze more electricity from a pound of coal or a gram of atomic fuel.
The more than 36,000 college graduates at General Electric comprise one of the largest and most varied pools of talent in the nation. But the Company's future is, in many ways, wrapped up in people still in school and college. As projects increase in size and complexity, so will the need for able young people. People who demonstrate, through their college record, the best use of their educational opportunities, who know the meaning of excellence, who understand the differences between specialization and narrowness, breadth and shallowness. Such people, working together, will make up the teams of the future, and be the architects of what we call progress.
The team (left to right): Jerry E. Rich, Georgetown College, Ky.,'53; Robert J.Mueller, Marquette,'44; William A.Mayer, Univ.of Calif.,'47; John P.Kelley,R.P.I.,'47; William G.Waggoner, West Va.Univ.,'33,Pratt Inst., '37; Arthur Pruneau, Univ.of Vermont,'52.
Progress Is Our Most Important Product
GENERAL GE ELECTRIC
Page 8
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 23, 1963 MEMORIAL STADIUM AT KANSas State was built in 1922. It has a capacity of 22,500.
Patronize Kansan Advertiser
Plan Talks On Problems
Students interested in suggesting solutions to various problems on campus will have the chance Nov. 5 and 6 in the 39th Annual Campus Problems Speaking Contest.
E. C. Buehler, professor of speech and drama and founder of the KU program said the contest is "an opportunity for students to appear to orally editorialize on something that concerns the community."
Prof. Buechler will retire this spring after 39 years at the University. He founded the contest as an outlet for students who had complaints they wish to convey to the university.
THE FIRST CONTEST was held in November, 1925, with students giving five-minute speeches and finalists giving eight-minute speeches.
Prof. Buehler said all KU students are eligible to try out for the contest from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Nov. 5 in 114 Strong.
Finalists will speak at 8 p.m. Nov. 6, in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
A trophy will be awarded to the best speaker in the final competition. Students interested in trying out for the contest should contact Prof. Beuhler in 114 Strong for a list of the topics available. Names of student entrants and their topic choices should be given to Prof. Beuhler by noon, Nov. 4.
Arab-American Club Elects New Officers
The Arab-American Club has elected Nazar H-Ahfidh, Iraq graduate student, president. Others elected were Carolyn Dyer, Charleston, Mo., senior, secretary, and Mansur A. Mady, Saudi Arabia junior, treasurer.
An Engineering CAREER
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Interviews will be held on October 28,1963 on the campus. See your placement office now for an appointment
FISHER GOVERNOR COMPANY Marshalltown, Iowa
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KU HAD TWO FOOTBALL ALL- Americas in 1952: Oliver Spencer, tackle, and Gil Reich, halfback. IT IS IMPOSSIBLE TO TAKE a picture of a stationary object with a photo finish camera.
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QUESTION:
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Page 9
University Daily Kansan
Seventy Bands Here Saturday
About 5,000 musicians from 70 Kansas and Missouri high schools will be at KU Saturday for Band Day.
Band Day Activities will begin at 9 a.m. with a parade of bands on Massachusetts street. The KU band will lead the procession.
After the parade, the bands will assemble at Memorial Stadium to rehearse for the half-time ceremonies of the Oklahoma State University-KU game.
When completed, the Perry Dam and Reservoir could become the most used recreational area in Kansas.
Perry Dam Ready Soon
And, the project to be located about four miles northwest of Perry on the Delaware River could be a great recreational mecca for KU students in the early fall and late spring months.
The dam will be about 15 miles from Lawrence. 25 from Topeka, 60 from Kansas City, 40 from Leavenworth, 60 from Atchison and within 80 miles of St. Joseph, Mo.
The population density surrounding Ferry is greater than for any other reservoir in the Kansas River Basin with over two-million persons residing within a hundred-mile radius of the project.
Russell Wiley, director of the KU band, and director of Band Day, said the number of high school musicians expected here this year is the maximum number which can be handled at KU.
He said there are many bands on a waiting list. If any band drops out of Band Day activities, a replacement will be chosen from this list.
The dam and reservoir will be four-fifths the size of Tuttle Creek, the project at Manhattan so handy for Kansas State University students.
The 70 bands will share the half-time ceremonies with the Oklahoma State marching band, and the crowning of the Senior Day Queen.
Col. Miles L. Wachendorf, district engineer of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Kansas City, speaking at Oskaloosa in July, said present plans call for two public use areas near the dam with others scheduled to be placed around the reservoir.
The Civil Rights Council will meet at 7 p.m. tonight in the Kansas Union.
CRC Forming Panel To Explore Projects
"Some additional areas will probably be set aside in the original land acquisition to be developed later, if necessary," Col. Wachendorf said. "We are working very closely with the Kansas State Park and Resources Authority and other interested agencies in our planning."
Members of the CRC will be appointed to committees to explore projects and ideas before the ideas are presented to the All Student Council.
Groups to be formed include an employment practices committee, seminar committee and fund raising committee.
Wednesday, Oct. 23, 1963
MEMORIAL STADIUM AT NE braska was built in 1923. Its capacity is 40,000.
Top Students to Give Recital
The KU School of Fine Arts will present five students in an honor recital at 8 p.m., Monday in Swarthout Recital Hall.
Leoncavallo's "I Pagliacci."
Students for the recital were chosen by the faculty for having been outstanding in performance during student recitals of the last semester.
Appearing in the recital are: Walter Hawkey, cellist, Kansas City senior, who will play "Fantasy Pieces" by Schumann, and David Holloway, ballet, Gas City senior, who will sing two selections by Mozart and the "Prologue" from
Jose Sandoval, pianist, a Monterrey, Mexico, freshman, will play "Spanish Rhapsody" by Listz. Jean Wiley, Lawrence sophomore, will play Griffes "Poem" on a flute. Malcolm Smith, Lawrence senior, will play "Suite for Oboe and Piano" on an oboe.
JACK MITCHELL. NOW KU head football coach, led the Big Six in rushing in 1947 when he was an all-America quarterback at Oklahoma. Mitchell gained 537 yards in 125 carries.
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University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 23, 1963
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--at George's Pipe Shop
727 Mass. VI 3-7164
"Smoking is our only Business"
---●--at George's Pipe Shop
727 Mass. VI 3-7164
"Smoking is our only Business"
HAVING A PARTY?
6th & Minn. VI 3-1300
DX Servicenter 6th & Michigan VI 2-9410
We are always happy to serve you with
Ice cold 6 pacs all kinds
Pitchers----75c
Ice cold beverages
Thursday night at the Purple Pig 810 New Hampshire
Variety of grocery items
Crushed ice, candy
OPEN TO 10 P.M.EVERY EVENING
TGIF at the Stables TGIS too!
Chips, nuts, cookies
LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY
Gene Bailey - Mark Patton
Ph. VI 3-0350
616 Vt.
Portraits of Distinction
"A Perfect Christmas Gift"
摄影师
HIXON STUDIO
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
See Us Before You Buy
TYPEWRITERS
NEW AND USED PORTABLES STANDARDS ELECTRICS
Sales — Rentals — Service
LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER
735 Mass. VI 3-3644
- pipes
- tobaccos
- complete accessories
JIM'S CAFE 838 Mass.
OPEN 24 hrs. a day
BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY
No more putting off laundry chores 'till the weekend we'll do your laundry any day of the week!
Try our efficient service washing, drying and folding today!
GRAVITT'S AUTOMATIC LAUNDRY
913 N.H. VI 3-6844
SY
Dodsw Ann It Ca Bethe
B
Main
Elme
8
35' x 8 cellent answe
1959 C
stick '
6 p.m
For fast, efficient service call our Mrs. Rose Abels.
One 3 table
Make your airline reservations now and be assured of your travel for Thanksgiving and Christmas vacation.
TRAVEL RESERVATIONS NOW!
RENA
good
1957
5139
— Airline and steamship reservations —
black
with
otton
table
Call
GUNS Hi-St scope pistol gun. 824 A
746 Mass.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
Travel Agency
Five
pus,
full
TATI
VI 3.
NEW scrate Stone
You o home per n new a TODI rence 2-311
VI 3-0152
nop
64
ss"
SHOP YOUR CLASSIFIED ADS
FOR SALE
Abington Book Shop 1015 $ _{1/2} $ Mass.
LEWIS, SINCLAIR
Dodsworth $5.00
Ann Vickers $5.00
It Can't Happen Here $6.50
Bethel Merriday $6.50
LEWIS, SINCLAIR
-0152
Bookplates. FIRST EDITIONS LEVIS SINCLAIR
8 vo. and 12 mo. cloth.all in dust jackets
Main Street $3.60
Elmer Street $2.90
voil. cloth. FIRST EDITIONS
35' x 8' Mobil home, 2 bedrooms and excellent condition. Call VI 2-1673 or if no answer call VI 3-9304. 10-29
1950 Chevy, good condition, economical
6 p.m. VI CALL 2-4161, 12 noon of
10-25
RENALTA—two, 1957 and 1959, both in good shape. Am asking $255.00 for the 1957 and $495.00 for the 1959. Call: 3-5139 or go to 1523 W. 22nd St. Terr. 10-29
One 3 drawer chest . $8.50, one study table with drawer . $9.75, one study table with wrought iron legs for $30.00, All in black enamel. Ladies Schwinn bicycle with 26 " basket . $15.00, Coral plastic ottoman with wrought iron legs. $40.00, mahogany plywood with wrought iron legs. $15.00, Call VI 2-8698. 10-25
GUNS: .38 Stubnose, Ruger 22 single six,
H-Standard 22 double nine, 22 rifle with
scope matched miniature Colt dueling
pistols. Ruger .44 magnum carbine, BB
gun. Mod. 98 Mauzer rifle. Many more,
824 Ark. VI 3-1110.
tf
Five room house on Tenn. St. near campus, basement, garage, needs some space. MASTER JOBS IN TECHNICAL ESSENCE CO. Bus. ph. VI 3000 Res. ph. I 3-2929, W. 7. w14th. 10-23
NEW Rycey Union lightweight bike.
Stoneback's, 929 Mass. 10-23
You can own your own clean used mobile home for as low as $200.00 down and $34 per month delivered. Large selection of used mobile and used mobile TODD MOBIL HOMES, 769 N. 2nd Lawrence, Kansas. Call VI 3-8846 or VI 1-2-311
63 HONDA SUPER HAWK. 305cc, 28
H.P., 4-speed, electric starter, 2 carbs,
dual exhaust, western bars, one month
old, 400 miles. must sell. Call VI 3-6649
LAWRENCE FIREARMS COMPANY -
ammo, Lugers, Musers, army, 45's -
trades welcome - we also rebule. 102
Ohio - VI 2-1214 - evenings and
10-2
MGA 1600 model Roadster—1960—Just over 16,000 miles. Wire wheels, white interior and decorative heater. White interior. Excellent condition. Phone VI 3-8221 today. 10-25
New stereo multiflex GE radio and
phono deluxe model portable with Gar-
rard's cut to $199.97 (reg. list XX5) or
Stoneback's 2,992 Mass. St. 10-23
Electric alarm clock with nite hands!
Special offer $1.99 plus tax to Kansan readers only. You must bring this ad as coupon to Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass.
1952 Cadillac 4-door sedan. Excellent condition. Private owner. See at 19th and Mass. Phone VI 3-1013 Days, VI 3-6506 evenings. 10-23
Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 1-2901 for free delivery. tt
New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500
ram- $85 Lawrence Outlook.
1005 Mass. Paper
1957 "98" Oldsmobile convertible; white;
excellent condition; power windows,
stores; fire truck, seat, brakes. Four new
restraints. Will take offer. Call: Bill Murdoff
I 2-4282.
INCOME PROPERTY — large 2 story
house near campus divided into apt.
and two guest rooms. Rentals of approx. $450 per month. Full price is $16,000 including furnishing.
ROGERS REAL ESTATE CO. Bus.
VI 3-0005, W. 14th, Res. ph. VI 3-0025
10-23
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outlines of biology classes. Formerly known as the Theta Notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50.
Sure—Everything in the pet field at Grant's drive in pet center. Where your $$ have more cents. 1218 Conn. VI 3-2921.
ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLEANERS New Electrolux and a limited number of rebuilt, fully guaranteed. All parts available. Equipment picked up for service and delivered. Frank V. Cox, Local Manager-1904 Barker. Call V 315-2727.
Typewriters, new and used portables,
standards, electrics. Olympia, Olivetti.
Royal and Smith Corona portables. Type-
writer and adding machine service and
rental. Lawrence Typewriter, 730 Mass.
CALL VI 3-3644. tf
Spencer Microscope. Monocular triple
tripod. Stage C1 VI 3-5710, 6 to 800
10-23
General Psychology study notes. Excel-
cells. Session sections. $4.00 per
call. Call V12-3-9788.
USED TV'S—we're flooded with trade ins! $15.00, $20.00, $29.95. As is sets, you fix 'em. $5.00 each—Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass.
Save on tires! 1,000 tires (snow and regular) at lowest discount prices in Kansas —Ray Stoneback's (Discount tire center)
929 Mass. 10-30
1958 Corvette Convertible—new motor,
good tires, top in excellent condition, 4
seats. Reasonable carburitors, coatings
and heater. Reliable price. Call John
Brown. VI 3-7102. 16-24
Tape recorders — new compact model,
take it anywhere! Only $24.97 - Pay $5.00
per month. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass.
10-22
One 12 string guitar and 6 string
guitar and new, excellent tone
TI 3-4087 10-28
FOR RENT
Want a girl to share my apartment. Con-
Tenn, After 4:30 on week days. 10-29
Furnished, clean 2 and 3 room apart-
ment in closets, bath, no drinking
311 Ohio. 10-29
Duplex, 2 bedrooms, stove, refrigerator;
1 boiler, except electricity paid Car.
VI 3-2811
5 room, entire first floor apartment furnished; utilities paid; off street parking. $85.00 per month. 1905 Mass. Call VI 3-6011 or VI 3-0570. 10-23
Large room, single or double, near campus,
1215 Oread. Telephone and parking
Rent $33.00, prefer grade
senior. Contact Jack Ashmore. VI 3-9883.
1215 Oread. 10-23
Two bedroom duplex, unfurnished, wall
carpeting, kitchen, laundry, storage
large room with full room. Small children
acceptable, no pets. One year lease.
Month. 1607 W. 22nd Tern. Car,
W. 21-882
Spacious 2 room, newly decorated, second floor apartment clean and quiet. Private bath. Near KU. $65.00. Bills paid except electricity. Call VI 2-2533. 10-25
Wednesday, Oct. 23, 1963
TYPING
Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter, carbon printer. Mail resume to VI 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley, 408 West 13th, tt
Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow. 2407 Lale, VI 1-2648.
New electric typewriter. Reasonable rates for themes, term papers, dissertations, and theses. Mrs. Barta, 1955 Miller Drive, VI 3-6994. tl
Experienced typist for theses and term
projects. Send resume to:
Mrs. Fulcher, 103 Miss M.I. V-3-0588. f
fultcher@missmiss.com
Efficient and experienced typer would like to do work in home. Prompt and guaranteed work. Call at any time. VI 3-2651. 10-31
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
legal terms. Marsha Goff, VI 3-2577.
Typing: Dissertations theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines; 35 special symbols, carbon ribbon; if desired services. Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI2-146 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI3-357.
Typing; Desertations, theses, manuscripts,
term papers typed. New Smith-Corona
machines; 35 special symbols, carbon
ribbon—if desired. Prompt, efficient
service. Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI 2-154e
or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI 3-3057.
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers, articles, and reports rates. Electric Typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney, 2521 Aia. Ph. VI 3-8568.
MILLIKENS SOS—always first quality typing on LB.M. Carbon ribbon machines e. also use tape transcriptions. Office dv 7 m. pmt 12 p.m.-1021/51 Matsa Phone VI 3-5920
Prompt, neat and accurate work on wide carriage electric typewriter. Journalism Business and Secretary experience. Charlotte Weber. VI 3-3495
Thesis. Typist. Electric typewriter
English degree. Prairie Village, NI 3.
IU.
University Daily Kansan
BUSINESS SERVICES
Troop 673 Senior Girl Scouts will baby sit for KU games at Lawrence Community Nursery School. 654 Ala. Ages 3 to 8. Phone VI 3-0606. 10-24
Complete line of soles and heels, lacens,
cosmetics and polishes. Have new mermer-
shes, leather gloves, each pursue a smoke totes. Burgerst's One Day Shoe Service — 1113 Mass. St. 11-1
English or Speech trouble? Certified English and Speech teacher, will tutor at reasonable rate. Also typing. Call VI 3-2873. 10-23
Dressmaking-alterations, formals and dressmaking-gowns. Ola Smith, 9391$\frac{1}{2}$ Massif VI 3-1528
Classes for Pre-school children ages 3, 4,
VI 2-1410 for more information. 10-23
HELP WANTED
Need 4 men with cars to work one night each week. Good pay. Contact Tom Dixon. Dixon's Drive-In restaurant. VI 3-7446. 10-28
OVERSEAS OPPORTUNITIES for qualified people in Rural Development and Agriculture in Southeast Asia. International Volunteer Services, 1903 N.Washington, D.C. 10-25
HELP WANTED—Linotype operator, 9 to 3 daily. Must be experienced on newspaper straightmaster. University of Kansas Press, 117 Flint Hall. Phone UU **tt**
MISCELLANEOUS
Cute kittens free to good home. 6 weeks.
Call OV1 3-7530 after 5:30 p.m. 10-29
West Side Presbyterian Church, 6th and Mass, welcomes you to attend Sunday services at 11 a.m. and Sunday classes at 9:45 a.m.
10-23
PARTY TIME: School house available for private parties, dances, meetings— equipped with piano, tables, chairs, restroom and coolers. VI 3-7453 - 451 Forrest.
WANTED
Bass player to work with small folk
12th Engineering Bldg. UND 4-978. 10-25
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart. 1025 Mass. tt
Kansan Classified Ads Get Result*
TRANSPORTATION
IT'S TIME TO MAKE
YOUR RESERVATIONS
FOR
THE HOLIDAY SEASON
The Thanksgiving and Christmas schedules are now in.
CONTACT
MAUPINTOUR
at the Malls
at the Mains
711 W. 23rd VI 3-1211
64
SENIORS... PLAN AHEAD
(for the senior day party of course)
AT THE BIG BARN
SENIOR DAY-OCT. 26
AFTER THE GAME, 5 PM.-11 P.M.
— SENIORS WITH ID'S FREE
— EVERYONE ELSE $1.50
SENIOR DAY-OCTOBER 26
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 23, 1963
THE BETWEEN TWO CENTURIES.
BLOOD DONATIONS—Student body President Reuben McCornack gave a pint of blood yesterday kicking off the blood donations drive of the ASC Health Committee. Blood donations will be sought throughout the year in organized living groups.
ASC Student Liaison一
(Continued from page 1)
tions of whether the ASC is serving the student body as it is intended to do.
"NINTY-NINE PER CENT of us are more interested in our own political ambitions and our own importance as members of the ASC than we are of the students," Jack Croughan, Novato, Calif., senior, said. "The problem is that the council exists too much to perpetuate itself. The council should take a serious reconsideration of what we're doing here."
Miss Conner said a committee with objectives similar to those Thompson envisioned for the Student Liaison Committee is needed.
"But when we as members of the ASC find problems, why can't we be liars?" she asked. "And why can't all of us try to become better informed so that we can have valid opinions at our meetings?"
McCORNACK SAID his goal as student body president is to set that the ASC is not prevented from
"hearing all problems, considering them intelligently and taking necessary action."
"If we don't take the responsibility of dealing with problems facing the student, then we have failed the student completely," McCornack said.
Prior to announcing his intention of having a special group examine the ASC committees, McCornack defended their usefulness. He said that several committees are present serving no useful purpose, and that he would probably favor their abolishment.
"I don't believe in having dead wood on our rolls," he said.
In other action, the ASC voted to allow the Elections Committee to determine the necessity of having party primaries in this fall's elections, added six non-voting members to the Elections Committee and accepted Roy Miller, Topeka junior, as new School of Journalism representative. Miller replaces Steve Clark, Coffeyville senior, who resigned.
--the BOOK SALE is coming
Donald R. McCoy, associate professor of history, is a delegate at the meeting of the U.S. National Commission for the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural organization.
Professor Attends UNESCO Meeting
The four-day conference in Chicago begins today.
Prof. McCoy's appointment was made by the Department of State.
Delegates to the UNESCO conference will consider the fundamental changes that have been taking place in Europe and the implications of these changes for the U.S.
Prof. McCoy last year held a Fulbright fellowship at the University of Bonn, Germany. He is the author of two books, "Angry Voices" and "Readings in Twentieth Century American History."
He is an assistant professor and research assistant.
Glenn Wolfe, former staff scientist at the Jackson Memorial laboratory in Bar Harbor, Md., has joined the zoology department at KU.
Scientist Joins Faculty
Wolfe received his Ph.D. at KU in 1960.
Paving Meeting to Begin
The Seventh Annual Kansas Asphalt Paving Conference, will be tomorrow and Friday at KU. The program will feature a study of problems related to the processing of road materials, and the laying of roads.
Industry leaders and government officials from Kancas and surrounding states will be the speakers at the technical sessions.
A PANEL will discuss "Highway Road and Street Financing at State, County and City Levels." The Moderator will be John A. Olsen, assistant manager of the Kansas Contractors Association. Panelists will be Laurin Jones, state senator of Dodge City; Kenneth F. Sanborn, city manager, Junction City, and C. R. Head, Wilson county commissioner. Needsha.
DR. HAROLD M. MALLETT, pastor of the First Presbyterian church, Lawrence, will be the dinner speaker Thursday, and Mayor Hal Gerlach of Topeka will address the Thursday luncheon.
The program was arranged by the KU department of civil engineering and University Extension for the Kansas Asphalt Association and the Asphalt Institute.
Official Bulletin
Interviews for Oct. 24. (Sign up in 202 Summerfield).
Caterpillar Tractor Co. - Technical marketing, manufacturing, manufacturing, only.
Pandhandle Eastern Pipe Line—Accounting dept.
TODAY
Catholic Mass. 5 p.m. St. Lawrence
Catholic Church, 1910 Stratford Road.
Catholic Unabel, 1991 St. Sebastian,
Civil Rights Council, 7 p.m., Kansas
University
Timely Topics, 7 p.m. St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center, 1915 Stratford
10. Newman executive meeting, 8:30 p.m.
Russian Club, 7:30 p.m. Jayhawk Room,
Union Mountain and elec-
cardium cavities invited
TOMORROW
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center,
1915 Stratford Road.
Latter-Day Saints Institute of Religion,
Union, Pan American Room, Kansas
Union.
Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m. 5 p.m. St.
Louis' Church Catholic Chapel. 1310 Stratford
Road
**Sigma Alpha Eta**, 7:30 p.m., Sunflower Room, Union. "The Characteristics of Mentally Retarded Children"—Dr. John F. Cawley.
Christian Science Organization, 7:20 p.m., Danforth Chapel. Everyone wel-
ome.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
"I'm having all my clothes cleaned at Independent Laundry."
Laundry."
For the best in cleaning and laundering services, it's
- Independent Drive-In 900 Miss.
- Independent Downtown Plant 740 Vt.
Independent
LAUNDRY AND
DRY CLEANERS
K
Calendar Says October, Weather Resembles June
B. R. H.
MARY KOGER, Lakewood, Colo., sophomore, carries her coat around hoping to hasten the late fall weather that should have arrived by now.
The state has already broken several high temperature records with 90 degree temperatures. Other records have been tied.
It was the warmest October ever recorded.
That's what weathermen will be saying if October's last week doesn't get cooler. And the forecast predicts that it won't.
October's normal high is usually 66 degrees, and the low temperature around 45 degrees. However, October 1963 has been some 40 degrees above normal with the low temperatures being what the normal high is for this time of year.
Predictions are for the highs to be in the upper 80's for the last remaining days of this unusual month which has affected many people in as many different ways.
KU students have mixed emotions about the situation. Girls are complaining about the warm temperature, because their wool skirts and sweaters are in their closets gathering moths and wishful looks. Men are indifferent—toward books and assignments as they sit beneath the green leaves of the many trees.
Lawrence merchants report few sales on such items as wool dresses, fur-lined coats, and cans of soup.
COLUMBIA
—Photo by Don Black
JIM MOORE, Wichita senior, like most students lately, seems to prefer relaxing to studying because of the summer weather.
Dailu hansan
61st Year. No.30
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Thursday, Oct. 24, 1963
JFK Asks Support Of Civil Rights Bill
WASHINGTON — (UPI)—President Kennedy today threw the full weight of his personal prestige into the battle to save his civil rights bill.
It was necessary to assure at least 17 northern votes against the strong bill to make sure the Southern bloc could not swing the issue with its eight votes. Liberal Democrats and some Republicans might be persuaded to change their minds, but if there was a danger the strong bill would be approved—despite their defections—members of this group would be hard to line up against it.
ADMINISTRATION forces pulled out all the stops in their efforts to stop the strong bill, which they be-
Administration forces faced a formidable task in their battle to block House Judiciary Committee approval of a civil rights bill they believe far too strong to get through Congress.
In order to reverse what appeared to be a lost cause yesterday the administration needed to switch about a dozen votes of the 34 members voting on the Judiciary Committee.
The committee was scheduled to meet again today (10:30 a.m. EDT) on the strong measure drafted by a subcommittee, but there was considerable doubt whether a vote would be taken. There were reports the vote might be postponed until Tuesday.
THE REPUBLICAN leaders indicated they would explain the President's position to GOP members, but they made no promises.
Present at the White House session besides Celler were House Republican Leader Charles A. Halleck, Ind.; GOP Whip Leslie Arends, Ill.; Rep. William M. McCulloch, Ohio, ranking Republican member on the Judiciary Committee; House Speaker John W. M.Cormack and House Majority Leader Carl Albert, D-Okla.
TWICE BEFORE — the last time yesterday — committee chairman Emanuel Celler, D-N.Y., has postponed showdowns on the measure in a desperate effort to change some votes.
The President met for an hour with House leaders of both parties last night. He sought to convince them of the necessity of approving a bill which he felt would have a chance for House passage.
lived would be cut to shreds on the House floor.
The administration was reported calling in for payment all of its debtors on the Committee. One source said heavier pressure was being applied than at any previous time since Kennedy took office. He said there were some votes that could be counted on "although it is unpleasant to get them that way. We may have to get more unpleasant with some others before this is through."
Even then, sources said, no one knew if there would be enough votes.
The President's backers secured a postponement of the showdown yesterday to try to convince a bipartisan group of civil rights militants that the strong bill they were supporting would fall of its own weight.
KU Students Petition For Return of Bell
If many KU students have their way, the Tau Kappa Epsilon bell will be returned to the football field at Memorial Stadium in time for Homecoming.
Last night, TKE had collected 1,500 signatures on petitions asking the university administration to allow the bell to be replaced on the field, Rod Lennard, Ottawa senior and TKE president said. Members of the fraternity began circulating petitions Tuesday in all organized living groups.
The bell has not been placed on the field this year because the University administration thinks it may cause trouble. It was the cause of a near riot at the stadium at the last KU-Nebraska game.
Lennard said the TKEs have representatives circulating petitions within most of the living groups.
DR. BRUCE TALBOTT, the inspector, checked the hospital procedures, staff qualifications, staff operation, records, state reports, fire drill procedures, and civil defense organization. He spent the entire day talking with staff members and gathering information.
Dr. Talbott said the result of the inspection would probably be known in a month or more.
Lennard said there was little reason for the university decision. The University could use the dogs which protect the goal posts to guard the bell, he said.
The petitions will probably be collected today. Lennard said.
Watkins Hospital Checked By Accreditation Group
The inspection is made every three years at the request of the hospital. Watkins has been an accredited hospital for the past 25 years.
An inspector from the national Joint Commission on Accreditation of Hospitals made a tour of the Watkins Memorial Hospital Tuesday.
The inspection was to gather information about the hospital and its taff to submit to the commission for its approval of accreditation. The commission is made up of various medical organizations, including the American Medical Association.
"To find good medical care in safe surroundings are two of the primary
functions of the inspection," said Dr. Ralph Canuteson, director of Watkins.
DR. CAUTESON said Talbott was surprised to find that Watkins has individual records on all students before they come to school. The inspector complimented the hospital on the program and said few schools had such a program.
Dr. Canuteon said 51 Kansas hospitals are accredited by the commission. The inspector also visited the Lawrence Memorial hospital this week.
In past reports from the commission, Dr. Cauteson said, one item always mentioned is the need for a hospital library. He said this was well known but the hospital could not find room.
"Watkins hospital is crowded for space. This is our primary difficulty." Dr. Canuteson said. The hospital was built for a capacity of 4,500 students and it now is responsible for about 10,000.
County Attorney Says 'Chain Letter' Illegal
By Tom Coffman
Invest $15.
Get back $19,200.
Bank sales of U. S. Series E saving bonds have increased during the past week, according to Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of students. He has warned students against participation in a chain letter scheme, which involves exchanging the bonds.
This plan is a lottery, according to Ralph King, Douglas County attorney, and James K. Logan, dean of the Law School. Conviction on a lottery charge, which is a felony in Kansas, is punishable by one to three years in prison.
The chain letters labelled "U.S. Savings Bond Club," are being passed from hand to hand. A $25 bond original investment of $18.75—and a list of ten names sells for $37.50. The bond purchased by the new letter holder is made out to the man whose name is at the top of the list.
The buyer mails the bond to the number one man and buys two more bonds at a bank and has them made out to the number two man on the list. He then seratches the number one man from the list and adds his name to the bottom. These two sets of a list and a bond are then sold for $37.50 each and the process is repeated in an endless chain, according to the theory. When the buyer reaches the top of the list he will receive all the bonds from the mushrooming number of listed participants, theoretically.
FRANKLY, I WOULD guess that anyone whose name is number 10 on a list today isn't going to get a damn thing back," commented Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of students.
Dean Woodruff is concerned about sales of the chain letters on the KU campus.
"I want to protect a lot of our naive, stupid students from getting hurt on this," Dean Woodruff said. The chain letters originally came to Dean Woodruff's attention when a former KU student's girl friend had been pulled into the chain letter game.
Many of the bonds purchased recently at Lawrence banks are made payable to Manhattan residents,
Dean Woodruff said, "Indicating the chain letters came from K-State." He has recently been in contact with Lawrence bankers about the matter.
THE DOUGLAS COUNTY attorney said an investigation will be conducted by his office. "Someone is going to be in a lot of trouble if it is true," King said. "It is a felony and a serious offense."
Dean Logan said the chain letter-saving bond scheme fits the definition of lottery as described by Kansas statute, which reads: "The term lottery...includes schemes for distribution of money or property among persons who have given or agreed to give a valuable consideration for the chance, whether called a lottery, or gift enterprise, or by some other name."
Several student chain letter holders said the chain letter originally came to the campus from Kansas State University. The editor of the Kansas State Collegian (the official K-State newspaper), Jerry Kohler, said by telephone that several K-State students came to KU last week to start the chain here. "Apparently some guys got stuck with them and down to KU to unload them," Kohler said.
Kansas lottery laws are stringent, Dean Logan said. Trading stamps and bank nights at the movies have been ruled lotteries in the courts.
A Manhattan radio station-KMAN staged an editorial campaign warning students against buying the letters because they might not get their money back. Kohler said. After that, the letters and bonds were almost impossible to sell on the K-State campus, he explained.
Manhattan bank supplies of bonds were virtually depleted, he said, and students were going to out-of-town banks to buy bonds.
Riley County attorney, Donn Everett does not believe the scheme to be illegal, Kohler said.
The chain letters have been circulated at the Kansas State football games with Nebraska, Colorado, and Oklahoma universities among the visiting fans, Kohler believes. It has been rumored that this particular chain originated on the West Coast, Kohler said.
(Continued on page 12)
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Thursday, Oct. 24, 1963
An Answer?
"There is no question that racial tensions are eventually going to make life impossible for all of us unless we develop an educational program that enables the Negro to enter our society and the white man to place a high value on his entry."
This fearful statement is the key to a new proposal toward what one man feels may be the next step in our nation's current Negro revolt.
The man behind the idea is Joseph P. Lyford, an executive of the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions, and his demanding program, recently expressed in Saturday Review, looks like this:
Raise the compulsory school attendance age from 16 to 18.
- Decrease the ratio of teachers to pupils to one to 15.
- Provide special services for children who start their education with severe economic, psychological, or cultural handicaps.
The enormous cost of such an expanded system, says Lyford, could be financed by the government at three or four times the present level of our public education program if we could realize now that "more and better education is more important to our national security than bigger and cleaner bombs."
He calls, too, for a revised educational philosophy preparing young people "to achieve an independent position in adult life and to distinguish between sentimental fairy tales about America and current realities."
THOSE EDUCATED in such a manner, he feels, would be "emancipated from the sort of tribal attitudes that have turned Birmingham, Ala., into a fratricidal society."
These are radical ideas with widespread consequences and will meet with plenty of determined opposition, as well as with more than a few disbelieving guffaws. But change is nothing new in America, and education, though a laggard at first, now tends to lead the way.
IN 1950, for example, about one-fourth of the non-white population had attended high school or college, while twice as many white children did the same. Ten years later, four of every ten non-whites had attended some high school or college, compared to six of every ten in the white population.
between the qualifications of workers and hiring requirements steadily widens, and the Negro, educated or not, bears the heavier burden.
But, even as educational levels struggle upwards, automation and technology make the average job more complex. As a result, the gap
The non-white unemployment rate, almost double that of white job hunters, provides ample evidence to confirm this fact. And the unemployment situation shows little sign of immediate improvement for any segment of the working force.
Lyford, predicting a general unemployment level of 14 million by 1970, sees in this the possible downfall of the American system as a whole. He says the Negro merely has begun to react to the deteriorating conditions first because, being economically in the most exposed position, he is far more sensitive to the "shock signals that are traveling through the country."
His most frightening point is that if the Negro does not prevail over the forces that are driving him downward, the white Americans will go down with him.
THOUGH PROBABLY a gross overstatement of the situation, this prediction may well reflect a growing amount of pessimism in the general public attitude toward the Negro movement because of the uncertainty of its development and the possibility of its getting out of hand.
In fact, the prevailing tone of Lyford's suggestions is one of urgent necessity in avoidance of such threatening consequences. And here his recommendations will undoubtedly meet the greatest resistance should an attempt be made to convert them into public policy.
The practical citizen may think it fanciful enough to dream of replacing bombs with books, but making the transition from a defense industry budget to one centered around the lower income-producing educational system could be quite a nightmare in itself.
True, the economy may be at an important turning point, and education is without a doubt an imminent key to the future. But Mr. Lyford needs only to look at the progress of President Kennedy's civil rights legislation in Congress to realize that the American people are not about to be stamped into anything so closely connected with their personal sense of values.
This is not to say the proposals he suggests are not sound—certainly here is a logical means toward extending the Negro's campaign for freedom. But to hitch equality to such a potentially explosive process would be inviting other, possibly more frustrating problems that a more sensible approach might well avoid.
Larry Schmidt
COMMUNIST WAR
BUDPHIST PAGODAS
NEW PALACE GUARD FORCE
© JESSE HERBLOCK
THE WASHINGTON POST
"What A Dirty Trick, Sneaking Up On Us From Behind Like That!"
Dailij Hansan
111 Flint Hall
University of Kansas student newspaper
UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom
UNiversity 4-3198, business office
b. became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
Founded 1889, 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 Lawrence, Kansas.
Mike Miller ... Managing Editor
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Blaine King ... Editorial Editor
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Bob Brooks Business Manager
Negro Gets Up From a Bed of Indifference
Such a topic has a pointed lesson to the Negro. Observation has instructed me that religious loyalty is largely associated with the lower socio-economic classes—the position into which the Negro has been forced for decades. A legitimate question, then, is whether the Negro will remain faithful to the church after our cause is won, or abandon the church as no longer necessary.
The subject of the sermon was "The Other Side of Job." Job was the man who served God while he was poor as well as when he was rich.
BUT WHATEVER relationship may develop between the Negro and his church after full equality is achieved, it is clear
[Editor's Note: The following article was written by Lacy Banks, Kansas City, Mo., junior, who participated in the March on Washington in Augstr. Banks is a Negro, and the article below is his interpretation of the march, what it meant to his race, and what his race meant by marching, although many of the marchers were, of course, white]
Forty-two delegates to the "March on Washington" met at a Kansas City, Kan., church late in August of this year. The purpose—to have a worship service—a sermon and prayer.
By Lacy Banks
that the relationship between the Negro and the rest of society is not what it should be.
That was proven Aug. 28, when more than 200,000 demonstrators in the mammoth "March on Washington for jobs and freedom" choked the gates of Washington, D.C.
About 2000 buses (these figures vary according to sources), 21 special and 10 regular trains, 20 planes and hundreds of cars were used. The crowd was composed of representatives from every state in the union.
When I look at the March, I cannot help but consider the historical, economic, sociological issues involved. The Washington Protest was the zenith of all other demonstrations staged thus far and it inspired each demonstrator to leave with a story to tell: a story about a dream and a vision. The dream concerns a nation of democracy and brotherhood, concrete through and through. The vision is a prediction that that nation will be America. The dream is not to spontaneously fulfill itself alone. Neither will it come true overnight. Our period today is pregnant with a nation of true democracy and brotherhood.
At every period in history when the times were pregnant with freedom and progress, there was activity within and without when the times of deliverance were at hand.
America is the offspring of such a period. The activity was expressed in our forefathers' quest for freedom and independence, the British resistance, the American protest demonstrations against the Greenville Acts, the Townsend Acts, the Stamp Act, the tea tax, taxation without representation, etc. Frederick Douglass, the father of this protest movement said, "If there is no struggle, there is no progress. Those who profess to favor freedom, and yet deprecate agitation, are men who want crops without plowing up the ground. Power conceded nothing without a demand. . . . Men may not get all they pay for in this world; but they must certainly pay for all they get."
THERE ARE MANY people who underestimate the gravity of the Washington Movement. Some say that it was not a cry for deliverance but rather a sign. Others say that it was just the Negro's turning over in the bed of his subordinate status. Others
say that the March merely served as an outlet for the Negro's steam that has been built up for the last 244 years. Still others believe the March to be the "swan song" of our freedom march.
These are all grave underestimations. The March was not a weak sign but a strong cry for freedom. We are not turning over in the bed of our subordinate status, we are getting up from it.
Our sentiments are expressed in the classic speech by Martin Luther King when he said, "Those who hope that the Negro needed to blow off steam and will now be content will have a rude awakening if the nation returns to business as usual. There will be no rest nor tranquility in America until the Negro is granted his citizenship rights. The whirlwinds of revolt will continue to shake the foundations of our nation until the bright day of justice emerges." We were expecting a speech but not one like that. The gravity of the speech was so concentrated that it seemed to compensate for the 244 years of failures in protests or getting the message across for our part.
The dream he gave us is the
Sometimes we tried to pretend that the dream was real or at least to make it so. We conformed to American ideals. We cleaned our clothes, greased our ashy skin, learned about the poetry of Homer, mastered French, straightened our hair, use nadinola (skin whitener), only to no avail.
dream that we have dreamed all our lives.
The door of acceptance was slammed in our faces and we were told, like Jonathan Bean, who tried so desperately to see the king, that we did not have the right clothes for color came before character.
There are those who label us communists, warmongers, and other names. They say, "But things are much better for you now than they ever have been before. What are you hollering about"?
We "holler" because we measure America not by her achievement but by her potential. Louis E. Lomax expresses this idea a little better when he said in The Negro Revolt, "America is too good not to be better."
There are those who so often harp, "But you cause violence. You are unjustified in doing so.
(Continued on page 3)
Up From Indifference...
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Even while the bulk of the Negro community was in slavery, men like Crisus Attuches were fighting and giving their lives to make America free (it is paradoxical that America's freedom meant their slavery). The year 1863 came, and so did the Emancipation Proclamation. We were allegedly free by law, but as we see even today what should be, is not.
AMERICA OWES us Negroes a great debt. That debt is that we be recognized as first-class citizens. We have merited this position. We helped to discover and settle these new frontiers of the Americas. In slavery we toiled sun up, sun down for 244 years to make America strong.
The March on Washington is backed by 100 years of unfulfilled promises and gradualism (which has merely served as an apology for perpetual racial injustices), and the realization that the laws on the statute books are like an ungrounded lease around a mad dog's neck. For one hundred years we have been struggling to attain our sanity as well as our citizenship. This nation has not only been forcing us to forget that we have always existed by to forget also that we exist today.
I constantly encounter many individuals who justify their contempt for and inferior estimation of the Negro by their freedom (that we Negroes have ironically helped to win) as outlined in the Constitution. An
FASHION
THE NEW YORKER
excellent example is the system of the Greek letter organizations here.
Last year I met a white friend whom I knew in high school in the Kansas Union. He was a member of one of the white fraternities. I told him that I had decided to try fraternity life and had pledged (though depledged later). He smiled, shook my hand and said, "Good thing there, Lacy, I'm glad to have you a brother in this fraternity system of ours. Which one did you pledge, the Alphas or the Kappas"?
I continued the conversation, to be sure, but only with a flaming humiliation inside of me. He obviously didn't know that I knew the truth about the euphemistic terms of "brother," "glad" and "our." I also know the truth about the other statements made by the white fraternities to justify racial discrimination and segregation. "We have the right to pledge whom we want to" simply means, "We have the right to segregate and discriminate on racial basis." But these houses, though privately owned, are dependent mainly or solely on the KU student body in order to subsist. They are also subjugated to university legislation. In these contexts I call them university living groups.
Anne is leading the Frosh Hawks — and campus fashions — in a red wool "little girl" dress — bow trimmed and here in many colors.
Anne Machin President of Frosh Hawks
COACH HOUSE
Chicken For Town and Country
"Is it justifiable," I ask myself, "for university housing that is established for the accommodation of University to deny a qualified student the right to accommodations solely on account of color"?
And when I say "no" I do not only base my answer within the moral frame of reference but in the democratic one that in substance seeks to insure for one and all life, liberty, and the pursuits of happiness. How can we live, be free and pursue happiness in the teeth of a system that makes it its business to prohibit us from doing so?
We have for centuries borne the cross of being Negroes in the midst of lynching, name calling, police brutality, economic exploitation, taxation without representation. We seldom said a mumbling word.
VI 3-6369
We have for centuries been patient. We have been forced to live together in the crowded and delapidated ghettos, to tolerate each other (however difficult it may be for some of us), to know what we are rather than who we are.
I SAY NO.
12th & Oread
Now we are of age. We are the "New Negro."
WE ASK FOR the payment of overdue debt. This is the motive for the Washington March. This is why we walked and are walking today. And we shall continue to walk solemnly and peacefully for our freedom.
We march on not only for ourselves but for the new and true America which will evolve in the aftermath of this victory.
The theme song of the March ends my sav:
We'll overcome, we'll overcome,
We'll overcome some day,
If in our hearts we do not yield
We'll overcome some day.
Thursday, Oct. 24, 1963 University Daily Kansan P P
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Oct. 24, 1963
Women's Day May Come In Ecumenical Sessions
VATICAN CITY — (UPI) — The day a woman walks in to take her seat at an Ecumenical Council, some 2,000 years of tradition will be shattered.
And that day does not seem too far off.
In St. Peter's Basilica today, Belgium's Leo Cardinal Sunns raised the point that half the Catholic World was unrepresented in the council.
Cardinal Suenens was the first council father to go on record with a question that has been current since the opening of the council's second session last month—why not women?
FROM THE FIRST Ecumenical Council in 325 A.D. until the opening of the second session of the present council, the gathering of church fathers was an all-male affair.
Under canon law, only churchmen with the rank of bishop or higher, could be called to take part in a council. Since women are barred from the Catholic priesthood, none could ever become eligible for a voice in a council.
It was still highly doubtful that a woman would ever be allowed to talk during a council debate but Pope Paul VI has, in effect, opened the door for them to come in and listen.
The Pontiff recently ruled that representatives of the Catholic laity should be invited to the council with the same privileges accorded to the observers from non-Catholic churches attending the meetings.
SINCE WOMEN comprise at least half of the Catholic laity, the ruling poised what some conservatives regard as the thin edge of the wedge under the all-made tradition.
But they could find some consolation in the fact that both canon law and council regulations seem to back up St. Paul's dictum, "It is unseemly for a woman to talk in church."
Only the council fathers have the right to join in debate and vote.
Catholic woman, by church law and tradition, have been barred from the priesthood, which is specifically reserved to "baptized males." They can be members of religious orders but in the structure of the Catholic church, the role of a nun is of a different order than that of a priest.
SOME OF THE outstanding saints of the Catholic Church, however, have been women and Catholics pay special devotion to the Virgin Mary. St. Joan of Arc, St. Theresa of Avila and St. Catherine of Siena, Italy's patron saint, are among the women who have made their marks in church history.
The first U.S. citizen to become a saint of the Catholic church was a woman, Italian-born Mother Frances Xavier Cabrini. The first native-born American to be batified was Elizabeth Ann Bayley Seton, the Protestant-born native New Yorker who founded the Sisters of Charity in the U.S.
Woman Knocks Lady Preacher
NEW YORK — (UPI)—A woman just promoted to a high post in the hierarchy of Protestantism believes women belong outside the pulpit in fulfilling their religious duties.
"I just think the woman's place is not in the pulit," said Miss Carman St. John Wolff, who is the first woman in the 44-year history of the National Council of the Protestant Episcopal Church to be named a departmental director.
THIS IS THE HOME OF THE FIVE-FOOT JAYHAWK AND THE BIG GALLON
Miss Wolff on Nov. 1, will succeed Rev. Dr. David R. Hunter as head of the council's Department of Christion Education. Dr. Hunter is the newly-named associate general secretary of the National Council of Churches.
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Thursday, Oct. 24, 1963 University Daily Kansan P
Seemingly Rosy Italy Faces Communist Gains
By Phil Newsom
On the surface, Italians never had it so good.
Wages were up and sales of automobiles, refrigerators and television sets were booming.
Unemployment—not counting the unemployables—was down almost to zero.
AND OF THE nations of Western Europe, only West Germany and France had more money in the bank.
But underneath there was trouble, some of it due to the very factors mentioned above, and some of it political wherein Italy's large Communist party saw its greatest change since 1948.
Events of the next few weeks would determine Italy's immediate future.
Italy's troubles were intertwined. POLITICALLY, the question was whether Italy's largest political party, the Christian Democrats, could or would renew its partnership with the left-wing socialists of
Fietro Nemni to set up a governing center-left coalition. A previous attempt under former Premier Amintore Fanfani collapsed after last April 28 elections in which the Communists picked up a million votes.
Caught in the ensuing tug-of-war were the Nenni Socialists who in their party congress this week will be asked to decide whether to continue their ties with the Communist party or to accept a sufficiently moderate stand as to permit renewal of their partnership with the Christian Democrats.
The Communist part in the campaign followed a familiar pattern of strikes and violence, including one particularly violent demonstration in Rome and resulting injury to 155 Roman Police.
A pawn in the struggle is the Italian economy whose rise has been among the most spectacular of all the European Common Market countries.
Text of Bonds Chain Letter
Editor's Note: The following is a full text of a copy of one of the letters currently on the KU campus.
1. You give $75.70 by hand to the person giving you this list. He gives you a $25 savings bond in the name of the person first appearing on the list you have just purchased. Don't use the mail to send this letter. It is illegal to do so.
2. The name on the bond must be the same as the name on the top of the list you have just purchased. Mail the bond at once to the person whose name is on the bond. It is legal to mail the bond. Mail it in a plain envelope, via regular or air mail.
3. Make two copies of this list, eliminating the name at the top and adding your full name (not initials) and address to bottom. Thus, the name originally number one is removed. Number two is now number one. Your name is number ten.
4. Purchase from the bank two
$25 savings bonds made out to the person whose name comes first on the list you have made out. (It appears that a sentence was omitted here, according to information received on the plan, which would instruct the participant to sell the new bonds and new lists to the new persons for a total of $75.) You will now have your money.
5. When your name reaches the top of the list, you will receive $19,200 in savings bonds worth $25,000 in seven years and nine months from date of issue. This campaign is assured of continuance because every person will hasten to get back his investment. The resulting bond sales will help your country.
Note: This list is not valid unless a bond payable to the person whose name is number one is attached thereto. Responsible legal talent had advised that this procedure of selling government bonds is illegal.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansa
Thursday, Oct. 24, 1963
Campus Civil Rights Boosters Join NAACP in Housing Poll
By Clare Casey
The local chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People has asked KU students to help conduct a house to house survey in Lawrence.
The announcement was made last night by the Rev. H. C. McMillan, head of the Lawrence NAACP, at a meeting of the Civil Rights Council in the Kansas Union.
"It HAS been found that most of the Negro families in Lawrence have been stationary since the 1820's," said Rev. McMillan. "We like to find out from the Negro families whether they would consider moving to other parts of the city if it were possible."
Rev. McMillan requested students to take a questionnaire to Lawrence homes, mostly Negro families. The survey begins Sunday to investigate minority housing in the Lawrence area.
city in New York. Rev. McMillan thought that it would benefit everyone if the CRC and the student body would help conduct the survey. He reported that the NAACP had around fifty persons now working on the survey. Many of these people have experience in the survey field, said McMillan.
HE ADDED that survey findings would be reported Nov. 1 in the St. Luke's Church.
A committee was set up to investigate fraternity and sorority affairs in the field of civil rights. ___
Police Stress Bike Safety
The KU Police department has launched a strict safety program on campus this week for the benefit of the increasing number of bicycle riders.
Joe Skillman, KU police chief, said, "The chances for accidents increase with the increased bicycle population and thus the need for strict enforcement of regulations."
He said that the department will take precautions to prevent another bicycle fatality.
Skillman said that patrolmen in the five traffic control booths are checking the bicycles to make sure they stop for the stop sign and see if they have been registered.
The bicycle riders are under the same regulations as an automobile and are not to be ridden on sidewalks. They should also stop for pedestrians as well as stop signs, he said.
All bicycles must be registered, according to a city ordinance, at the KU police department or the Lawrence police department. The campus has no bicycle regulations and follows those of the city.
Persons not registering their bicycles or violating other parts of the ordinance can be fined $25. This week KU police are issuing warning tickets to offenders.
Registration costs 25 cents and is a great aid in finding owners of lost or stolen bicycles when they are found by us, Skillman said. The manufacturer's serial number found on the bicycle frame is listed for registration.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Mathematics Staff Seminar, 3:30 p.m.
119 Strong. "Computer Languages"—Prof. John B. Johnson. Coffee at 3:20 p.m.
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road.
Sigma Alpha Eta, 7:30 p.m. Sunflower Room, Kansas Union. "The Characteristics of Mentally Retarded Children."—Dr. John F. Cawley.
Christian Science Organization, 7:30 p.m. Danforth. Everyone welcome. Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m. Danforth.
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses 6:45 a.m. 5 p.m.
Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford
American Society of Tooling and Manufacturing Engineers 6 p.m. Bowler Hall. Field trip Christian Fellowship, 7:30 p.m., 829 Mississippi St. "Jesus Christ and the World"—Dr. Alice Kitchen, KUMC grad.
Arthur Spears, Kansas City, junior, reported he was working with a group outside of the CRC in looking into the Greek organization problem.
"I WOULD like to make it known that there are other groups that are working on this problem," said Spears. "However, at this time we do not want any publicity as we feel that it would defeat our purpose. The tactics that we are using will be more effective if they are not publicized."
Aside from the fraternity and sorority committee, the council also voted to set up a housing committee.
The council also set up a committee to look into the tavern issue as it stands in the Lawrence area. It was decided that this committee should also handle recreation matters in Lawrence.
JAMES E. TITUS, assistant professor of Political Science and CRC
faculty advisor, suggested that the tavern committee be expanded to include all public accommodations in Lawrence. This motion was accepted.
Prof. Titus, former chairman of the Lawrence Human Relations Commission, (LHRC), urged the committees to stress accuracy in their reports. He said that in the past the LHRC has been hampered in its work by lack of definite facts. "If we are to take action in any field, we must have all the facts," said Titus. "We must know exactly what taverns, what cafes are discriminating. If it is housing we must know what home owners are discriminating."
The council also voted to have a finance committee and a committee to look into employment practices. Professor Titus urged that the CRC should have closer ties with the LHRC by working directly with a similar committee of the LHRC.
KU's Union Opens Room For Student Study Needs
Students frustrated by the noise and inconvenience from Watson Library's construction project may find solitude at last.
Frank Burge, director of the Kansas Union, has reserved the Sunflower Room off the cafeteria from 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. daily for a study room for KU students.
Because of possible conflicts with previous reservations for the room, announcements about the study room will be posted on the main bulletin board in the lobby of the Union every day.
main bulletin board in the lobby of Stuart Forth, associate director of Watson Library, said there will be no library books in the Sunflower Room.
Forth said that Burge offered the Sunflower Room because of the inadequate studying facilities at Watson due to the construction.
Forth said the Sunflower Room would be open to students throughout the fall semester and probably into the spring semester.
The construction work on Watson is slated for completion in February.
Feel nervous, run-down?
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VI 3-9481
Home in Wax
LONDON—(UPI) It was moving day at Madame Tussaud's yesterday
LONDON day at Madame Tussaud's yesterday. The famous Wax Museum, which displays effigies of the British Cabinet among its exhibits moved New Prime Minister Lord Home to the center of the stage and carted former Leader of the House of Commons Iain MasLead to the storeroom to await a change in political fortunes.
Nobody's Fool
ST, LOUIS, Mo—(UPI)—James L. Mason was in jail on suspicion of robbery today because he refused to fall for an old trick.
Police said Mason was holding up a service station when the attendant began talking to someone behind Mason's back — patrolman Allen Duncan.
TOMMY
On Campus with Max Shulman
(Author of Rally Round the Flag, Boys and Barefoot Boy With Cheek)
HAPPINESS CAN'T BUY MONEY
With tuition costs steadily on the rise, more and more undergraduates are looking into the student loan plan. If you are one such, you would do well to consider the case of Leonid Sigafoos.
Leonid, the son of an unemployed bean gleaner in Straightened Circumstances, Montana, had his heart set on going to college, but his father, alas, could not afford to send him. Leonid applied for a Regents Scholarship, but his reading speed, alas, was not very rapid—three words an hour—and before he could finish the first page of his exam, the Regents had closed their briefcases crossly and gone home. Leonid then applied for an athletic scholarship, but he had, alas, only a single athletic skill—picking up beebes with his toes—and this, alas, aroused only fleeting enthusiasm among the coaches.
aroused only meeting enthusiasts. And then—happy day!—Leonid learned of the student loan plan: he could borrow money for his tuition and repay it in easy installments after he left school!
instrumentafter he lerst to acquire
Happily Leonid enrolled in the Southeastern Montana College of Lanolin and Restoration Drama and happily began a college career that grew happier year by year. Indeed, it became altogether ecstatic in his senior year because Leonid met a coed named Anna Livia Plurabelle with hair like beaten gold and eyes like two sockets full of Lake Louise. Love gripped them in its big moist palm, and they were betrothed on St. Crispin's Day.
17
...but he had, alas, only a single athletic skill
Happily they made plans to be married immediately after commencement—plans, alas, that were never to come to fruition because Leonid, alas, learned that Anna Livia, like himself, was in college on a student loan, which meant that he not only had to repay his own loan after graduation but also Anna Livia's and the job, alas, that was waiting for Leonid at the Butte Otter Works simply did not pay enough, alas, to cover both loans, plus rent and food and clothing and television repairs.
Heavy hearted, Leonid and Anna Livia sat down and lit Marlboro Cigarettes and tried to find an answer to their problem—and, sure enough, they did! I do not know whether or not Marlboro Cigarettes helped them find an answer; all I know is that Marlboros taste good and look good and filter good, and when the clouds gather and the world is black as the pit from pole to pole, it is a heap of comfort and satisfaction to be sure that Marlboros will always provide the same easy pleasure, the same unstinting tobacco flavor, in all times and climes and conditions. That's all I know.
Leonid and Anna Livia, I say, did find an answer—a very simple one. If their student loans did not come due until they left school, why then they just wouldn't leave school! So after receiving their bachelor's degrees, they re-enrolled and took master's degrees. After that they took doctor's degrees—loads and loads of them—until today Leonid and Anna Livia, both aged 87, both still in school, hold doctorsate in Philosophy, Humane Letters, Jurisprudence, Veterinary Medicine, Civil Engineering, Optometry, Woodpulp, and Dewey Decimals.
Their student loans, at the end of the last fiscal year, amounted to a combined total of nineteen million dollars—a sum which they probably would have found some difficulty in repaying had not the Department of the Interior recently declared them a National Park. © 1963 Max Sinclair
* *
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Coach Suffers Few Losses After First Dual Meet Here
Page 7
He was a quarter-miler at the University of Indiana. He gained prominence with winning track teams as coach at Hammond, Ind., High School.
University Daily Kansan
Then, in 1947, after coaching eight years at Drake University, Bill Easton came to the University of Kansas.
The Jayhawker distance team will be seeking its 40th consecutive league cross country dual meet victory against Oklahoma Friday afternoon at Norman.
A loss isn't encouraging to any coach anytime, but even more so when the loss is suffered in the coach's first cross country meet at a new school.
BUT EASTON had to experience such a defeat after KU lost a close meet to Missouri in its cross country season's opener in 1947.
Since his first dual meet here, however, Easton's cross country teams have not lost to another league opponent. In fact, only twice since then has KU lost to non-conference opponents.
Easton hasn't experienced a dual meet defeat in four years and 20 meets. The last loss was suffered to the Chicago Track Club in 1959.
ONE OTHER KU loss over the years was to Oklahoma State in 1955 before the Cowboys entered what is now the Big Eight.
The Jayhawks, who finished second in last year's league meet to Colorado, have won 14 of the last 16 conference cross country meets.
To date, this year's team has beaten Southern Illinois, Chicago Track Club and Drake. All three defeats were either by the maximum point spread or nearly the maximum.
THIS EVENING...
"They're a fine, well-balanced gang," Easton said of this year's team. "They're by far the best team we've had since our NCAA championship team in 1953, especially in balance.
By Roy Miller
"WeVE HAD good teams, but I don't believe we'd had them as good in balance."
Paul Acevedo has finished first for KU in all three meets this season. He has been pushed hard in the last two meets by teammates Herald Hadley and John Lawson and Easton feels this is indicative of the team's balance.
"Last year, we were short on manpower and didn't really have down to earth good distance runners," Easton said. "This gang, however, has competitive spirit and desire and all seven men are battling for first place in each meet."
George Cabrera, team captain, finished first in every meet last year for KU. Against Drake here Saturday, Cabrera placed seventh.
"CABRERA WAS lucky to make the travel squad," Easton said. "The way it looks now, he'll really have to work to keep on the squad."
Easton feels Colorado will be the team to beat in the Big Eight meet here Nov. 9.
The Buffaloes returned their entire championship team from last year, but David Wighton, a sophomore, is their No.1 runner currently.
Easton earlier thought Missouri would be strong this year. Saturday, however, the Tigers lost to Oklahoma State at Stillwater.
A man is lying in a hammock.
You've Never Known Such Comfort
RUNNING FOR KU Friday against Oklahoma will be veterans Acevedo, Hadley, Tonnie Coane, Chick Fero and Cabrera along with rookie Lawson and either sophomore John Donner or another rookie, Ken Holm.
And at such a modest cost . . .
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THE NEW YORK STATE COLLEGE
Pardon me if I sound as if the executive position I've landed deals with the whole future of the world.
THE CURRENCY UNION SHOWS THE INFORMATION FACILITY AT HAWAIIAN AIRPORT.
It does.
Certainly, there's no organization today conducting more vital business than the business of the United States Air Force. And very few organizations that give a college graduate greater opportunities for responsibility and growth.
As an Air Force officer, you'll be a leader on the Aerospace Team—with good pay, a 30-day paid vacation each year, educational opportunities.
How can you get started? For many, the best way is through Air Force ROTC. But if you missed out on AFROTC, or if there's no unit on your campus, you can still apply for Air Force Officer Training School. This three-month course leads to a commission as a second lieutenant in the United States Air Force.
For more information about Air Force OTS, see your local Air Force representative.
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Oct. 24, 1963
Liberals Join Attack on Foreign Aid
Editor's Note:
President Kennedy's foreign aid program is in deep trouble in Congress after many years of bipartisan support. Much of it comes not from Conservative critics who have opposed foreign aid in the past but from Liberals who have supported it. Why? One of those Liberal supporters, Sen. Frank Church, D-Idaho, a member of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, explains the "Liberal Revolt" in the following dispatch.
By Sen, Frank Church, D-Idaho
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — When Conservatives in Congress criticize foreign aid, it's hardly news. But when the Liberals begin to join the revolt, it is time to ask what's gone wrong.
Congressional resistance to this year's foreign aid authorization bill is at an all-time high. The House of Representatives has already struck a billion dollars from the President's request; the bill was mired down in the Senate Foreign Relations Committee for months before the committee approved it. By the time the appropriations process exacts its toll, President Kennedy will be lucky to come out with a $31½-billion program for the coming year, fully half a billion less than the least Eisenhower year.
Why should a Democratic Congress so threat a Democratic President, particularly one who has reorganized the whole program and placed it in the hands of David Bell, the ablest director yet?
WHY SHOULD THE REVOLT come on the heels of the most successful innovation in the aid program since Truman's famous "Point Four" inaugurated technical assistance? I refer, of course, to the Peace Corps, a Kennedy triumph, which seems really to be reaching through, on a people-to-people basis, to capture the enthusiasm of young nations and young Americans alike.
Why, then, the revolt?
As one Liberal who is taking part in it, I think the reasons are several in number and cumulative in character. To begin with, Congress has finally lost patience with the apparent inability of the administrators to ever bring aid programs to an end. By 1962, the list of recipient countries had grown to 107! This left only eight countries in the whole on the free world which were not
getting some form of American subsidy! Even the rich, fully-recoveries of Western Europe and Japan were still receiving sizeable grants of our military equipment and supplies. It is preposterous that spigots, once opened on the American foreign aid barrel, should continue to drip indefinitely.
A SECOND REASON for the Liberal Revolt is the frustration we have suffered in our long-time efforts to shift foreign aid from gifts to loans. Had we loaned, instead of given, most of the money under the Marshall Plan to the countries of Western Europe, we would not have so serious a problem with our balance-of-payments today, for we would now be in a position to call back from the presently prosperous European countries, without hardship to them, the money we should have loaned them in the postwar years.
Drawing on this experience, we established, some years ago, a development loan fund (DLF), for the underdeveloped countries, confident that it would serve to place aid for economic development of these regions on a genuine loan, rather than grant, basis. Now we are discovering that the flexibility provided by the DLF has resulted in virtually all "loans" being made on 40-year repayment schedules, with generous grace periods during which no repayment of principal occurs, and with interest rates as low as $3/4 of one per cent. In short, instead of giving away money and calling it a gift, we are now giving away money and calling it a loan! Even the Soviet Union, while denouncing the "Wall Street money-changers," never gets less than two per cent on long-term credits.
A THIRD CAUSE for the spreading Liberal Revolt is the sheer size of the continuing aid program. We have voted for it because we believe our national purposes are served by extending help to others, but we have observed that, outside of industrial Europe, our most conspicuous successes have been achieved through the least costly parts of the program—the Peace Corps, technical assistance, and surplus food. There is a growing feeling that the need for huge project investments in any given country should be met through the greater use of international lending institutions like the World Bank.
These institutions can impose requirements necessary for sound investment management which often cannot be demanded by one sovereign nation of another. Moreover, the investment capital of such institutions is contributed by all the rich, industrial countries, so that the burden is shared, as it should be, rather than borne entirely by the United States.
To meet these defects in foreign aid, Liberal members of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee have this year given both direction and support to efforts to modify the program. I myself have secured the committee's approval of an amendment which would prohibit all further grants of aid to fully self-sufficient countries, which, as late as 1962, still amounted to nearly $400-million dollars.
Another amendment, offered by Sen. Frank Lausche, D-Ohio, and having significant Liberal support, would set a minimum $ _{3/4} $ per cent interest rate for the first five years and a minimum of two per cent for the next 30 years with a maximum 35-year repayment period.
As a first thrust against mammoth projects, the committee has adopted an amendment by Sen. Albert Gore, D-Tenn., placing a $100-million ceiling on American contributions to any given project abroad, unless specific Congressional approval is asked for and obtained.
EVEN WITH THESE improvements and others it is by no means certain that the Liberal disaffection with foreign aid can be remedied. There are fundamental changes which must occur, if strong, sustained support for foreign aid is ever to be regained.
Many Liberals are agreed that military aid ought not to have been commenced in Africa, or continued in Latin America—areas which are remote from either Russia or Red China, where the thin resources are desperately needed for public health, education, and economic development.
And what about the quarter billion we plunge into Formosa each year? Is this to be a permanent expenditure, just to indulge an old man's dreams—to sustain an army twice as big as necessary to defend his island and not a tenth big enough to menace the mainland?
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THESE ARE THE QUESTIONS Liberals are asking. We understand that Kennedy inherited these excesses, and we don't blame him for them. But it is now within his power to come to grips with them.
Wherever he has taken a new initiative, we have given him ardent support. We have applauded the alliance for progress in the hope that it might help free Latin America from feudalism and dictatorship, the seedbeds of communism. We approve the way he has broken off relations with the junta governments in the Dominican Republic and Honduras, and suspended the aid program to both countries as a lever toward the return of constitutional government.
The basic reforms in foreign aid are still to be accomplished. They can't come all at once, but progress toward them must become more evident. Liberals who have supported foreign aid in the past, at considerable political risk, have a right to be heeded now, as they seek to reshape the program to better serve the interest of the American people.
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Thursday, Oct. 24, 1963 University Daily Kansan
4
Page 9
Law Professor Conducts Hootenannies at Home
THE FOLK SONGS
By Charles Corcoran
Charles H. Oldfather
When Charles H. Oldfather, KU law professor of law, persuades a student to sing, it's to a guitar, and not a judge.
Prof. Oldfather, who has been at KU since 1950, is a man of many talents.
His father, Charles H. Oldfather,
Sr., dean of the College of Liberal
Arts and Sciences at University of
Nebraska for many years, was an
amateur guitarist.
"I LISTENED to him play and sing since I was this high." Prof. Oldfather said, holding his hand about three feet from the floor. When he was in the Navy during World War II he picked it up.
One of his proudest possessions is the Gibson guitar made in 1908 that his father bought in Chicago second-hand store for $30.
"I sing mostly American and English folk songs. I look into the background of the songs to know how they should be sung and that's it. I sing purely for pleasure," he said.
Prof. Oldfather has sung at many functions both on and off campus in the years that he has been at KU.
"I SANG AT Corbin Hall last weekend. I sing for various groups quite frequently," he said.
The professor was born in Crawfordsville, Ind., in 1920, but grew up in Lincoln, Neb. He was graduated from Holchkiss Preparatory School in Lakeville, Conn., in 1937
"I was one of the Midwestern scholarship boys," he said. "The scholarships were one way the school attracted boys from across the country. It was a pretty good piece of change, $1,500 a year. Of course, I had to wait tables for four years."
He attended Harvard for two years, 1937-39, and lettered in track and cross country there. He then transferred to the University of Nebraska where he was graduated Phi Beta Kappa in 1941.
HE SPENT THE following semester at Nebraska doing graduate work in political science. The next semester he went to Chicago to enter the Navy Officer Training School.
"They called us the 90-day wonders, although it took 120 days," he said. "I was married the day I received my commission, May 14, 1942."
The professor met his wife on a blind date.
"I was a senior in prep school (1937)and my sister got me a date with this Theta pledge," he said smiling.
Prof. Oldfather lives on a 125-acre farm six miles southwest of Lawrence. He and his wife have seven children ranging from ages 6 to 20.
"EVERY DINNER at our house is
like homecoming with that mob," he said.
The Oldfathers' oldest daughter, Felicia Oldfather, 20, is president of the student body at Carleton College, Fairfield, Minn.
After his service as an ordinance and gunnery instructor ashore and later as gunnery officer aboard an aircraft carrier during the war, Prof. Oldfather returned to Harvard in 1945 to enter the School of Law. He was graduated, went to Wisconsin and passed the state bar examination in 1948. He had practiced law there for nearly three years when he came to KU as an assistant professor of law in 1950.
IN 1953, HE WAS promoted to associate professor. He's been a full professor since 1958, the same year that he was elected to the KU Athletic Board.
He was secretary of the Athletic Board up to his year when he was appointed chairman.
In addition to being the board's presiding officer, he serves as the chancellor's representative to the board and is responsible directly to the chancellor for the operation of the athletic program.
"Ive always been interested in athletics," he said. "But since I was about 35 I've noticed that it takes me about a week to throw off a sore
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muscle where it used to take only 2 or 3 days."
The 6'4" professor rubbed his right arm. "I'm not as athletic as I used to be," he said.
He pointed out a plaque hanging on the wall over his desk. "It's the first annual 'Supreme Order of Barristers' award. It's awarded to the law professor who gives the toughest tests at the KU School of Law Funday. You might say I showed it with some amusement," he said.
Prof. Oldfather's office in Green Hall is cluttered with books and papers.
"I'm working on annotations of portions of the Uniform Commercial Code," he said. 'It's the suggested uniform law covering the whole area of commercial law which has been adopted in 25 states.
"I'm working in conjunction with the research department of the legislative council of the Kansas Legislature . . . and it looks like I'll be at it all year."
Baxter Springs Man Top Junior
Terry Alan Miller, Baxter Springs junior, has been awarded the Grace Caroline Eaton Scholarship for being the outstanding junior man in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences.
The award, comparable to the Paul B. Lawson award to the outstanding College senior, was made by the Summerfield Scholarship committee.
The scholarship, given for the first time this year, was established in honor of Miss Grace Caroline Eaton. Prior to Miss Eator's death in 1961, she was one of the oldest living KU alumni, having graduated in 1893.
Miss Eaton left a portion of her estate to KU, the income from which is to be awarded to an outstanding male student in the College. The
award is based on the recipient's first two years of work at KU. The scholarship will assist him in his last two years in school.
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University Daily Kansan Thursday, Oct. 24, 1963
Politics, Art, Feats, Foolery Campus Fare
KU Architects Try Hand at Art
The second annual exhibit of architect students' work is on display in Murphy Exhibition Galleries.
The exhibit, of both painting and sculpture work, will be displayed through Nov. 15.
The objects on display were in a judging from around 200 pieces by W. Eugene George, Professor of architect, and Nick D. Vaccaro, head of the department of painting and drawing.
All of the displays were produced in the classes of James Sterritt, asst. professor of architecture, and Bernard Frazier, associate professor of architecture, as class projects.
The judging was from the two areas of paintings and sculpture work, according to Prof. Sterritt, but there were no definite requirements.
There are 14 pieces of sculpture, and 10 paintings in the exhibit.
VOX, UP Plan Party Platforms
The University Party delayed last night presentation of its campaign platform to the general assembly until next week.
Party leaders had hoped to have the platform prepared for approval
Charles Marvin, Lawrence senior and independent co-chairman, announced the platform committee will meet at 1:30 p.m. Sunday in the Kansas Union. He invited party members to offer suggestions for the platform to the committee at that time.
Vox Populi will announce its candidates for All Student Council tonight at a general assembly meeting in the Kansas Union.
The party has been conducting interviews the past several weeks with prospective candidates.
Tom Bornholdt, Topea senior and Vox president, said the platform will be presented to the assembly for approval next Thursday.
JOHN HADL LED THE BIG Eight in punting in 1959 and 1960. His average was 45.6 yard a punt in 1959 and 40.5 for 1960.
Rivalry Ends In Tug-of-War
Give two men's dorms enough rope and they will go out and have a tug-of-war.
He sings of justice.
Carl Lindquist and Richard Epps, Joseph R. Pearson and Templin dorm presidents, respectively, have both made boasts that their dorm can win a tug-of-war scheduled between them at 2:00 p.m. this Sunday over Potter's lake.
Epps, Topeka senior, said, "I have no doubt but that we'll give them a bath in Potter's lake. We realize J.R.P. has a number of athletes in the dorm. It's because of this that I like the tug-of-war idea."
Lindquist, Prairie Village junior, replied, "I cannot see why you guys are so anxious to take a bath. We have all of the freshman football team and a majority of the varsity football team."
The challenge for the contest came after Templin men said they doubted if J.R.P. would reach the 'talkathon' record set by Templin. J.R.P. is attempting to break the record of 422 hours of talking without stopping.
Each of the dorms will have a pulling team of 35 men. In front on each side of the lake will be the two dorm presidents. Both said the winner will accept tug-of-war challenges from all comers on the hill.
Some pronounce the name of the building Haworth, with a long a sound. Others pronounce it with an ah sound for the first vowel.
However, Kieth Lawton, vicechancellor for operations, recently pointed out that neither of these is correct. The name of Erasmus Haworth for whom the building was named is pronounced Howorth.
The building which stands between Robinson Gymnasium and Hoch Auditorium has been called many things, but seldom by its right name.
This reminds most students and many faculty members in the rather embarassing position of not knowing the correct name of one of the oldest structures on campus.
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University Daily Kansan
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Ride wanted -Kansas City, Kansas, to KU and return, daily. Live near 18th and Quindaro. Will discuss terms. Call VI 3-9474. 10-30
Two, large room modern basement apartments. For one of two young men Outside Bills paid. No drinking smoking. See first house south of famous, 1616 Inc. 10-30
Vacancies for young men in contemporary home. Swimming pool, private entrance and bath. 845 monthly rent. Home cooked meals I Used. 3-9-6355. 11-20
FOR RENT
FOUND
Want a girl to share my apartment. Con-
tinue. Tenn. After 4:30 on week days. 10-29
Furnished, clean 2 and 3 room apart-
ment in closets, bath, no drilling.
511 Ohio. 10-29
Duplex, 2 bedrooms, stove, refrigerator,
furniture, except electricity paid. Caf.
VI 3-2281.
Two bedroom duplex, unfurnished, wall
storage, storage and utility room. 2 small children
acceptable, no pets. One year lease.
Storage. 1607 M. 22nd T. Cam.
VI 2-1028
Spacious 2 room, newly decorated, second floor apartment clean and quiet. Private bath. Near KU. $65.00. Bills paid except electricity. Call VI 2-2539. 10-25
The Thanksgiving and Christmas schedules are now in.
CONTACT
Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter, carbon ribbon, special keyboard. 5:00 p.m., Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley, 408 W. 13th, tt
TYPING
Typing: Dissertations theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines; 35 special symbols carbon ribbon materials and service. Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI2-1546 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI3-3057.
Typing: Desertations, theses, manuscripts, term papers typed. New Smith-Corona machines; 35 special symbols, carbon ribbon—if desired. Prompt, efficient service. Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI 2-1546 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI 3-3057.
Efficient and experienced typer would like to do work in home. Prompt and guaranteed work. Call at any time. VI 3-2651. 10-31
MILLIKENS SOS—always first quality typing on LB M. Carbon ribbon machines hours 7 a.m. to 10 p.m. tape transcriptions. Office Phone VI 3-5920.
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers, reports, etc. Use of the machine amenable. Donate Typewriter writer
Fidlowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568, t.
e-mail: fidlowney2521.ala@ucr.edu
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast
legal terms. Marsha Goff, VI 3-2577, fff
GRANT'S
Drive-In Pet Center
Experienced typist for theses and term paper
Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Miss. VI 3-0588.
Experienced typlist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow. 2047 Yale. VI 2-1648.
Everything in the Pet Field
1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921
New electric typewriter. Reasonable rates for themes, term papers, dissertations, and theses. Mrs. Barta, 1955 Miller Drive, VI 3-6994
JOE'S BAKERY
616 West 9th
25c delivery VI 3-4720
LEONARD'S
THE HOLIDAY SEASON
new location at
IT'S TIME TO MAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS
Standard Service
"the best in car care"
706 W. 9th
VI3-9830
BRAKE ADJUSTMENTS ... $.98
LUBRICATION ... $1.00
Motor tune-ups, wheel balancing
Thursday. Oct. 24. 1963
STUDENTS
MAUPINTOUR
**FREE**—one quart of oil with each oil and filter change
-all major brands-
PAGE-CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE
711 W. 23rd VI 3-1211
VI 3-9694
at the Malls
1819 W 23rd
FRATERNITY
JEWELRY
ALLAN EASUM LEROY HADL
A. complete line, including.
● Lavaliers ● Guards
● Pins ● Mugs
● Rings ● Crests
Ray Christian JEWELERS
JEWELERS
IT'S OK TO OWE BAY
★ WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT
BUSINESS SERVICES
809 Mass.
Thesis Typst. Electric typewriter,
diplom degree. Prairie Village, NI.
8446
1946
Prompt, neat and accurate work on wide carriage electric typewriter. Journalism, Business and Secretary experience. Charlotte Weber. VI 3-3495. tf
9th & Mississippi VI 3-9897
★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M.
THE NAME FOR SERVICE
★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK
★ BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED
Troop 673 Senior Girl Scouts will baby sit for KU games at Lawrence Community Nursery School. 654 Ala. Ages 3 to 8. Phone VI 3-0606. 10-24
★ TUNE-UPS
★ MUFFLER SERVICE
Complete line of soles and heels, laces,
cosmetics and polishes. Have new mermer-
chals, a shiny powder, such pursuere
smoke totes. Burgert's One Day Shoe
Service -- 1113 Mass. St. 11-1
ART'S TEXACO
STEERING AND RADIATOR SPECIALISTS
4.
Bear Wheel Alignment
Dynamic Wheel Balancing
Brake & Frt. End Parts
Dressmaking-alterations, formals, and mass.
Dressing, Ola Smith, $931; Mass.
YI 3-5283
Auto Glass Installed
6th & Minn.
VI 3-1300
HELP WANTED
"Lawrence's O'dest Drug Store"
Round Corner Drug
Prescriptions
OVERSEAS OPPORTUNITIES for qualified people in Rural Development and Southeast Asia National Voluntary Services, 1903 N. St.Washington, D.C. $10^{-25}$
Need 4 men with cars to work one night each week. Good pay. Contact Tom Dixon. Dixon's Drive-In restaurant. VI 3-7446. 10-28
HELP WANTED -Linctype operator, to 3 daily. Must be experienced on newspaper straightmaster. University of North Carolina, 117 Flint Hall. Phone UN 4-3282.
MISCELLANEOUS
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart. 1025 Mass. tf
Cute kittens free to good home. 6 weeks.
old. Call VI 3-7330 at 5:30 p.m. 10-29
WANTED
PARTY TIME: School house available for private parties, dances, meeting with pungent wine, table- freshment bar and coolers. VI 3-7453 -43 Forrest.
Bass player to work with small folk singing group. Contact Bob Douglas, room 125 Engineering Bldg. UN 4-3979. 10-25
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Oct. 24, 1963
Soviet Union Greets Prof. Weir
Rv Charles Corcoran
"I saw a pen-and-ink sketch of an ugly American, his chin thrust out in disgust, glaring at his uniformed adversaries. 'Casey Stengel', I said, 'and an excellent likeness.' My Russian friends smiled."
John A. Weir, professor of zoology, recounted such anecdotes about his recent trip to Russia at a faculty forum luncheon yesterday. His talk, entitled "Thirty Days in the Soviet Union in Thirty Minutes," pointed out how Russians act in comparison to how most Americans think they do.
The 47-year-old professor, an authority on mammalian genetics, traveled through the Soviet Union under the State Department's Multilateral Exchange Program. Under the program, he visited and lectured in universities throughout Russia from April 4 to May 3.
HE EXPLAINED he was strictly reporting what he saw in the light of the short period of time that he had to observe, and left it up to his listeners to draw their own conclusions.
"If you get a chance to visit the Soviet Union, I recommend that you go in the early spring. The people are still swathed and bundled in their winter fur, although it's not especially cold. I was told this is a characteristic of people who live in countries that are frozen solid in the winter." Weir said.
"Also," he said, "the Bolshoi Ballet is still on and the universities are still in session."
"I thought of the problems that I might encounter while I was there—being buried in piles of paper work, getting lost on the complicated Metro system, losing gifts—but never the knock on the door," he said as he rapped three times on the table before him.
The unexpected knocking, Weir explained, "was a young professor with gifts for me. He had found out that it was my birthday from the curriculum vitae I had submitted. We were both rather inarticulate, he spoke little English, and I little Russian, but it wasn't the time for words. The Russians make a great deal of birthdays and he couldn't stand to think of me spending my birthday alone."
WEIR TOLD about a ride on a bus in Moscow, where the rider is on the honor system to pay his fare.
"The bus driver sits in front and drives, the riders get on and put
their fare in the coin collector in back. If you haven't got change, as my guide and I didn't, you stand by the receptacle and hold the change of those getting on until you have enough to change your bill.
"Some people would get on anc go directly to a seat without giving us any money. Soon after, however, you'd see their money being passed from hand to hand over the heads of the other seated riders," he said.
AT THE Tretyakov Art Museum Weir's guide, Vadim Sichov, showed him a picture called "The Road to Siberia." Sichov said the regime now in power realized that it hadn't built the great showpieces of the nation like the Kremlin, and had only added the red stars to the tops, but neither had they built the no-longer-traveled road."
The gallery also featured a Lenin room, Weir said. "Statues, posters and literature about Lenin are quite ubiquitous throughout the Soviet Union. The museum devoted an entire room to him. It was filled with paintings, sketches, busts and statues." "I ATTENDED a concert on the Mausoleum," Weir said. "The
program was mainly the works of Bach and Handel. When the Ave Maria was presented, quite a bit lighter than the heavy and serious music of the masters, a light thrill ran through the audience. The people reacted in the same way as an American audience would have," he said.
"My first ride on the Metro, I went alone. My guide had given me instructions, but I had become confused and asked a man for directions. Instead of telling me what I needed to know, he took me to my destination, making all the necessary changes to get there. I thanked him when we arrived and he was on his way. They're quite helpful."
IN REPLY to a question about the United States, Weir said, "They're afraid that Kennedy will push the button. They've been well conditioned to this.
"On May 2 I attended a soccer game in Moscow. Castro was there and everyone stood and cheered him, but after the game had started, he could have run around in his BVD's and no one would have noticed him," he said.
Chain Letter—
(Continued from page 1)
SPOT CHECKS BY telephone revealed that letters have been circulated among at least one dormitory and several fraternity houses at KU.
Representative of three fraternities—Alpha Tau Omega, Sigma Chi, and Sigma Alpha Epsilon—said their members had been approached by K-State students during the past week. Approximately 15 fraternity members were believed to have bought the chain letters.
Rex Bare, Wichita junior and councilor of third floor south wing in Ellsworth Hall, said the letters had been circulated freely through the hall with several takers.
"I had no idea that it was illegal," one participant said. "I just thought it was a real good deal."
The three Ellsworth Hall letter holders interviewed believed the plan to be legal. All three said they had sold their new sets of bonds and lists on the same day the letters were purchased.
"How could there be chance involved?" commented one. "We got our money back."
THEY SAID THE chain letter was not illegal because it was not
sent through the mail. "As long as it keeps going nobody loses," another said. "There is a real incentive to re-sell the bonds and lists because you've got $75 invested. It's not like these chains involving dimes or at Christmas a fifth of liquor."
The increased sales of savings bonds in the Lawrence area was called to the attention of William Lutz, area manager of the U.S. savings bond division in Topeka, last Friday.
"The guy at the bottom of the list always gets hurt when the enthusiasm for the chain wears off or local banks take action against it." Lutz said in a telephone interview.
Lutz said the scheme is lottery because the possibility of the chain being broken creates the element of chance.
According to regulations of the Saving Bonds Division of the Treasury Department, local bankers and issuing agencies may refuse to sell bonds if they "know or are given reason to believe" that the bonds will be used in a chain letter scheme," Lutz said.
(See page 6 for text of chain letter)
PETER, PAUL AND
THE MARY AREN'T AT
Catacombs
HOWEVER
The Fabulous
"MISS ANN BREWER"
AND
The FLAMES ARE.
644 Mass. EVERY FRI. & SAT.
AT LAST! A NO-MESS NO-DRIP WAY TO ADD COLOR TO YOUR HAIR!
Dr. Beary color foam
PRE-FOAMED! Du Barry color foam
8250 plus tax.
HAIR COLORING RINSE AND CONDITIONER
Just push a button-and it foams on! Gives you natural-looking highlights and blends in gray in minutes. Leaves hair silky-soft. 10 shades. e250
RANKIN DRUG 1101 Mass. VI 3-5440
Read and Use Kansan Classifieds
BE AN AD EXPERT
(show Madison Avenue how it's done)
Write the "perfect" ad for one of these 3 products and win a matched set of five Kaywoodie pipes.
EVERYONE ENTERING WINS A PACKAGE OF KAYWOODIE TOBACCO In addition 5 major prizes awarded on your campus
Copy points on KAYWOODIE PIPES
Kaywoodie Super Grain-
pipe illustrated $7.95 —
others from $5.95 to $2,500.
Pipes are today's symbol of the dominant masculine male. They provide all the pleasure of smoking, without inhaling. Kayoowiee is the world's best known pipe. Each bowl is painstakingly carved from rare grained, imported briar. That's why Kayoowiee always smokes cool and sweet. Inside the pipe is Kayoowiee's unique aluminum invention, a permanent filter that screens tars and irritants; condenses moisture; assures a mild. drv. smoke. (Now let's see how much imagination you have)
Ideas on NEW KAYWOODIE TOBACCO
KAYWOODIE
PIPE TOBACCO
Imported from Switzerland, it's an exclusive formula of rich, rare Cavendish Tobacco blended to perfection for flavor and mildness (underline mildness). Important to drink is the bitter taste. That's why it burns slowly, evenly, and is easier to keep lit. In special "pocket-pak" only 50¢. (Try your creativity on this one and see what you come up with)
Facts about NEW
KAYWOODIE BUTANE
LIGHTER
Lighter being pulled out of lighter box.
Specially designed — it’s the world's finest butane pipe lighter. Upright for cigars and cigarettes. Tilt for large soft flame for pipes. Sizes to keep you warm. Only $9.95 with free miniature Butane Injector® - Refuel Cartridge. Guaranteed for life. (You take it from here)
HERE'S ALL YOU DO — Write any size ad, large or small. You don't have to draw, just describe whatever you want illustrated. The contest ends December 31, 1963. Decision of the judges is final. A two-pipe set will be awarded to the best ad on your campus. 4 runners-up will receive a Kaywoodie pipe or lighter. These ads will then compete against the winners from other colleges for a grand prize of a $100 matched grain, five-pipe set. Everyone who enters receives a package of Kaywoodie Tobacco. This contest is subject to all federal, state and local laws and regulations. All entries become the property of Kaywoodie Pipes, Inc. Send entries to Kaywoodie, New York 22, DEU. CO.
CLOVER VALLEY
KAYWOODIE
Daily Hansan
61st Year. No. 31
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Friday. Oct. 25. 1963
Vox Presents 24 Students For Election
Vox Populi last night announced 24 candidates for the All Student Council elections.
The election of living group representatives to the ASC will be Nov 13-14.
Presentation of Vox's platform is scheduled for Thursday night. Tom Bornholm, Topeka senior and Vox president, said the platform will consist primarily of planks advocating additional student services.
"This will follow our concept of student government as an organization designed to extend services to students." Bornholdt said.
Vox candidates by living districts are:
Fraternities—Jerry Bell, McLouth junior; Ray Edwards, Bethesda, Md., junior; Richard King, Prairie Village sophomore, and Tom Schumauher, Russell junior.
Sororities — Jackie Caesar, St Louis sophomore; Sara Crites, Great Bend sophomore, and Susan Hartley; Atwood sophomore.
Large Men's Residence Hats— Jim Cline, Rockford, Ill., junior; Bill Brier, Overland Park junior, and John Traylor.
Large Women's Residence Halls—Sandra Garvey, St. Louis, Mo., senior; Linda Bolan, Wichita junior; and Nancy Barta, Los Angeles junior.
Small Men's Residence Halls—Dave Doane, Hutchinson sophomore, and Lee Schrey, Leavenworth sophomore. Small Women's Residence Halls—Mary Beth Gast, Paola sophomore.
Freshman Women's Residence Halls—Nancy Sodderstrom, Wichita; Linda Tebbe, Memphis, Tenn.; Judy Bernhardt, Lawrence, and Cinda Waller.
Professional and Co-Op—Conrad Wagenknecht, junior.
Married — Gary Walker, Wichita; sophomore.
Unmarried and Unorganized—Mike Miner, Lawrence junior, and Brian Grace, Lawrence senior.
Bornholdt said a fourth candidate from the large men's residence halls district would be announced within several days.
The KU division of the United Fund Drive has achieved 75 per cent of its goal in the first two weeks of the campaign.
Capt Richard Gruber, professor of naval science and chairman of the drive at KU, said the response to the pledge cards sent out on October 8th has been overwhelming. The drive has reached the $7,500 mark with one week left to run. The goal for the drive is $10,000.
KU Fund Drive Reaches $7.500
CAPT. GRUBER said the pledge cards were mailed to faculty and staff members on October 9th. The cards asked for either cash donations or a pledge to pay an amount over an extended period of time.
The drive is to end on October 31st and those with cards are to mail them as soon as possible to make up the outstanding 25 per cent of the quota, Gruber said.
SENIOR QUEEN—One of these three seniors will be named Senior Queen tomorrow in the pre-game ceremonies. They were chosen as finalists by senior class members at a meeting Wednesday. At the left is Lesley Hagood, Prairie Village; at the upper right, Kay Cash, Cleveland, Ohio; and on the lower right, Mary Lynn Cooper, Prairie Village.
It will be cloudy tonight and Saturday, turning cooler Saturday. The low tonight will be between 40 and 50 and northwesterly winds 10 to 15 miles per hour should come up early Saturday morning.
Weather
Weather forecasters said the need for rain was still urgent in Kansas.
The eastern third also remained quite dry despite good rains over some sections a week ago.
1976
War and Peace Talk Stresses Rule of Law
The "rule of law" must prevail within a society if its laws are to be regarded as effective, Errol E. Harris, professor of philosophy, said ast night.
Prof. Harris made this remark in his sixth lecture in his series on The Philosophy of War and Peace"n Dyche auditorium.
"LAW, SO FAR as it is effective, maintains peace and harmony within the community. Failure to do his is the breakdown of law and order. It is, therefore, an essential part of the concept of law that the Rule of law' prevail," Prof. Harris said.
Prof. Harris describes the "rule of law" as embodying four requirements:
- Covering all the relationships between citizens.
- Applying equally to all persons at all times and places and cannot be indiscriminately alerted to suit circumstances.
- If a code of rules and legal principles exist and are known to men it does not follow that a political system of laws exist, Prof. Harris said. He added that law must be enforced if it is to be considered law in the political sense.
- Subjecting the magistrates and officers to the law.
- Falling only within the law.
In order to be effective, law must be known. Prof. Harris said. He explained the need for a legislative organ to make and pronounce the laws so every member of the society can reasonably be expected to know what it is.
He explained further that when uncertainty exists and disputes arise as to the meaning, application, and precise obligations imposed by the law, there is need for an authoritative interpreter.
LAW MUST also be enforceable to be effective. Prof. Harris said.
Prof. Harris said using natural law as a possible standard of law has many shortcomings of natural law as an objective criterion.
"NOWHERE IS there any indis-tutable statement of what natural law enjoins," Prof. Harris said,
"Therefore the notion is just as subjective and variable as any other conception of moral or legal standards," he added.
Theorists who have tried to state the contents and provisions of natural law have not agreed among themselves.
Prof. Harris will continue his lectures at 7:30 p.m., Thursday, in Dyche auditorium.
His next topic will be status and efficacy in international law.
Stevenson's Bump Seen as Accident
DALLAS — (UPI) — Mrs. Cora Frederickson said today she did not deliberately strike U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations Adlai Stevenson with an anti-U.N. sign. She said someone in the crowd pushed the
Stevenson was struck with a sign stating "Get the U.N. out of the U.S." after he made a speech last night celebrating United Nations Day in Dallas.
POLICE LED Mrs. Frederickson out of the crowd after the incident. She was not arrested.
The crowd gathered around Stevenson after he left Memorial Auditorium. He was cursed, booed and spat upon.
"Someone must have pushed the sign down on him (Stevenson)," Mrs. Frederickson said. "There were a bunch of colored people standing around in back of me, but I couldn't say who pushed the sign. I just know I didn't to it."
She said that the near-riot was started by pro-U.N. people. "Some of the things they said were awful. They called us Reds and Communist and unchristian."
"YOU KNOW how things happen all of a sudden?" Mrs. Frederickson, 47, wife of an insurance man, said. "Somebody told me that a group of colored people wanted to start something."
Mrs. Frederickson said she was not a "joiner" and did not belong to the John Birch Society or any other house.
"I'm against the U.N. because it has not been beneficial. When they drew up the charter, they goofed, that's all." Mrs. Frederickson said. "I am in favor of the Alger (U.S. Rep. Bruce Alger, R-Tex.) bill to get the U.S. out of the U.N. I'm a conservative, and in the past few years have voted Republican, but I don't belong to the party."
"I don't go around hitting people. We were all in the crowd before we knew it and somebody pushed me," Mrs. Frederickson said.
"ALL I WANT to do is get America back on its feet. I just can't understand all those liberals and their ideas," she said.
Mrs. Frederickson said that after Stevenson was hit with the sign, a
policeman told her "step over here lady" and she moved out of the crowd and went home.
A Dallas Times Herald reporter and Dallas attorney Murray Schueth were congratulating Stevenson on his speech when a woman rushed through the crowd and brought the sign crashing down on the heads of all three.
About 70 demonstrators shoved and jostled Stevenson, who spoke to commemorate the U.N. Day in Texas.
"IT WAS A concerted action by members of (former Mat. Gi.) Edwin Walker's following and the John Birchers," Jack Goren, president of the sponsoring Dallas U.N. Association, said.
"All they've done is disgrace Dallas and the good manners of Texans and Americans."
Stevenson said he did not understand why persons of different points of view showed such "bad manners."
Frank B. McGehee, leader of a conservative movement known as the National Indignation Convention, rose from the second row of Dallas Memorial Auditorium as Stevenson prepared to start speaking.
"Mr. Ambassador," McGehee said, "I have a question."
"I will be glad to give you equat time when I am through," Stevenson said.
AGAIN McGEHEE rose and started to address Stevenson.
"Throw him out," cried persons throughout the crowd of 5,000.
"I don't have to come from Illinois to teach Texans manners, do I?" Stevenson asked.
BULLETIN
Two pumpers and an aerial truck were called out at about 12:45 p.m. today to put out a blaze at the Nuclear Reactor Center.
Damage was estimated at about $15.
George Higgins, a graduate student who works at the reactor, said the solvent extraction system exploded just as he turned around to leave the building.
The blaze was burned out before the fire department arrived.
Freshman Sets 10-Hour Record
James Ferree, Kansas City freshman, set an individual talking record of his own this week as he contributed 10 hours to bring the Joseph R. Pearson-Margaret Hashinger "talkathon" total past the half-way mark.
The "talkathon" total reached 240 hours at 1 p.m. today on its way to the 422 hour record set by Templin and Lewis halls in 1961.
THE FORMER INDIVIDUAL record of eight hours of talking was made during the Templin-Lewis record "talkathon."
Ferree said he did not plan to try for the individual record. He was talking during his designated half-hour at 2 a.m. Tuesday and the next man did not show up. He talked until 5 a.m. before anyone came to talk.
Feree said it was then he decided to try for the record since he had a good start.
"I got sleepy," Ferree said, "and my ears got so sore that I had to chang ears every half-hour or so."
FERREE SAID HE discussed every subject imaginable with 20 different coeds that talked to him. He discussed whether the women's dorms should have closing hours at 11 p.m. with one coed
Ferree said he lost a lot of sleep in the process of setting the record but made up for it the next day. He said he might get a date with some of the girls.
A LEE COHLMIA, Wichita senior and JRP social chairman, said that enthusiasm has dropped a little but he does not anticipate any difficulty. The hours for talking are all signed up for the next three days
"As soon as we pass the 300 hour mark, spirit will pick up and we'll go on to set our record," Cohlmia said.
The "talkathon," which began on Oct. 15 at 1 p.m., was started in order to build up hall spirit. The present record "talkathon" was set in December, 1961, in an effort to raise money for the Campus Chest charity fund.
BETWEEN THE FIELDS.
Talking James Ferree
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Oct. 25, 1963
If Goldwater Wins
A recent Time magazine poll indicated that Barry Goldwater has a strong chance of winning the 1964 presidential election if he carries Texas, a state in which the fortunes of the GOP and Barry grow daily.
Republican palms across the country are sweating over the possibility of tumbling the mighty Kennedy regime and sending it packing to Hvannis Port and the Riviera.
Republicans and anti-Kennedy Democrats, if they feel any sense of this responsibility, need to examine the silver-haired politician who is to fight their battle with the fair-haired boy.
In particular, I suggest examination of Gold-water's views as outlined in his best-seller, "Why Not Victory"?
CONSIDER. FOR example, his views on:
(1) Co-existence—"Victory is the key to the whole problem; the only alternative is—obviously defeat."
(2) Neutral nations—"The first stage of a Communist take-over is 'neutralizing' a country."
(3) The nature of the rise of Communism— "It does not help any to adopt the false notion that Communism is spawned by poverty, disease, and other similar social and economic conditions. Communism is spawned by Communists, and Communists alone."
(4) Nuclear fission bomb test bans—"We must not again abandon nuclear testing." (The book was written after the beginning of the 34-month moratorium during the Eisenhower administration.)
(5) The United Nations—"We must guard against confusing the UN's meagre accomplishments with its grandiose plans and pronouncements. It is useful only so long as it serves the interests of the Free World." (Free World means
anything not under Communist domination, according to Barry.)
(6) American power—"We are ashamed of our strength and hesitate to use it at times when only by the vigorous use of American power can we hope to avoid disastrous conflict."
THE LAST STATEMENT probably best summarizes Goldwater's position. It is "hard line." It is aggressive and militant. Unlike the Kennedy administration's policies, Goldwater's could be expected to be uncompromising.
Projecting his tenets on foreign policy into a hypothetical Goldwater administration, Americans could expect:
(1) Resumed nuclear testing, if a reason could be found to sidestep the obligations of the treaty.
(2) Suspension of aid to neutralist or leftist nations, such as Yugoslavia, Indonesia, Ghana and possibly India.
(3) Strong reaffirmation of all military commitments around the globe.
(4) A weakening of the United Nations.
(5) An attempt to eradicate Communism from Cuba, if necessary by force.
(6) Weakening programs which — according to the liberal ideology—clip Communism in the bud by altering conditions which supposedly foster communism. This means slowing down massive economic aid, ending pressure on Western European nations to dispense with colonialism, etc.
GOLDWATER MAY be right. However, the immediate risks in such a program are greater than in Kennedy's, simply because Goldwater's objectives are more far-reaching and he seems impatient to obtain them.
-Tom Coffman
1.
The People Say...
Bury Goldwater
Editor:
This is in response to your article of last week concerning college, support for Goldwater. I feel that many of the comments made were very questionable.
The worst offense Jerry Dickson, head of the collegiate Young Republicans, commits is when he tries to foresee faculty objections to Goldwater and then answers them with ad hominem arguments. He says, for instance, that most faculty members grew up during the Depression and thus are prejudiced against the Republican Party. Even so, that does not tell us the truth or falsity of their arguments against Goldwater. That we have to decide for ourselves. Eesides, those faculty members damn better well be prejudiced, or else they didn't learn anything from their experience. The only adults today who still support the Republican Party in any large
manner are those properly interested who didn't suffer in any fundamental way (hunger, unemployment) as a result of the Depression. The rest, the disinherited, have every reason to regret the existence of the Republican Party.
Finally, Dickson's comments on the amount of support he sees for Goldwater are very arguable. Nowwhere does he give evidence that "college students are generally Republican," or that 60% of those who could vote in 1960 voted for Nixon. These things may seem
Dickson's other argument against the faculty, concerning research grants, is also ad hominem, but his objection to them based on their supposed ignorance of a universal "drive for power" is more valid. However, as R.H.S. Crossman has observed, "It is not power, but the legitimation of the lust for power, that corrupts absolutely." Take note, young Goldwaterites!
quite natural and right to people who come from the Kansas area, which is largely Republican. But when one realizes that the number of Democrats in just one of California's 16 state colleges out-numbers all the students here at KU, Dickson's argument (?) sags immeasurebly. Furthermore, Gold-water, who wants to wage a Holy War against communism, has a natural appeal to people raised in the Bible Belt, of which Kansas is a part.
Besides, what sort of appeal is Dickson trying to make by his above statements? It's the old one of "Come on, kids, join the bandwagon. Everyone else is doing it. Conform! Get behind Goldwater." But I understand Dickson's plight—that is the only appeal left open to him. He certainly can't point to the rational arguments of such a man as Goldwater!
Steve Heeren Fontana, Calif., grad.
BOOK REVIEWS
THE FRENCH REVOLUTION, by Georges Pernoud and Sabine Flaisser (Premier, 75 cents).
Two editors have herein compiled a story of the French Revolution through contemporary documents, diaries and eye witness accounts. The famous Andre Maurois has contributed a preface. The result is an inexpensive volume that should be of considerable interest to students of history.
The account begins with the movement on the Bastille and concludes with the guillotining of Robespierre in the black days of the Reign of Terror. Pernoud and Flaisser have found their accounts in the diary of Gouverneur Morris, recollections of Mirabeau, histories of the Revolution, the diary of Louis XVI, memoirs of emigrants, letters of the sister of Louis, writings of Daudet, of Goethe, Prudhomme, Charlotte Corday, Camille Desmoulins, Joseph Bonaparte and many others.
$$
* * * *
$$
THE LIVING THOUGHTS OF THOREAU, presented by Theodore Dreiser (Premier, 60 cents).
A new volume in Premier's "Living Thoughts" series, this offers extracts from the works of the lonely man of Concord, the rebel of his times as Drieser, the collector, was the rebel of his times. Though such a book cannot substitute for "Walden" or "A Week on the Concord and Merrimack Rivers," it presents in simple, almost indexed, form the basic ideas of Thoreau.
Dreiser debates with himself at some length as to whether Thoreau actually was a philosopher, in the sense of a man who collects in ordered fashion his views on life. This, as Dreiser concludes, is irrelevant, for the thoughts of Thoreau offer a considered philosophy, even though one searches for them in nature passages, diaries, or poetry.
Subject matter of the Thoreau thoughts included is forms in nature, time, universal laws, knowledge, the problem of morals, free will and necessity, good and evil, emotions, society, religious institutions and social institutions, friendship, "the good life," art and beauty, progress, life as imagination and illusion, and death.
THE COMMONWEALTH OF ENGLAND, 1641-1660, edited by Charles Blitzer (Capricorn. $1.65).
This is a volume of critical documents of the English civil wars, the Commonwealth and protectorate. As such it has significance in understanding the Puritan rule and the era of Oliver Cromwell.
Blitzer's selections show how the English revolution was the first modern revolution and one that set the example for others to come. The editor has selected contemporary portraits, firsthand observations and significant documents—writings by Harrington, Hobbes, Baxter, Milton, Clarendon and John Evelyn.
Dailij Mänsan
111 Flint Hall
111 Flint Hall University of Kansas student newspaper UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom UNiversity 4-3198, business office
Founded 1889, 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 Lawrence, Kansas.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Mike Miller ... Managing Editor
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Blaine King ... Editorial Editor
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Bob Brooks ... Business Manager
DOES.
YOUR
PARTY,
THE
RADICAL
MIDDLE.
HAVE ANY
VIEWS ON
EXTREMIST
CANDIDATES
RUNNING
FOR PRESIDENT?
THE RADICAL MIDDLE ONLY SUPPORTS
RADICAL MIDDLE CANDIDATES. HOWEVER
SINCE LIBERAL PRESIDENTS INVARIABLY MOVE TO THE RIGHT AND CONSERVATIVE PRESIDENTS INVARIABLY MOVE TO THE LEFT. THE RADICAL MIDDLE WILL SUPPORT WHOMEVER WINS.
ON EXTREMIST CANDIDATES RUNNING FOR PRESIDENT?
THEEREFORE, YOU
TAKE NO POSITION,
SAU, IN THE
CURRENT FIGHT
FOR THE
REPUBLICAN
NOMINATION!
NOMINATION:
WHILE IT IS TRUE THAT GOVERNOR ROCKEFELER WAS A PREMATURE RADICAL MIDDLER WE SEE SIGNS OF SENATOR GOLDWATER BECOMING A LATENT RADICAL MIDDLER. THUS IN OUR VIEW THERE IS NO IMPORTANT DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THEM.
AREN'T YOU BEING UNDULY CYNICAL?
ON THE CONTRARY. WE ADVOCATE JUST SUCH A COLLAPSE TO WARD THE MIDDLE. OUR MOTTO:
"THAT GOVERNMENT IS BEST WHICH COLLAPSES MOST."
BEST WHICH COLLAPSES MOST."
DIFFERENCE
WOULDN'T YOU CALL THAT A SURPRISING STATEMENT IN VIEW OF THEIR STATED POLICY DIFFERENCES?
BUT IF ALL WHO WIN POWER COLLAPSE TO THE SAME POSITION WHAT'S THE POINT OF ELECTING ANYONE?
THE RADICAL MIDDLE
BELIEVES THAT ALL
POWER, ONCE OB-
TANED, COLLAPSES
TOWARD THE MIDDLE,
IT LITTLE MATTERS
WHAT AMONE
SAWS HE STANDS
FOR.
ANTURE :
THE RADICAL MIDDLE STRONGLY FAVORS FREE ELECTIONS JUST SO LONG AS THERE CONTINUE TO BE NO REAL DIFFERENCES BETWEEN THE PARTIES. THEM SERVE AS AN INTERESTING TRIBAL RITE AND MAKE MARVELOUS PROFAGANDA VALUE.
THEY YOU
HAVE NO
PREFERENCE
AT ALL IN
YEAR'S
ELECTIONS?
The Hall Syndicate, Inc.
WE HAVE MET THE CANDIDATES AND THE ARE OURS.
MISSIONS?
10-27
Friday, Oct. 25.1963
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
AMA President Here To Talk on Medicare
The president of the American Medical Association (AMA), will speak at KU at 4 p.m., Thursday, in the Ballroom of the Kansas Student Union.
Dr. Robert Hughes, Lawrence physician, will be the unofficial host for Dr. Edward R. Annis while he is here. Dr. Hughes said Dr. Annis will talk about the proposed federal program of medical care for the aged.
Dr. Annis was installed as president of the AMA last June. He was awarded the Brotherhood medal of the National Conference and Jews in 1958. He is also president of the World Medical Association.
Dr. Annis' speech is the first of the "Featured Speakers" program, sponsored by SUA. The program was initiated this year.
Binky Goes A'breaking
LONDON — (UPI) — The Foreign Office flew two new monocles to Indonesia yesterday to replace the one broken by Col. "Binky" Beck during the riots around the British Embassy in Jakarta recently. The monocles were sent in the Embassy's Diplomatic Pouch.
AUFS Lectures to Start Oct.28
An expert on Middle Eastern and Central Asian affairs will visit the campus and deliver several lectures Oct. 28 to Nov. 6.
Louis Dupree, an American Universities Field Staff (AUFS) representative, will speak to university lasses and campus groups. He will also speak to a Lawrence High School group on his observations of the politics, economics and culture of the Middle East and Central Asian countries.
PROF. DUPREE, an anthropologist, has specialized in Indo-European language areas of countries in the Middle and Far East.
PROF. DUPREE earned his M.A.
and Ph.D degrees from Harvard
University, and has served on the
faculties of the Air University and
Pennsylvania State University. He
lectured at KU in 1960 and 1961.
The AUFS representative has made two field trips to Afghanistan for the American Museum of Natural History, as a research associate. He has also made a trip to Iran for the University of Pennsylvania.
During his most recent stay in Afghanistan, he directed an archaeological excavation at Aq Kupruk.
Prof. Dupree is one of many AUFS field workers wreo spend approxi-
Hurricane Ginny May Hit South Carolina Coast
CHARLESTON, S.C. — (UPI) — Gales from hurricane Ginny almost reached to the South Carolina shore today and weather officials warned that hurricane winds from the 95-mile-an-hour center of the storm would probably hit here this afternoon and continue up the coast to North Carolina tonight.
"Ginny is forecast to continue towards the north at about 8 mph probably turning a little more toward the northeast by tonight," the weather bureau said.
The weather bureau warned that tides ranging up to six feet tonight would flood low-lying coastal areas from this historic port city to Cape Fear, N.C., and urged that these areas be evacuated.
"This would result in the center reaching the South Carolina coast this afternoon and then moving along the coast to North Carolina tonight."
The Miami weather bureau said
there were "slight indications" that the season's seventh tropical storm would change its northward course a little to the east during the day and this would keep the hurricane "short way off the coast."
The weather bureau said that since the course of the storm so closely parallels the coastline "a slight change in direction will make considerable differences in the conditions to be experienced in various locations."
It warned residents of this moss-draped coastal section which has been battered by five hurricanes within the past 11 years to prepare for the worst and most people were taking them at their word.
"Residents should take all precautions against the possibility of hurricane force winds beginning near Charleston this afternoon and elsewhere over the area this afternoon or tonight," the weather bureau said.
mately 18 months in an assigned country observing and reporting on current developments. Each year, four men return to lecture to AUFS member colleges and universities.
Prof. Dupree is the first of the AUFS representatives who will speak on campus this year.
Other AUFS lecturers who will visit KU this year are:
Kalman Silvert, an authority on Argentina and Chile, Dec. 2-11; John Hanessian, an expert on the polar regions of the world, March 25 to April 3; and Victor DuBois, an
authority on the former French areas of West Africa, April 23 to May. 2.
Stiff Standing
WINDSOR, England — (UPI) — Coldstream Guardsmen Trevor Butterfield, 20, was reported in good condition today after he fainted and fell on his bayonet while standing guard at Windsor Castle.
Said his commander: "These things do happen."
CAREER
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Interviews will be held on October 28,1963 on the campus. See your placement office now for an appointment
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10
Top-Seeded Shooter Stuns Allen's Crowd
LAWRENCE, Kan., Oct. 24—(Special)—Wind gusts of up to nine miles an hour and a possible record shot marked the International Watermelon Seed Spitting Preliminaries here Thursday.
The preliminaries were held at Allen's Drive-In Restaurant, 1404 W. 23rd St., shortly before 10 o'clock. As a record crowd of ten persons watched breathlessly, James Payne, 26, Topeka senior, set an apparent world's record of 39 feet 2 inches.
Payne, manager of Allen's, expects the record to be broken and a new world record for watermelon seed spitting to be set in competition between Kansas University students Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday.
THE SPECTATORS greeted Payne's shot in amazed silence. "I've never seen anything like it in all my years." said one 17-year-old co-ed. "It left me, well, you know, really breathless with tremendous admiration for anyone who could do something like this. Really!"
Payne's shot, in effect, was a slap in the face to a group of California students who previously claimed the record.
"I read about some shooters out there making it real big at 34 or 35 feet," said Payne. "Every time I read the article I得 tremendous feelings of aggression. I lost the paper in which they were claiming the record, but anyone who can't spit a seed more than 35 feet doesn't have the breath to blow out a candle."
Payne, who has already had his record challenged by more than twenty fraternities, sneered at the challenges and even offered to help anyone interested in entering the competition.
"FREE WATERMELONS will be given to any organized group interested in entering the competition." Payne said. "Allen's Drive-In is backing me 100%. Any group representative may stop by Allen's Drive-In this weekend and pick up a watermelon. We'll explain the rules to him and the group will be able to practice before the contest begins on Monday."
Expecting a large turn-out for the contest. Allen's Drive-In has ordered 100 watermelons to be delivered this Friday.
"We're also going to give free watermelons to all spectators, fans and officials," Payne said. "The contest will be held Monday. Tuesday and Wednesday from 6 to 8 p.m. Anyone who stops by then can watch the contest and enjoy free watermelon on us."
THE CONTEST court. 15 feet wide, has been painted on the driveway in front of Allen's and the rules have been posted in the window.
Allen's will award a travelling trophy to the person spitting a seed the fartherest, or if the winner is a member of an organized living group, the trophy will be awarded in the name of the group.
Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Oct. 25, 1963
Hindus to Give Lessons in Yogi
The East will try to teach the West Nov. 15 when two Hindu philosophers come to Lawrence to give instruction in Yogic exercises and Hindu scriptures.
Wami Jyotimayananda and Swami Lalitananda, his disciple, will arrive in Lawrence on Nov. 15 as guests of Mr. and Mrs. Lekh R. Batra, 932 Maine, Lawrence.
A SWAMI is about the same as a monk or run in the United States. The term refers to both male and female. The swami is not associated with a particular church.
Kansas Editors To Meet at KU For Workshop
John McCormally, editor of The Hutchinson News, and Burton W. Marvin, dean of the School of Journalism, will describe their experiences in African journalistic workshops on the annual Kansas Editors' Day program here tomorrow.
They were members of a fourman team of American journalists that conducted seminars for African journalists from 15 countries in July and August at Addis Ababa, Ethiopia; Dar es Salaam, Tanganyika; and Lagos, Nigeria.
An estimated 300 persons are expected to attend the Editors' Day activities in Flint Hall, which also will include announcement of the name of the 47th Kansas editor to be elected to the Kansas Newspaper Hall of Fame by Kansas editors. The annual election began in 1931. For a number of years two men were chosen annually, but in recent years only one man has been selected.
The day's program will begin at 9:30 a.m. with the traditional Wrangle Session, presided over by Stanley H. Stauffer, president of the Kansas Press Association and general manager of the Topeka Capital and Journal. In this session the editors will discuss problems proposed for discussion by Editors' Day participants.
The editors will be guests of Chanceller W. Clarke Wescoe at a buffet luncheon in the Kansas Union and will attend the Kansas-Oklahoma State football game as guests of A. C. Lonborg, director of athletics.
Special displays will be exhibited in the William Allen White Memorial Reading Room relating to the Hall of Fame including David Low, the late British cartoonist, some of whose originals will be included in a display; and the summer workshops in Africa.
WHATCHA MACALLIT
DANCE
PLAY CARDS
LIVE IT UP
TONIGHT AT HASHINGER HALL
FREE ADMISSION SPONSORED BY ASSOCIATION OF UNIVERSITY RESIDENCE HALLS.
9:00 - 12:00
Swami Lalitamanda was raised and educated in the United States. She will assist Swami Jyotirmayananda in giving talks and discussions on Hindu and Indian scriptures and giving lessons in Yogic exercises and the practice of meditation.
Batra met the two philosophers while in India a few years ago. He said they are not being sponsored by any group in Lawrence but are coming on their own.
LETTERS ARE being mailed to all Indian students at KU to tell
them of the dates the Swamis will be free to speak and perform the exercises, he said. They will be in Lawrence for a week or more depending on the number of engagements they have.
There will be a meeting at Batra's home during the week of Nov. 15 so that Indian students may meet the Swamis and talk with them.
Any group interested in having the Swamis speak and perform may contact Mr. Batra so that arrangements can be made.
Official Bulletin
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road.
TODAY
American Society of Tooling and Manufacturing Engineers. Leaves Foward 6:00 p.m. Field Museum, Washington Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7:30, 829 Mississippi, "Jesus Christ and the Same"
TOMORROW
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
Catholic Masses 6:45 a.m. 5 p.m.
St. Luke's Episcopal Church, 908 North
Ford Street Confessions 4-5 bd. 7-8 p.
SUNDAY
Catholic Masses, 8 a.m. St. Lawrence
Lesser of Two Evils
No Sale. Reverend
Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road. 9:30 and 11:00 a.m. Fresher Hall.
Faith and Life Seminar. 9:15 a.m.
Westminster Center. The Church, Justice:
216 Westminster Drive, Suite 403.
Oread Friends Meeting, 10:30 a.m.
Broadway welcome, Quaker meeting and worship.
SUA Chess Club, 2 p.m. Kansas Union.
Berkshire Center, HIRC Speaker,
Westminster Center, HIRC Speaker.
"Vatican II: Second Spring," 8 p.m.
Kansas Union. Panel discussion of revolutionary changes emerging from the Euclidianism James Fainnery, S.J., David Schmidt, S.J., F. James Finnerty, S.J. all of St. Mary College, St. Mary,
AUSTIN, Tex.—(UPI)—"Sam," a University of Texas student who gave no further identification if about to be drafted.
He put a sign on a bulletin board that advertised: "Help. Need wife quick. I'm being drafted and must get married by Oct. 31. Call GP 2-5720."
ACTON, England—(UPI)—A brewing company said today it had turned down the Rev. Richard Parsons' offer to open a beer garden in his Anglican church graveyard here. "We were flabbergasted," a brewery spokesman said. "But we turned it down because it might tarnish our image."
After the Game SENIOR DAY
it's the Post Game Buffet 5:00-8:30 Eldridge Hotel
Bar-B-Q Ribs, Chicken, Roast Beef, Ham Many taste-tempting dishes Adults $2.25 Children $1.25
Listen to the Eldridge Scoreboard after the game — Station KLWN
THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES SALUTE: MORRIS JOHNSTON
"Pioneering in the space age," is the way Morris Johnston (B.A., 1957) describes his job as Data Sales Manager of Southwestern Bell.
Morris's job is a new one with the Telephone Company, brought about by the mushrooming growth of computer-processed business data, and the need to distribute this data quickly to widespread locations.
Morris came to his present position from the manager's job at Waxahachie, Texas, where he was responsible for
all commercial operations. Now, as Data Sales Manager in Dallas, Texas, he is helping to pioneer the development of this new business method-a communications system for computers. To be a part of this development in the pioneering stage is both challenging and rewarding.
Morris Johnston, like many young men, is impatient to make things happen for his company and himself. There are few places where such restlessness is more welcomed or rewarded than in the fast-growing telephone business.
BEST OF THE
WESTERN UNION
CITY
321
537TH
STREET
BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES
TELEPHONE MAN-OF-THE-MONTH
Friday, Oct. 25, 1963 University Daily Kansan Page 5
SPORTS! HERE'S A
"Date Idea!"
YOUR DATE OR MOM GETS TWO GAMES FOR THE PRICE OF ONE . . .
T
THIS WEEKEND YOU AND YOUR DATE ARE INVITED TO ENJOY A "FUN-THING." BOWLING! AND . . YOUR DATE OR MOM GETS EVERY OTHER GAME FREE. THIS OFFER STARTS TONIGHT AT 6 P.M. AND IS GOOD THROUGH SUNDAY UNTIL 6 P.M. YOU'LL SAY IT'S THE BEST TIME YOU'VE EVER HAD.
JAYBOWL
Open 8 a.m. - 11:30 p.m. Weekdays—1 p.m. - 11:30 p.m. Sundays
REDUCED PRICE
Season Tickets Are Now On Sale for
Read and Use Kansan Classifieds
The Classical Film Series
at the Low Price of $3.50 for 9 Films
SAVE ALMOST TWO DOLLARS
Get yours in time for
"Last Year at Marienbad" Wednesday, October 30th
On Sale at Kansas Union Ticket Desk
64
SENIORS...
PLAN AHEAD
(for the senior day party of course)
- AT THE BIG BARN
— SENIOR DAY-OCT. 26
AFTER THE GAME, 5 PM. - 11 P.M.
— SENIORS WITH ID'S FREE
EVERYONE ELSE $1.50
SENIOR DAY-OCTOBER 26
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Oct. 25, 1963
Ex-President Truman Frolics at Grinnell College
GRINNELL, Iowa — (UPI) — With all the breezy pep of a college freshman, former President Harry S. Truman today laughingly absorbed a whack from an initiation paddle and shrugged off a tumble into a clump of campus shrubbery.
In most cases, he said, negotiations with foreign countries are best handled by the president "acting as mediator, discussing issues with
AFTER DORMITORY president Ken Richards of Naperville, Ill., made a light swing with the paddle, Truman straightened up, grinned and said: "Well, that's not so bad."
Truman, still full of vigor, despite his 79 years, emerged unhurt from his slip and fall at the start of his traditional early morning stroll and his staged initiation into a men's dormitory at Grinnell College.
He lost his balance as his foot slipped two or three inches to the ground and he toppled into the clump of shrubs. He jumped up quickly. While aids were still brushing dust from his suit he jovially began signing autographs for the children.
Then he complied with photographer's pleas that he repeat the performance.
"If I had hit hard I would have had at least 50 per cent of the people on my neck," he said.
heads of the states individually" and reaching agreements through mutual understanding."
The Democratic elder statesman breezed through his second and concluding day as "politician in residence" at the college he jokingly calls "my alma mater."
Richards explained why he swung lightly.
"They wouldn't be good photographers if they didn't want one more," he said.
HE TOLD STUDENTS that presidents at summit conferences deal with "some of the stiffest necked people in the world." He obligingly tried to answer for students of international politics "all the questions you think I've got sense enough to answer."
Truman slipped off a sidewalk curbing as he was leaving the college guest house with about 50 persons, including grade school and pre-school children, crowding around him.
VOLUBLE AS EVER, Truman did not brush off autograph seekers by scribbling only his name. He wrote a brief message to each child. To Craig Baumann, 4, youngest of the lot; Truman wrote:
A few hours later, Truman was initiated into West Norris Hall. The ex-president smilingly assumed the proper position and took the whack of a wodden paddle at the appropriate spot of the anatomy.
In an international affairs class conducted by Assst. Prof. James R. Magee, Truman told students he did not approve of handling foreign af- fairs at conferences between heads of state "except in extreme cases where emergencies make them necessary."
Some of the delighted children held their history books open to a page with the former president's picture on it.
"May Craig always be happy and lüüky."
Kansan Classified Ads Get Results!
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See five entirely different lines of cars at your Chevrolet Showroom — CHEVROLET, CHEVELLE, CHEVY II, CORVAIR & CORVETTE
DANCE
Join in the fun at the SUA dancing lessons. Professional instructors teach you all the latest steps.Every Friday night.Oct.25-Nov.22.7-8 p.m.
in the Big Eight Room. 50c per lesson.
Friday, Oct. 25, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Beat Oklahoma State!
Hawk's Nest
The Hawk's Nest offers good food throughout the day, whether you desire a full meal, snack, or a cold drink after the game.
7:00 a.m. - 11:15 p.m.
Kansas Union Cafeteria
5:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m.
The Kansas Union Cafeteria offers a wide selection of
The Kansas Union Cafeteria offers a wide selection of foods for a good meal before and after the game.
10:30 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.
10:30 a.m. - 1:30 p.m.
5:00 p.m. - 6:30 p.m.
Prairie Room
The Prairie Room serves the very best in charcoal broiled steaks, shish kebabs, and seafood. A special luncheon menu is available.
Jayhawk Buffet
Before every home game from 10:30 to 1:00 p.m. enjoy express service and good food in the ballroom at the Student Union. Music provided by the Kansas University band. Open to the public.Bring your friends and join us, just $1.55.
Kansas Union Food Service
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Oct. 25, 1963
Chuong to Explain Stand On Viet Nam In KU Talk
"President Ngo Dinh Diem has the mind of a medieval inquisitor."
"President Ngo Dinh Diem has the mind of a medieval inquisitor." This statement was made by Tran Van Chuong, father of the Vietnamese "first lady," Madame Nuh. He will speak here at 8 p.m. Nov. 11 in the University Theatre at Murphy Hall.
CHUONG is now on a coast-to-coast speaking tour explaining his opposition to the Diem regime. He has refused to see his controversial daughter while she is in the U.S.
Chuong resigned the Vietnamese ambassadorship to the U.S., a post he held for over eight years, last August because of Diem pollies towards Buddhists. He is a Buddhist, while his daughter, son-in-law, and President Diem are Roman Catholic.
"This difficult war will be won only by the reconciliation and sincere union in liberty of all anti-Communist Vietnamese forces and by the utilization of all available talents and not by copying totalitarian regimes," Chuong said when he resigned his ambassadorship.
EDUCATED AT the University of Paris, Chuong took his doctorate in the faculty of law in 1922. He now lives in Chevy Chase, Md., near Washington, D.C.
In 1940 Chuong was president of the Grand Council for Economic and Financial Interests in Indochina and in 1945 became Minister of Foreign Affairs for Indochina. Chuong served on a French-Viet Nam court until he was appointed Minister of State in 1954 in the new Diem government. He was appointed to the ambassador post a year later.
His wife was Viet Nam's official observer at the United Nations from 1958 until last August when she resigned simultaneously with her husband.
Chuong's appearance here is being sponsored by the All Student Council current events committee and the Student Union Activities featured speakers committee.
Round Corner Drug
"Lawrence's Oldest Drug Store"
Prescriptions
Today he had his first traffic ticket--for driving without a license. He told police he never bothered to get one.
DUBUQUE, Iowa—(UPI)—For 34 years Melvin Roeth stopped at all the stop signs and never drove over the speed limit.
A Perfect Record
Cost of Living
HENDON, England—(UPI)—Magistrate E. Hudson-Davies, who recalled that he was fined $1.40 48 years ago for having a faulty muffler on his car, levied the same fine for the same offense on a defendant yesterday "to show that the cost of living has not gone up."
Black and White
LONDON—(UPI) A 15-year-old boy from Wolverhampton, England, told a juvenile court yesterday that Police search him every time he comes to London just because he wears a black undershirt, black shirt, black vest and black jeans.
It's Band Day-Don't Fight The Long, Long Chow Line!
gaslight tavern
JOIN US TOMORROW!
PRE-GAME SPECIAL
DELICIOUS, GIGANTIC
ONLY
SUBMARINE SANDWICHES
44c
(1/4 loaf french bread, 1/4 lb. of meat-ham, salami, bologna plus cheese, lettuce and mayonnaise.)
READY TO GO NO WAITING
only at the
gaslight tavern
2 doors north of the Union
When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansar Classifieds
KU & KAI
HOMECOMING DANCE
Saturday, November 2nd 8:00 to 12:00
Student Union Ballroom
featuring...
KAI WINDING
AND ORCHESTRA
Tickets...$2.50 per couple sold at Information Booth, Student Union or buy them at the dance!!
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Texa
Colo
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You decisiv here S
Elim conside of vict
Jack should of the he utte
"THI will be agine, urday.
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University Daily Kansan
Page 9
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Friday, Oct. 25, 1963
Jayhawks, O-State Meet for 'Snake-Bitten' Title
By Roy Miller (Sports Editor)
Arkansas 21. Oklahoma State 0.
Texas 34. Oklahoma State 7.
Colorado 25. Oklahoma State 0.
Missouri 28. Oklahoma State 6.
You think Oklahoma State's next decisive loss automatically will be here Saturday when it plays KU?
Eliminate "automatically" then reconsider your confident prediction of victory for the Javhawkers.
Jack Mitchell. KU football coach, should receive the "understatement of the year award" for this quote he uttered this week:
"THEY (OKLAHOMA STATE) will be anxious for a victory, I imagine, when they come here Saturday."
So anxious, in fact, the Cowboys can be expected to give KU a close battle in the Band Day affair.
"The Waddies (O-State) have been as unlucky as a lame duck in a shooting gallery. In their first four games, all defeats, they have yielded seven touchdowns and two field goals after surrendering the ball on fumbles or blocked punts inside their 37-yard line.
The Jayhawks haven't been doing so well themselves lately. They lost 17-14 to Iowa State and 21-18 to Oklahoma in their last two efforts. Don Pierce, KU sports publicity director, says:
"IF NOTHING ELSE, Kansas and Oklahoma State will play for the snake-bitten championship of Big Eight football here Saturday.
"Kansas' misfortune is more serious. The Jayhawkers have run into their most prolonged injury outbreak since Jack Mitchell's first season here, 1958."
Arkansas scored its first touchdown against the Cowboys after recovering a fumble on the O-State 36.
Texas gained 13 points on two fumbles and a blocked kick. Colorado picked up three fumbles which led to touchdowns. And Missouri scored once on a fumble at the 20 and a blocked punt at the 37 last Saturday.
YET, THE hard-hitting Cowpokes command respect.
"They looked better against Missouri than Iowa State looked against Nebraska," Jack Scofield, KU assistant coach, said after scouting the game at Stillwater. "If they can just eliminate their fumbles, they're good enough to beat anybody they play."
Oklahoma State is the only team that has led Texas this season. The Cowboys jumped to a 7-3 lead when Walt Garrison, sophomore fullback, scored on a 48-yard run.
KU has only three lettered players left at tackle. Coach Mitchell moved 2 inexperienced players to second and third team left tackle Wednesday in an effort to replace three men lost on injuries.
BRIAN SCHWEDA, KU's starting left tackle, has lost three of his understudies. Richard Pratt is sidelined indefinitely with a fractured wrist, Tommy Thompson is out of action with a re-injured knee and, just Tuesday, John Garber suffered a fracture of the forearm and is lost for the season.
seen only limited action in four games this season, has been promoted to the second team. Mike O'Brien, a sophomore who has been bothered by a knee injury for two years and who still can't play full speed, was moved to the third team.
Bruce DeBey, a junior who has
"I hate to get an opportunity to play more this way," DeBey said after practice Wednesday. "But, I've been waiting for this chance for a long time. I think I can do a good job."
Small O-State Back Plays Like 'Monster'
When you have a halfback who stands 5-7 $ \frac{1}{2} $ and weighs 150 pounds, you don't consider him large enough for high school football. But those are the dimensions of Oklahoma State's top left halfback, Larry Elliot, who is one of the sharper performing Cowboys.
Elliot is the second of an Elk City, Okla., family to lend his football talents to OSU. The first was his older brother Jim, a 5-9, 160-pound "monster" who was the offensive quarterback spark for the 1960 Cowpoke squad.
The stubby halfback has a sturdy pair of legs that always seem to be churning. Plus this, he has pretty good speed (10.1 was his best high school 100), excellent balance and
what's most important in Coach Phil Cutchin's book, a burning desire to excel.
THE BIG EIGHT'S SMALLEST player gave a solid opening night performance under extreme conditions at Arkansas.
Elliot rushed four times for 19 yards, caught two passes for 11, returned two punts for 16 yards and raced back a total of 53 yards with two kickoff runbacks.
Larry made the rounds in high school. He won twelve athletic letters in football, basketball, baseball and track, including all-state football honors his senior year and second team all-state in baseball. He was always a starter in basketball, a high scoring halfback and a baseball shortstop who hit the ball at a 400 clip two springs ago.
"No, I Don't think my lack of size hurts me a lot," Elliott said. "In fact, it's sort of an advantage. Whenever you do something good the coaches or players are quicker to notice it."
O-State's assistant in charge of offense, Elwood Kettler, describes Elliott as "a 110-percent player all of the time."
"He enjoys playing the game and his great desire makes him an easy player to work with. Other than his fine attitude toward the game his greatest physical asset is quickness and balance," Kettler says.
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Oct. 25, 1963
Labor Expert Foresees Dip In Economy
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — A spokesman for the AFL-CIO told senators today that a recession will occur next year if Congress fails to enact President Kennedy's tax cut program.
The flat prediction of a downturn—with "rising unemployment"—was made by Andrew Biemiller, legislative director of the Labor Federation in testimony before the Senate Finance Committee.
He said substantial tax reductions, concentrated in the lower and moderate income brackets, were essential to prevent a 1964 recession.
Biemiller urged the Senate to give lower income taxpayers a bigger share of the cuts than did the House in the $11 billion dollar bill it approved Sept. 25.
THE SOLE REASON that labor endorses tax cuts, he said, is that they should provide more jobs to alleviate unemployment.
The Biemiller testimony followed an attack on the tax cut program by the American Farm Bureau. President Charles Shuman called it "fisically irresponsible" in the face of budget deficits in 26 of the past 32 years.
Other congressional developments:
- Civil rights—President Kennedy intensified his personal efforts to save his civil rights bill, conferring today for 40 minutes with Democrats of the House Judiciary Committee which seems ready to approve a much stronger bill than he wants.
This followed a conference last night with both Democratic and Republican leaders at which he succeeded in getting a Judiciary Committee showdown on the stronger bill postponed until Tuesday.
Administration leaders are alarmed that the tougher bill sought by militant pro-civil righters could not pass the House, much less the Senate.
- Republicans—House GOP leader Charles Halleck indicated he would do what he could to help the administration get its civil rights legislation to the house floor. But he said he had doubts that Congress will enact a bill this session.
Senate GOP leader Everett Dirksen said he is beginning to have doubts that either a civil rights bill or tax legislation will pass this session.
JOE'S BAKERY
new location at
616 West 9th
25c delivery VI 3-4720
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
THERE ARE 3,000 ITEMS caught in the COBWEB the antique shop at the
BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass. VI 3-1044
BIKE REPAIRS
Specialized Service Parts for All Makes Authorized Schwinn and Honda Dealer
BLEVINS 701 Mich. VI 3-0581
Fraternity Jewelry
Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER
Balfour
- pipes
- tobaccos
- complete accessories
MATHEWS
at George's Pipe Shop 727 Mass. VI 3-7164 "Smoking is our only Business"
Portraits of Distinction "A Perfect Christmas Gift"
Portraits of
PHOTOGRAPHY
HIXON
STUDIO
PETS UNLIMITED
Bob Blank, Photographer
721 Mass. VI 3-0330
Fine furnishings for all pets. Choice tropical fish and equipment. "The only pet for college students."
$ 3 / 4 $ mile E. of Mass. on 19th
1824 Almira VI 2-3393
Daniel's
Reasonable Prices Prompt Service
P
- Watch Repair
- Engraving
- Jewelry Repair
features
- Watch Repair
Your Service Jeweler is at VI 3-2572
914 Mass. VI 3-2572
ACE
ACE STEERING AND RADIATOR SPECIALISTS
ALLAN EASUM LEROY HADL
Bear Wheel Alignment Dynamic Wheel Balancing Brake & Frt. End Parts Auto Glass Installed
VI 3-1300
6th & Minn.
Tops — Glass & Zippers —
Rear Glasses — Hearlines —
Door Panels —
Jack's Seat Covers
545 Minn. VI 3-4242
Tailor Made Seat Covers at Competitive Prices with sewed double lock stitch.
GRANT'S
Drive-In Pet Center
Sure-
Everything in the Pet Field
1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921
FRATERNITY JEWELRY
A complete line, including,
● Lavaliers ● Guards
● Pins ● Mugs
● Rings ● Crests
Ray Christian
JEWELERS
IT'S OK TO OWE RAY
809 Mass.
Burgers - Malts - Fries
KENTUCKY FRIED CHICKEN
They are best at the BIG BUY Delivery Service
23rd & Iowa
V1 3-8225
JIM'S CAFE
838 Mass.
OPEN 24 hrs. a day
BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY
One Stop Service
★ Engine Tune Up
LEONARD'S
★ Generator & Starter Repair
★ Brake Repair
★ Lubrication & Oil Change
WRECKER & ROAD SERVICE
SKELLY
JACK & GUNN'S
SKELLY SERVICE
300 W. 6th
THE NAME FOR SERVICE
VI 3-9271
DX
★ WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT
Standard Service
"the best in car care"
706 W. 9th
VI 3-9830
★ BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED
★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK
★ MUFFLER SERVICE
★ TUNE-UPS
★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M.
Fast Cor Wash Minor Tune up Brake Work Muffers & Tail Pipes
9th & Mississippi VI 3-9897
ART'S TEXACO
DX Servicenter
6th & Michigan VI 2-9410
FREE PICK-UP & DELIVERY
Milliken's SOS
$1021\frac{1}{2}$ Mass., VI 3-5920, 7a.m.-11p.m.
Milliken's SOS "the best professional service"
- General typing service
- Notary public
- 24 hr. answering service
- Mimegraph & photo-copying
365 day hospitalization
STUDENTS
BRAKE ADJUSTMENTS ... $.98
LUBRICATION ... $1.00
Motor tune-ups, wheel balancing
FREE—one quart of oil with each oil and filter change
— all major brands —
$8-$20 daily benefit
$300 miscellaneous expense
$400 surgical expense
LOW COST
Kermit Hoffmeier special insurance agent VI 2-0266
PAGE-CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE
1819 W 23rd VI 3-9694
Pitchers—75c
Thursday night at the Purple Pig 810 New Hampshire
TGIF at the Stables TGIS too!
Gene Bailey — Mark Patton
HAVING A PARTY?
We are always happy to serve you with
We are always happy to serve you with
Ice cold beverages
Chips, nuts, cookies
Variety of grocery items
Crushed ice, candy
Ice cold 6 pacs — all kinds
OPEN TO 10 P.M. EVERY EVENING
OPEN TO 10 P.M. EVERY EVENING
LAWRENCE ICE COMPANY
616 Vt. Ph. VI 3-0350
No more putting off laundry chores 'till the weekend we'll do your laundry any day of the week!
Try our efficient service washing, drying and folding today!
GRAVITT'S AUTOMATIC LAUNDRY
913 N.H. VI 3-6844
---
One da
Fruits
Croydon
The Im
Seven I
4 to Bu
HOOTEN
fun—place
easy
only $2.0
Oahu Pu
land 1, 0
Must sel paint, u after 4:3
TRAVEL RESERVATIONS NOW!
Make your airline reservations now and be assured of your travel for Thanksgiving and Christmas vacation.
Crystal gifts for House VI 3-398
Airline and steamship reservations
For fast, efficient service call our Mrs. Rose Abels.
1961 Volt tion, ma 9451 or :
35' x 8'
cellent
answer
1959 Ch
stick "6"
6 p.m.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
746 Mass.
RENAUJ good sh 1957 and 5139 or
Travel Agency
One 3 d
table wi
... $4.5
black e
with 26
ottoman
table w
Call VI
GUNS:
Hi-Stan
scope 1
pistols.
gun, Mk
824 Ark
LAWRE new and ammo, trades Ohio ends.
VI 3-0152
Friday, Oct. 25, 1963
University Daily Kansan P
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
delivery. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion.
FOR SALE
GIDE. ANDRE
GIDE, ANDRE
Fruits of the Earth $3.25
Croydon $3.50
The Immoralist $3.50
LAWRENCE, T. E.
Seven Pillars to Wisdom.
4 to Buckram, Garden City, 1935 $5.00
ABINGTON BOOK SHOP
1015' Mass.
HOOTENANNY. Guitar Music — have fun—play authentic folk music in Five easy self taught loose leaf lessons for only $3.00, payment in full with order. Oahu Publishing Co., Box 5110G, Cleveland 1, Ohio. 10-25
Crystal and glassware. New and different gifts for that person who has everything. House of Glass, 906 New Hampshire VI 3-280. Closed on Sat. 10-28
Must sell 49 Jeepster convertible New
Era 360 for sale. Call or text 4-2381, 1681,
after 4:30 during week VI. TI 2-3681, 1681.
1961 Volkwangen Sedan. Excellent condi-
tion for car rides. Dcougal at 11-6
9451 or see at 1244 La.
35' x 8' Mcblih cell, 2 bedrooms and ex-
tensions. VI 2-1673 and we answer call VI 3-9304.
10-29
1059 Chevy, good condition, economical
6 p.m. 'Call VI 2-4161, 12 noon of
10-25
RENAULT—two, 1957 and 1959, both in good shape. Am asking $325.00 for the 1957 and $495.00 for the 1959. Call VI 3-5139 or go to 1523 W. 22nd St. Terr.
One 3 drawer chest . . . $8.50, one study table with drawer . . . $9.50, 3 book cases black enamel . . . $12.95, black enamel. Ladies Schwinn bicycle with 26" basket . . . $15.00. Coral plastic tote with 10" mahogany body with wrought iron legs . . . $6.00. Call VI 2-8698. . . . 10-25
GUNS: .28 Stubnose, Ruger. 22 single six,
Hi-Standard. 22 double nine., 22 rifle with
scope matched miniature Colt dueling
pistols. Ruger. 44 magnum carbine, BB
gun, Mod. '98 Mauser rifle. Many more,
824 Ark. V-1-3110.
tt
LAWRENCE FIREARMS COMPANY —
new and used guns — military weapons,
ammo, Lugers, Mausers, army .45’s —
trades welcome — we also rebel. 1026
Ohio — VI 2-1214 — evenings4 and week-
ends. 10-28
You can own your own clean used mobile home for as low as $200.00 down and $34 per month delivered. Large selection of used mobile now! ODDI MOBIL HOMES, 73N. 2 N. A. accrence, Kansas Call VI 3-8846 or VI 2-3111
MGA 1600 model Roadster—1960—Just over 16.000 miles. Wire wheels, white interior. Heater. White window interior. Excellent condition. Phone VI 3-8221 today.
Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500
cream—$85 Lawrence Outdoor.
1005 Mass
ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLEANERS New Electrolux and a limited number of rebuilt, fully guaranteed. All parts available. Equipment picked up for service and delivered. Frank V. Cox, Local Manager-1904 Barker. Call VI 3-1827.
1957 "98" Oldsmobile convertible; white;
excellent condition; power windows,
radio, seat, brakes. Four nets.
Will take offer. Call: Bill Murdock
V 2-42828.
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outlines of the text of these classes. Formerly known as the Theta notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50.
Typewriters, new and used portables,
standards, electrics. Olympia, Olivetti,
Royal and Smith Corona portables. Typewriter and adding machine service and rental. Lawrence Typewriter, 730 Mass.
Call VI 3-3644. tf
General Psychology study notes. Excellent study aid for all sections. $4.00 per copy. Call VI 2-9378. tf
Save on tires! 1,000 tires (snow and regular) at lowest discount prices in Kansas—Ray Stoneback's (Discount tire center)
929 Mass. 10-30
One 12 string guitar and one 6 string
electric drum and new, excellent tone
VI 3-4087
10-28
Ride wanted -Kansas City, Kansas, to KU and return, daily. Live near 18th and Quindaro. Will discuss terms. Call VI 3-9474. 10-30
TRANSPORTATION
Patronize Kansan Advertisers
FOUND
Ring in ladies' room, Watson Library.
Ring in gentlemen's room, Bailey
UN 4-3306. Must describe.
FOR RENT
Town Manor Penthouse apartment available Oct. 28th. Private entrance, beautifully furnished large kitchen, steam heat, afternoon parking, lovely patio, cookout equipment. Lease to children or mature students. No small children or pets. Call VI 3-8000. 10-31
Two, large room modern basement apartments. For one of two young men, Outside court. Bills paid. No drink. See "See first house south of campus, 1616 Inc." 10-30
Vacancies for young men in contemporary home. Swimming pool, private en-
trance. Two bath. $45 monthly if unpaid. Home cooked meals if desired.
3-19-6353. 11-20
Duplex, 2 bedrooms, stove, refrigerator,
except electricity paid. Gau VI 3-2281
Two bedroom duplex, unfurnished, wall to wall carpeting, fenced yard, large storage and utility room. 2 small children acceptable, no pets. One year lease. $5.50 a month. 1607 W. 22nd Terr. Call VI 2-1028. tt
Furnished, clean 2 and 3 room apart-
ment in closets, bath, no room
Altoh. Ohio . . . . .
Want a girl to share my apartment. Con-
tinue Tenn. After 4:30 on week days. 10-29
Spacious 2 room, newly decorated, second floor apartment clean and quiet. Private bath. Near KU. $65.00. Bills paid except electricity. Call VI 2-2593. 10-25
Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1648.
Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter, carbon printer. Postmaster Vl 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley, 408 West 13th. tt
New electric typewriter. Reasonable rates for themes, term papers, dissertations, and theses. Mrs. Barta, 1955 Miller Drive, VI 3-6994. tf
TYPING
Experienced typist for theses and term
exercises of the MSc. in Computer Sci-
cifics. Mrs Fulcher, 1031 Miss M.I. V-35688,
tf
Efficient and experienced typer would like to do work in home. Prompt and guaranteed work. Call at any time. VI 3-2651. 10-31
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
In legal terms, Marsha Glover. VI 3-2577.
Typing: Dissertations theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines; 35 special symbols. Machines; 35 special customer service. Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI2-1546 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI3-3057. **tf**
Typing: Desertations, theses, manuscripts,
term papers typed. New Smith-Corona
machines; 35 special symbols, carbon
ribbon—if desired. Prompt, efficient service.
Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI2-1546
or Mrs. Dorothy MOII VI3-3057.
Prompt, neat and accurate work on wide carriage electric typewriter. Journalism Business and Secretary experience. Charlotte Weber. VI 3-3495. tf
MILLIKENS SOS—always first quality typing on LB.M. Carbon ribbon machines.
The tape transcriptions. Off-
hours 7 a.m. 12 p.m. - 1021. Mass
Phone VI 3-5920
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers,
papers, letters, reports and newsletters. Electric Typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 38-658f, t
Thesis Typist, Electric typewriter
thus degree. Friule Village, NI
8469.
HELP WANTED
Part time help wanted: Qualifications:
- paid money Call Vi 1-2-3617 10-31
5:30 p.m
Need 4 men with cars to work one night each week. Good pay. Contact Tom Dixon. Dixon's Drive-In restaurant. VI 3-7446. 10-28
OVERSEAS OPPORTUNITIES . . . for qualified people in Rural Development and Education, Southeast Asia. After graduation, Services 1003 N. Washington, D.C. 10-25
BUSINESS SERVICES
HELP WANTED -Linotype operator, 9 to 3 daily. Must be experienced on newspaper straightmatter. University of Karachi Press, 117 Flint Hall. Phone UN 4-2323
Complete line of soles and heels, laces,
cosmetics and polishes. Have new merchandise in stock such purses and shoes for Burgert's Day The Day Store Service — 1113 Mass. St.
Dressmaking-alterations, formals and dressings. Ola Smith. 939 1/2 Masse VI 0-763
MISCELLANEOUS
Cute kitten free to good store. 6 weeks old. Call VI 3-7330 after 5:30 p.m. 10-29
PARTY TIME: School house available for private parties, dances, meetings—dressed with piano, tables, chairs, refreshment bar and coolers. 3-7453-431 Forrest.
WANTED
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart, 1025 Mass. tf
Bass player to work with small folk
125 Engineering Bldg. DU4. 10-25
125 Engineering Bldg. DU4. 10-25
TRANSPORTATION
The Thanksgiving and Christmas schedules are now in.
CONTACT
IT'S TIME TO MAKE
YOUR RESERVATIONS
FOR
THE HOLIDAY SEASON
MAUPINTOUR
at the Malls
at the Malls
711 W. 23rd VI 3-1211
MORE JOBS BETTER PRODUCTS LOWER PRICES advertising works for you!
SENIORS
"GET MORE WITH '64"
DON'T MISS YOUR BIG PARTY!
TOMORROW NIGHT...AT THE BIG BARN AFTER THE GAME...5 P.M. 'TIL 11 P.M.
We are indeed proud to be able to cater to you on your day...
DIXON'S
"The home of the very best in sandwiches and fried chicken!"
2500 WEST SIXTH
VI 3-7446
Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Friday, Oct. 25, 1963
International Club Trip Planned Date Set for Halloween Party
Both Halloween and Christmas are on the agenda for the International Club this weekend.
A Halloween costume party entitled "Harvest Festival" will be featured at the regular meeting of the club at 8 p.m. Saturday in the Javahawk Room of the Kansas Union.
RAB MALIK, Pakistan graduate student and president of the club
said he hopes all foreign students will wear traditional costumes of their native countries.
The club will hold a preparational meeting for their annual Christmas vacation trip to Mexico. At 3 p.m. Sunday in room 306-A of the Kansas Union.
Milan Loupal, Czechoslovakia graduate student and an organizer
Anderson Likes Jap Steaks; Comments Blasted by Kansans
WICHITA — (UPI) — Gov. John Anderson's comment that Japanese beer-fed steaks "taste better than those at home" drew a "beef" today from Wichita restaurant operators.
Ruby Slayton, manager of the Wichita Stockyards Dining Room, said "that's practically blasphemy, talking that way about beef in his home state."
A. B. COX, catering manager for the Allis Hotel, remarked, "that's a pretty broad statement for the governor of this state to make."
Ted Werts, owner of the Beeefater Inn said, "That isn't going to make him too welcome in Kansas."
The governor's remark about beef came during his recent tour of Japan with a group of other U.S. governors.
Concensus of Wichita restaurateurs and livestock men was that Kansas cattle do not need beer in their diet to produce top quality steaks.
MRS. HATTIE GUTTIRIE, a Women's Christian Temperance Union leader, also commented on Anderson's statement.
"I wouldn't be in favor of giving beer to anyone," she said. "I remember one time when someone sold malt to my folks and it made the cattle tips."
of the trip, said about 30 persons have requested registration forms for the trip. He said 66 persons could be taken on the 15-day trip. One need not be a member of the club to participate in the trip.
THE GROUP plans to leave Lawrence by bus on Saturday, Dec. 21, and travel by way of Laredo to Monterrey. In Monterrey, the group will visit the open markets. From Monterrey, the group will go to Mexico City.
In Mexico City, they plan to see a bullfight and visit the campus of the University of Mexico.
From Mexico City, the group will travel to Xochimilco, renowned for its floating gardens. The next stop on the trip is Taxico, called the "Silver City" of Mexico. From Taxico, the group will travel to the seashore city of Acapulco on the west coast of Mexico.
FROM ACAPULCO, the group will return to Mexico City and then go to San Miguel, a famous Mexican art center. On the way back to the United States, the group will stop in Guanajuato, famous for natural hot springs.
Loupal said the total cost of the trip per person will be $110. A $10 deposit is required of each person making a reservation.
DOES GOD UNDERSTAND ENGLISH?
Is the Curia kaput? Will deacons be allowed to marry? How does this council differ from Pope John's Ecumenical Council? Will scientific advancement change the Church's stand on birth control? Will Catholics and Protestants marry without signing promises? Will the Church really change?
Fr. James Blumeyer, S.J., Fr. David Schmidt, S.J., Fr. James Finnerty, S.J., all of St. Mary College, St. Mary, Kansas will hold a panel discussion on "Vatican II: Second Spring," the revolutionary changes emerging from the Ecumenical Council.
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 27
FORUM ROOM
8:00 p.m.
UNION
OF HO
3.
PRE-HALLOWEEN
SKULLS &
CROSS BONES
CHAMBER
OF HORRORS SHOW!
3 Fiendish Hits 3
TAR
Fiend No. 1
"THE REVENGE OF FRANKENSTEIN"
Fiend No. 2
MONSTER of the FUTURE
KARLOFF
BORIS
"FRANKENSTEIN"
1970
CINEMA SCOPE
+ + + + +
Fiend No. 2
MONSTER of the FUTURE
BORIS KARLOFF
"FRANKENSTEIN"
1970"
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Daily Hansan
图 2-15
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Monday. Oct. 28, 1963
61st Year. No. 32
Mary M. Dobroth
Patsy Kendall
A. E.
Karen Vice
(3)
Sherry Zillner
Karen Vice is Homecoming Queen
Homecoming activities opened today with the announcement of Karen Vice, St. John senior, as KU's 1963 homecoming queen.
Miss Vice, who is majoring in biological science education, was named queen at a student gathering in front of Strong Hall at 10:20 a.m.
HER ATTENDANTS are Patricia Gail Kendall, Holton senior, and Sherry Zillner, Shawnee Mission senior.
Members of the homecoming royalty were chosen from 10 finalists by a committee of Lawrence citizens and KU professors.
Miss Vice will be crowned during halftime ceremonies at KU-Kansas State football game in Memorial Stadium Saturday.
THE QUEEN, who represented Alpha Chi Omega sorority, is a counselor in Corbin Hall, a freshman women's dormitory, and is a member of the Student National Education Association, KU-Y and People-to-People. She also was a candidate for KU's representative to the American Royal queen competition.
Miss Kendall is an honor roll student and a member of Mortar Board. A member of
Kappa Kappa Gamma, she has held several offices in Associated Women Students (AWS) and in Intercollegiate AWS.
Miss Zillner is president of Pi Beta Phi. She has been active in KU-Y, Student Union Activities, Frosh Hawks, and the Panhellenic executive board. She is the recipient of a Hallmark scholarship. In 1961, she was KU Relays queen and was an attendant to the 1963 Greek Week queen.
HOMECOMING EVENTS this week include the annual Varsity-Freshman basketball game at 7 p.m. Friday in Allen Field House, and presentations of "Madame Butterfly" at 9 p.m. Friday and 8:15 p.m. Saturday in the University Theatre.
The general homecoming reception will be at 9:30 a.m. Saturday and the SUA reception will be at 10 a.m., both events in the Kansas Union.
President James A. McCain of Kansas State University and KU Chancellor Clarke Wescoe will discuss higher education at 10 a.m. Saturday in the Ballroom of the Kansas Union.
Marriage Will Only Postpone the Draft
By Tom Coffman
What will be the effect of President Kennedy's recent proclamation on the draft and young married men? What is the effect of extended liability in student deferment?
"YOUNG MEN who marry do not escape the draft." Hitt explained. Anyone in 1A classification is eligible for the draft. The President's recent proclamation served to re-shuffle the drafting sequence, making all unmarried men in 1A between the ages of 19 and 26 eligible before the married men. Hitt said.
James K. Hitt discussed these questions Saturday to clarify hazy information surrounding Selective Service regulations. Hitt, in addition to being registrar and director of admissions, is military information officer for KU students and liaison between the National Registrar's Association and the federal Selective Service board.
The proclamation did not technically exempt or defer married men from the draft, Hitt said.
"A man who runs out and gets married in hopes of escaping the draft only delays his military service, probably."
"You might say there are better reasons for getting married," Hitt quipped. The Registrar did not believe that many men will marry for that reason.
THE MAIN effect of the proclamation, Hitt believes, will be to drive the draft age of unmarried men in 1A down to about 19 years. The current draft age has been about 21 or 22.
Hitt speculated President Kennedy's reasons for the proclamation were both political and economic.
"It should be, a vote-getter," Hitt said. "Probably more important are the economic considerations—if a man is married you have to pay dependents."
The earlier a man is trained, the better soldier he makes, Hitt said. "He's enthusiastic at age 18. They make real fighters."
Males who are deferred—in any classification other than 1A—are eligible for the draft until they are 35. Regular 1A liability runs up to age 26.
"THERE IS A fancied damage or danger in having extended liability conferred," Hitt emphasized. "This liability is purely theoretical."
All college men are eligible for deferment. They do not have to be in any particular area of study or meet any scholastic standards as long as they stay in school.
However, college men must have their local draft boards informed of their enrollment by the registrar of their college or university if they wish to be deferred.
AT KU THIS IS accomplished by submitting an IBM card at enrollment with the draft registrant's Selective Service number on it. Then the registrar's office sends out a form—called an SS 109—to the local bord and a deferment, usually to II-S classification, is conferred.
About 4,000 of KU's 5,500 men undergraduates students requested Hitt's office to send out SS 109 forms this past year.
This school year is the first in which the scholastic average was not considered as a factor in deferment. Before, the male student had to be in the top one-half of his class to be taken out of the 1A category.
"THE THINKING behind this is simple," Hitt said. "We can't outnumber the Chinese or the Russians. All we can do is out-fox them through better education."
The national draft system does not call for universal service, Hitti said. "Rather it is exactly what the name implies—selective."
Senior Day Activities Include Game, Party, Pubs
Rv Mike Miller
Kansan Managing Editor Saturday, was, Senior, Dav.
Saturday was Senior Day. The queen was beautiful. So were the attendants.
THE SENIOR cheerleaders were tacky.
Some of the seniors overdid their celebration and had to be assisted from the stadium by helpful campus policemen.
The Jayhawkers defeated Oklahoma State 41-7.
About 1,200 seniors and 350 guests consumed 55 kegs of the student's favorite beverage at the party at the Big Barn.
Yes, the class of 1964 celebrated their day. Aside from various preparties at various pubs, the Senior Day festivities started at Memorial Stadium about 1:15 when Jerry Pullins, Council Grove senior and president of the Senior class, presented the senior gift, a $1,000 loudspeaker system, to James Surface, vicechancellor of the University.
KAY CASH, Fairview Park, Ohio,
senior, was crowned queen of the
class of 1964. Attendants were Lesley
Hagood, and Mary Lynn Cooper,
both Prairie Village seniors. Miss
Cash represented Pi Beta Phi social
sorority; Miss Hagood, Gamma Phi
Beta and Miss Cooper, Kappa Alpha
Theta.
Now that the preliminaries were completed, the seniors settled down for the business at hand, the football game. Surprisingly, some of the seniors actually watched part of the football game. Twice the action on the football field was so exciting that the seniors chose to watch the game rather than listen to the senior cheerleaders.
The senior cheerleaders, John
Bumgarner, Tulsa, Okla: Tom Tatlock, Wichita; John Middleton, Kansas City, Mo., and Phil Harrison. Colby, were not as attractive as some of the feminine cheerleaders, nor for that matter as neatly dressed, but with the help of the loudspeaker system given by the senior class, they certainly were loud.
ONE GROUP of seniors became so carried away with the activity that they accompanied the 70 high school bands in playing "The Battle Hymn of the Republic." Of course the accompaniment was with basketball whistles, but the spirit was there. It was stirring. A campus policeman made a special trip to the senior music section to congratulate the musicians.
For the occasion, the seniors made up some "original" cheers. These cheers ranged from baby talk to the spelling of the senior class mascot. the bird, to the advice that Jack Mitchell be given to the O-State team.
The game was exciting for those who watched it. Senior fullback Ken Coleman and Armand Baughman plunged through the O-State line; senior quarterback Sid Michele passed beautifully and Lloyd Buzzi side-steped artistically behind a predominantly senior line. Of course, underclassmeen like Gale Sayers, Ron Oelschlager, Mike Johnson, Steve Renko, Gary Duff, Bill Gerhards, and Dave Crandall helped.
The game was over about 4 p.m.
By 5 p.m. the senior class party had
WEATHER
Fair weather is forecast to continue through tomorrow with a high in the mid 60's. The low tonight will be near 40.
started at the Big Barn.
Intellectuals, playboys, campus politicians, big men on campus, little men on campus, and their feminine counterparts gathered 1500 strong to talk over their three years at the University.
SOME PEOPLE went inside the barn to dance to the music of "The Flippers." Most, however, preferred to avoid the heat and smoke of the barn. They stayed outside to chat, drink, and enjoy the lovely autumn evening.
Most of the seniors were attired in the official class uniform, class of '64 sweatshirts, blue jeans and the senior class button, which was worn on various parts of the anatomy.
As the evening wore on everyone seemed to be enjoying himself. One politician was explaining how he planned to ruin those who had crossed him when he got out of the University. One of the senior cheerleaders was explaining to a rather large, rather unhappy football player that the vell. "Give 'em Hell, Jack Mitchell, Give 'em Hell; Give 'em Hell, Jack Mitchell, Give 'em Hell; What the Hell, Give 'em Jack Mitchell," was really all in fun and if the seniors didn't like the coach so much they wouldn't have chided him. The football player said he understood and he smiled. The cheerleader heaved a sigh of relief.
THE PARTY had about run its course by 11 p.m. Much to the surprise of skeptical underclassmen and faculty, the barn still looked much the same as before the party.
the seniors left the party, some hand-in-hand, some arm-in-arm and some elbow-in-arm.
It had been a fine exhibition of the spirit of the class of 1644.
THE HUBBLE BOOK
SENIOR QUEEN—Kay Cash, Fairview Park, Ohio, senior, reigned over Senior Day activities. She was crowned at pregame ceremonies Saturday.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Oct. 28, 1963
Disarm and Improve
Approval of a resolution last week opposing the orbiting of nuclear weapons in outer space by the United Nations General Assembly was a further step toward world peace. The decision is an important solution toward the slackening of international tension. This action, as Adlai E. Stevenson, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, said, is another advance in the disarmament process.
But this step is not enough. There is a need for complete disarmament, in a reduction of national arms to the level of such police forces as are essential for international order only. There is a need also for the establishment of a strong world police force and, as Grenville Clark has said in an article in the Saturday Review, "peacekeeping and dispute-settling system" with the necessary "minimal amount of law and organization" to prevent any "large scale organized armed conflict" between nations.
THE POSSIBILITY of this armed conflict became more apparent and acute in the mad race for armaments among the big powers. Each of the nations wants to beat the other at having larger armies, more and more destructive weapons and even greater power to harm others.
Our economy and people have been affected by this arms race. The United States spends billions of dollars to develop better arms necessary for national defense. If this race is abolished, many underdeveloped countries could be supported with the same amount of money.
There is good evidence for believing that the prevention of undue population growth is probably impossible until disarmament is achieved. There is also good evidence for believing that disarmament could pave the way for effective population control within a few decades.
necessity is no more unrecognized. The 17-year period after World War II, regarded as one of failure and frustration because of many protracted and sterile efforts toward disarmament, has produced necessary adjustment and gestation. It was during this period the world began to understand that peace will require not only disarmament, but also some kind of legislative, executive, and judicial institutions on a worldwide scale. These institutions are considered necessary for the maintenance of internal order in local communities and within nations.
BUT THE PROBLEM of the arms race or the
Reflecting this gradual enlightenment, the year 1961 included the March 17 statement of all the prime ministers of the British Commonwealth calling for "total world wide disarmament" and for a "substantial and adequately armed" world police force; the McCloy-Zorin agreement of Sept. 20, whereby the objective of "general and complete" disarmament was unequivocally accepted by the two superpowers; and President Kennedy's United Nations' speech of Sept. 25, in which he summoned the world to a "peace race" based upon total national disarmament.
ALSO, PRESIDENT KENNEDY'S administration has canceled out or dismantled a vast and varied arsenal of strategic weapons planned by the Eisenhower administration.
Some nations have expanded public education and discussion, hoping to develop a far better informed public opinion with respect to the kind of world organization required to achieve and maintain disarmament.
- Vinay Kothari
Total disarmament would open the way to a tremendous improvement in living standards and the consequent stabilization of peoples. Let's hope more people and nations do realize the importance of disarmament.
THE SUPREME COURT
DECISION OF 1954
WAS MORALLY
AND LEGALLY
CORRECT
- EISENHOWER
1953
PS. OF COURSE
THE CURRENT
CIVIL RIGHTS BILL
IS TOO STRONG
© HERBLOCK
“Half Step! Half Step! You Keep Marching Too Fast”
The People Say . . .
Return The Bell
Editor:
After reading Mr. David Perry's letter pertaining to the TKE bell in Thursday's Daily Kansan, and
Drastic Reform for College Athletics?
(Editor's Note: The following article appeared in the Oct. 20 issue of the New York Times Magazine. Entitled "Gown and Gridiron," the article was written by Fred M. Hechinger of the Times education staff.)
The demise of big-time intercollegiate football and other athletics is prematurely predicted quite often when college presidents make self-righteous speeches and contradicted as soon as there are alumni in the house. It may be symbolic of the durability of the sport that a week ago Yale's new president was told of his election to that post while he attended the Yale-Columbia football game.
the president of one large state university, not long ago, when pleading in closed session with a football-minded but otherwise tight-fisted legislative committee, said: "Gentlemen, please let me build a campus of which our football team may be proud."
Despite their ability to survive criticism and to weather scandals, college spectator sports remain a legitimate target for question by educators who believe that higher education priorities are being perverted. More important, there are indications that the college scene itself—especially the quality and purpose of its students—has changed more than the football boosters (and partisans of other exhibition sports), realize or want to admit. This must have been what the faculty and a few courageous leading alumni of Ohio State University had in mind when, two years ago, they braved the wrath of the football-dedicated and vetoed competition in the Rose Bowl.
Subject Dissected
In the October issue of "Liberal Education," the journal of
the Association of American Colleges, published last week. Louis B. Perry, president of Whitman College, in Washington, dissects modern big-time collegiate football.
Mr. Perry, an economist who was educated at the University of California at Los Angeles and at Yale, calls big-time athletics "a hangover from the days of the hip flask and the coonskin coat." He warns that the whole collegiate athletic program may be doomed unless remedial action is taken.
That a good deal is involved in college sports was driven home last August when allegations of a "fix" in a game between the Universities of Georgia and Alabama led to an award of over $3 million in damages to a coach who said he had been libelled.
Mr. Perry charges that, since the most outspoken boosters of spectator college athletics are the alumni of a bygone era these essential new facts of life are overlooked:
(1) In earlier days, many colleges "were often begging for students." The football atmosphere was important in painting an attractive recruiting poster for fun-loving "Joe College," for whom a degree was the byproduct of a gentleman's C.
By contrast, today's better high-school preparation before college and tougher employment competition after graduation require full-time concentration on the main event—study.
(2) The idea that there is big money that can be used to support education in inter-collegiate games is increasingly held to be a sentimental fallacy. In many institutions, Mr. Perry warns, intercollegiate athletics are actually subsidized, with education dollars although this is eamouflaged by claims of the intangible public relations, fundraising value.
Apparently underlining this point, the Very Rev. Laurence J. McGinley, S.J., then president of Fordham, last year rejected revival of football which the formerly big-time football institution had abandoned in 1954 because of continued financial loss.
One Prediction
(3) The drawing power of professional teams, Mr. Perry adds, has hurt college gate receipts. This, in turn, heightens the temptation to try to recapture crowds and dollars by way of Bowl Games spectaculars. This increases the danger of commercialization and interference with academic schedules and college life.
Dr. George L. Cross, president of Oklahoma University, said earlier this year: "As time goes on, the entertainment services provided by college football will be furnished more and more by the professional teams. He predicted a slow decline of college spectaculars—by attrition rather than as a result of the courageous leadership of college presidents.
Mr. Perry betrays a parochial attitude found among some college educators when he says: "College and university administrators should breathe a sigh of relief that the high schools have taken over the problem."
He is, of course, accurate in his observation; but high school; and unhappily junior high school experts, too, are seriously concerned that the even earlier obsession with uniforms, marching bands, out-of-town or evening games is a still greater menace to education.
Teen View
As for girls, a national magazine recently quoted an above-average teenager who was elected cheerleader: "I guess there's nothing left to do in high school. . . that was all I really wanted."
This is especially true when schools put new stress on quality education. A combination of academic and athletic pressures is, as many parents report, simply too much. As in college, furthermore, inter-school emphasis often deprives the majority of students of the chance to participate in physical exercise and to develop aptitudes in sports which remain a life-long asset.
Few high school observers therefore would share Mr. Perry's belief that the problem can be solved by getting it out of students' system earlier. But in a more realistic appraisal of the campus scene, he suggests that collegiate athletics might be saved through reforms.
Among these, he adds, should be more effective limitation of the length of seasons and of practice periods, elimination of post-season games "regardless of the siren calls of promoters" and integration of the athletic staff with the teaching faculty, in terms of tenure, rank and salary. He urges the elimination of athletic scholarships and of double standards in admission. Finally, he calls for an end to all separate budgets for intercollegiate sports, thus placing them under the colleges' financial control.
especially after reading that the official word on having the "traditional" bell seems to be "NO." I would like to make a few comments on this bell and the controversy which surrounds it.
Some institutions have been moving in such directions; but in many places, these reforms still sound like Utopia or Judgment Day—depending on one's point of view.
Last year (first semester), I was Publicity Chairman for the Jay Jane Pep Club. It was brought to the attention of the officers of the pep clubs that for some strange reason, school spirit seemed to be lagging at KU. Indeed, we were even criticized from some quarters for this apparent lack of pep.
T C
Now that I am no longer an officer in Jay Janes, perhaps I have no right to speak up, but in this case I think it is necessary. Picture this, if you will: KU has come from behind to make a touchdown. The crowd goes wild, they begin to wave their arms in the "traditional" manner. The cheerleaders and pep clubs are "traditionally" frantic with yelling. The Jayhawk mascot skips around showing his enthusiasm. The band is playing, the drums are beating—all in the "traditional" fashion. But the also "traditional" ringing of the TKE bell is mute. There is definitely something missing this year when KU makes a touchdown in Memorial Stadium, and anyone who has attended football games in the past knows it.
If Mr. Lonborg and the others who seem to be concerned with school spirit at this school are really concerned, then I challenge them to return the bell. If the pep clubs can show their co-operation, why can't the administration also show their co-operation towards the same goal of better school spirit? Since Pinkerton men and KU police with dogs are already stationed in the end zones, why should there be any question as to the security of the bell? Either we trust the man with the dog to guard the end zone, or he is surely being paid for wasting his time.
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By United Press International It is a matter of opinion whether President Kennedy is in orderly retreat or demoralized rout with his tax and civil rights bills. He has been compelled to compromise. Liberal Democrats are denouncing the tax bill and Negro leaders are accusing Kennedy of a sellout on rights.
Page 3
others with are challenge the epepitation, also towards school and already why as to Either the dog he is ing his
Republicans and conservative Democrats oppose Kennedy's plan to finance tax reduction with borrowed money. Left-wing Democrats accept tax reduction at the expense of more borrowing but they object, and in some anger, to the administration's surrender on some of the tax reform program originally proposed as essential to tax reduction.
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The House Ways and Means Committee eliminated these reforms. The administration decided against trying in the Senate to reinstate them. Sen. Paul Douglas, D-Ill., and others among the left wing of the democratic Party now call it a rich man's bill. Douglas and Sen. Albert Gore, D-Tenn., gave Treasury Secretary Douglas Dillon a hard time during his testimony before the Senate Finance Committee.
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THE TAX BILL continues to enjoy No.1 priority among administration legislative proposals. The brave talk of enacting the tax reduction before Christmas, however, has diminished. More likely, the tax bill will go over until the second session of the 88th Congress, which will convene next Jan.3.
There is no assurance, of course, that the civil rights bill will get through Congress before Christmas. If it fails to do so and if the tax bill also is stymied, the traffic jam in session No. 2 of the 88th may be a record breaker. That would come at a bad time for the Kennedys. Next year comes a presidential election. President Kennedy urgently needs to set his administration's record straight before going to the voters again.
All of this is doubly distressing to the Kennedys. They need the tax cut in this session on the theory that it will stimulate the economy, make jobs and so improve the political climate as to help next year to re-elect the President. As Dillon told the Senate committee a week ago, the overriding necessity was for Congress to enact the tax reduction
THE KENNEDYS also urgently need civil rights legislation now. The more time that elapses between an angry Senate civil rights filibuster and the meeting of the 1964 Democratic National Convention, the more time there will be for party hurts to heal. So civil rights has a sort of second class No. 1 legislative priority of its own.
No matter how it may wreck plans or the second session, civil rights cannot be postponed until 1965. Not with a presidential election coming up next year. The bill now pending was supposed to have been passed the first session of the first Kennedy congress, in 1961.
this year.
Eat Sip and Smile But in Moderation
Candidate Kennedy promised that o the Negroes in his 1960 campaign.
If civil rights goes over to the second session it may block other legislation essential to the Kennedy record.
LOS ANGELES—(UPI) -A leading authority on heart disease said yesterday no single factor—such as high-fat diets, smoking, or stress—should be blamed exclusively for heart ailments.
Dr. Irvine H. Page, director of the research division of the Cleveland (Ohio) Clinic, told the closing session of the American Heart Association's scientific session, that heart disease can result from a variety of things.
Commenting on American habits, he condemned:
- Eating too much. "We should eat less now in the hope of living to eat more in the future."
- Too much interest in spectator sports.
- Abusing the "nice things in life, like tobacco and alcohol."
"We should think of moderation n all things,but be sure not to miss anything," he said.
Another authority on the subject, Dr. Michael E. DeBakey, a Houson, Tex., surgeon, told a news conference that the time when defective human hearts will be replaced by permanently implanted artificial pumps is in the not too distant future.
CAREER
An Engineering
FISHER GOVERNOR COMPANY
With
Interviews will be held on October 28,1963 on the campus.See your placement office now for an appointment
DENVER—(UPI)—Mrs, Jeanne Marie Goodfellow, 29, history's sixth liver transplant patient, died today after surviving a record 23 days with a new liver.
Liver Transplant Fails; Colorado Woman Dies
FISHER GOVERNOR COMPANY Marshalltown, Iowa
Manufacturers of Automatic Control Equipment
University Daily Kansan
Walter Noakes, assistant director of Colorado General Hospital, said Mrs. Goodfellow's body apparently "rejected" her transplanted liver as foreign.
All previous liver transplant recipients also died, but from blood clotting or blood malfunctions.
Mrs. Goodfellow died at the hospital at 3:40 a.m. EDT, just into the 23rd day after the Oct. 5 operation. The 23 days were the longest any liver transplant recipient has ever survived.
Mrs. Goodfellow, an Arvada, Colo., housewife, received the liver in surgery by a team of Denver doctors who have made medical history in the last year with a series of successful kidney transplants.
Mrs. Goodfellow's progress up until a few days ago had encouraged doctors to think she might be the first in history to survive a liver transplant.
The same team performed four of the five previous liver transplants.
Monday, Oct. 28, 1963
Stevenson Blast Expected Of Visiting Madame Nhu
SAN FRANCISCO — (UPI) — United Nations Ambassador Adlai Stevenson was expected to heat up his cold war with Mme. Ngo Dinh Nhu today at a news conference just a short distance from where the controversial first lady of South Viet Nam was scheduled to deliver an address.
Stevenson and Mme. Nhu have levelled thinly-veiled barbs at each other during the past few days, although their paths have never crossed directly during their visits to the same cities.
Stevenson was struck with a picket sign and spat upon following an address in Dallas the day before Mme. Nhu arrived there on another stop in her tour of the United States.
Mme. Nhu said in Texas last weekend that an attack on Stevenson in Dallas Thursday by anti-U.N. demonstrators might indicate that Texans "are fed up with people who are soft on communism."
However, a spokesman for the ambassador said yesterday that Stevenson "now intends to make a major statement" at today's news conference "in regard to the latest statements by Mme. Nuu."
HE SAID Stevenson would meet the press shortly after addressing a breakfast meeting of the Eleanor Roosevelt Memorial Foundation at the Fairmont Hotel. Mme. Nhu was scheduled to address the Commonwealth Club of California at noon.
Her comment in Los Angeles came after Stevenson indicated to reporters that he felt Mme. Nhu was receiving too much news coverage during her present tour.
The glamorous sister-in-law of South Vietnamese President Ngo Dinh Diem remained secluded in her hotel room last night and indicated she might cancel two of her three scheduled speaking engagements.
This was Mme. Nuh's last stop in the United States but even members of her official party did not know when she would depart or what route she would take back to Saigon.
W
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Oct. 28, 1963
Support Needed For Book on Constitution
By Lyle C. Wilson United Press International
There must be a wealthy foundation or philanthropist somewhere in the United States eager to help American high school and college students understand and revere the Constitution of the United States.
THESE WOULD NOT be overly large sums to invest in the citizenship and patriotism of young America. The investment would permit large-scale distribution of the most informative book on the U.S. Constitution that has come across this desk in 36 years of Washington reporting. The book is Thomas James Norton's "Constitution of the United States; Its Sources and Its Applications," published by the Committee for Constitutional Government, Inc., 117 Liberty St., New York 6, N.Y. First printing was in 1941.
If such there be, this essay is for the attention of that foundation or that generous individual. Roughly $300,000 is needed immediately to keep this project going. Thereafter, a large sum of money would be needed each year to maintain it.
About 18 months ago the committee had a backlog of 80,000 requests for Norton's paperback. These requests have been filled. But there had accumulated as of Oct. 8, a backlog of requests for 200,000 copies. The 80,000 books distributed since the late spring of 1962 were at a cost of $1 each. The cost has risen to $1.50. Some of this added cost is represented by increased labor and paper costs, plus the need for a sturdier binding to resist rough treatment by young America.
The committee says the new edition is ready to go to 200,000 young Americans if some old Americans will come up with funds. In support of its appeal the committee can present letters asking for the book. Typical is one from Rev. Edward M. Connors, associate superintendent of schools, the Archdiocese of New York. He wrote, in part:
4
"Our previous experience with the Norton classic has been heartwarming. Accordingly, we respectfully submit a request for 10,000 copies to be distributed among our students enrolling in the required American heritage course.
Chance fights ever on the side of the prudent - EURIPIDES
Prudence has a way of bringing good luck. Euripides knew it way back when, and it's true as ever today.
Are you being prudent about your financial future? It's never too early to start and it's wise to begin with a foundation of life insurance. Delay could be costly.
"WOULD IT be possible for us to have as many as 15,000 of these books?"
John T. Bernard, administrative assistant to the president of Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah, wrote:
Our campus office specializes in life insurance programming for young people. Stop by to see us or telephone.
"We recognize that this is a rather large order, but our total student enrollment is now over 11,000. The Norton book would be of great value to our student body."
"The Playboy Philosophy" will be the topic of discussion at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Jayhawk Room of the Kansas Union.
Don Igelsrud, Minneapolis, Minn., senior and chairman of the Philosophical Basis of Absolutely Everything committee, said the idea for the talk rose out of a series of editors published in "Playboy" magazine.
Discussion to Feature 'Playboy Philosophy'
Myra Olstead, assistant professor of English, will then present the women's reaction to the philosophy as it is summarized by North.
Following Prof. Olsted's views, the floor will be open to questions from the audience to be directed to the speakers.
John North, assistant instructor of sociology, will begin the program by summarizing the playboy philosophy as it has recently been given by the editors of "Playboy."
SNIFFER OFF BEAM
MEMPHIS, Tenn. — (UPI)—Police abruptly took "Miss Bubbles," a member of the canine corps, off a car theft case Monday night. They said she tracked down the investigating officers instead of the suspect.
Rocky's Support Hinges On Beliefs of Goldwater
NEW YORK—(UPI) —Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller has hinted he might not back Sen. Barry Goldwater if the Arizona Republican wins the 1964 GOP presidential nomination unless some of the senator's views change.
The governor recalled that Goldwater had said he would refuse to run on a platform such as the one adopted by the GOP in 1960. This platform, Rockefeller said, represented the "broad mainstream of the Republican party."
IN NOTING differences between Goldwater's ideas and his own, Rockefeller said the Arizona senator is opposed to foreign aid, regards the progressive income tax with distaste and would like to "roll back social gains," such as federal aid to education.
In reply to a question, he declined to state directly that he would not support Goldwater. But Rockefeller said: "If he ran on a Republican platform like the one in 1960, I would support him."
Rockefeller, who plans to announce next month if he will seek the GOP nomination, yesterday coupled comments on Goldwater with sharp criticism of President Kennedy's foreign and domestic policies. He spoke in a television interview ("Issues and Answers," ABC).
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HE ALSO ACCUSED the President of proposing "gimmicks" to sole problems instead of penetrating to their causes, and of moving to break down "the shared sovereignty between the federal government and the states."
Rockefeller was asked how he would handle the crisis in South Viet Nam. He replied:
"One thing I wouldn't do is to send a man of (Henry Cabot) Lodge's stature and ability out there (as the new ambassador) and then, while he's on his way, the President goes on television and castigates the regime of South Viet Nam, creating an atmosphere of such antagonism that by the time he (Lodge) gets there he can't do anything."
Rockefeller predicted that the "failures" of the administration would be the "dominant issues" at the 1964 Republican convention. On his own candidacy, he said:
"... I will tell you, really, next month."
Assignment:
gear up for more
“go”in low!
Result: All 3-speed manual transmissions in Ford-built cars with V-8's now are fully synchronized in each forward gear
To get more "go" in low, Ford engineers were asked to upgrade the conventional 3-speed transmission to give drivers more control in all three forward gears to make "low" a driving gear-and they tackled the problem imaginatively.
Their achievement, another Ford First, is the only U.S. 3-speed manual transmission with all three forward gears fully synchronized! No need now to come to a complete stop when you shift into low—and no clashing gears! It lets you keep more torque on tap for negotiating sharp turns and steep grades. It makes driving more flexible, more pleasurable.
Another assignment completed and another example of how engineering leadership at Ford provides fresh ideas for the American Road.
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Monday. Oct. 28, 1963
University Daily Kansan
Page 5
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Fraternities, Dormitories, other living groups: Be sure to reserve your room for the dance, now. Contact the SUA office, UN 4-3477
Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Oct. 28, 1963
Halloween, Mexican Trip Occupy International Club
Students dressed in costumes from many different countries celebrated Halloween Saturday night in the Kansas Union.
The occasion was the International Club's Halloween party entitled, "Harvest Festival." For this party, international students were encouraged to wear the traditional costumes of their home countries.
A group of KU-Y folk singers were featured at the party singing songs which included several made popular by Peter, Paul, and Mary.
Games, such as relay races and musical chairs, were included in the program. Prizes were awarded individuals who won in the games. Students also danced to popular
songs later in the evening.
Sunday afternoon about 30 persons attended a meeting concerning the proposed International Club trip to Mexico over the Christmas holidays. The trip will begin Dec. 21 and last 15 days. The group plans to visit such famous Mexican cities as Mexico City, Taxico, and Acapulco.
Details of the trip were discussed at Sunday's meeting. Milan Loupal, Czechoslovakia graduate student and an organizer of the trip said that he wished to make it clear that anyone, whether or not they are members of International Club, may go on this trip.
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Peace Corps to Show Slides of Asian Activity
Ray Woods, El Dorado senior, will show color slides of Peace Corps operations in Southeast Asia to accompany his talk on the subject at a meeting sponsored by the Peace College Student Committee, at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the Kansas Union.
"The Case for the Apartheid" will be the topic of the SUA Minority Opinions Forum at 4:30 p.m., Tuesday, in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Woods, who traveled through Southeast Asia during the summer, said he will show Peace Corps operations in the Philippines, Thailand, Indonesia, and Malaya (Malaysia). Pictures he took in Cambodia and South Vietnam will also be shown.
South African Editor to Speak At Minority Opinions Discussion
Louwrens Buurman, the speaker, is the radio and television officer of the Information Service of South Africa. He is assigned to the South African embassy in New York.
Buurman attended the Universities of Pretoria and Stellenbosch in South Africa. He is also editor of the South African Digest," a weekly
news magazine.
He was appointed to his present office during 1962.
'DO NOT DISTURB'
BOLOGNA, Italy — (UPI) — Paolo Adani, 25, who hates noise, put a bullet yesterday through the gas tank of a motorcycle that had roused him from his afternoon nap. The motorcyclist, Giovanni Paparo, 17, called police, who charged Adani with firing a rifle in a public place.
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University Daily Kansan
Page 7
UP. Vox Announce ASC Candidates
With all the Student Council representative election just over two weeks away, the two campus political parties are shifting campaigns into high gear.
Both plan to reveal their platforms this week. University Party on Wednesday night and Vox Populi the following evening.
Also tentatively planned is a debate between leaders of the two organizations in a freshman women's residence hall. The debate was planned originally for last week, but then postponed to avoid conflicts due to mid-semester examinations.
"We delayed announcement of our platform for a week because we felt it was too general," said Charles Marvin, Lawrence senior and cochairman of UP. "We then sent questionnaires to house and dorm representatives to get statements on what they felt would be good platform planks."
"Our platform will consist primarily of planks advocating student services," said Tom Bornholdt, Topeka senior and Vox president. "This follows our concept of student government as an organization designed to extend services to students."
NEITHER PARTY is revealing specifics of its platforms, but both give hints of their broad outlines.
In addition to the 46 students seeking seats on the ASC,12 freshmen are competing for the four
Free Man Likes Apple Pie, Quiet
SEPULVEDA, Calif.—(UPI)—Enjoying Mr. apple pie and "a little peace and quiet," young Robert F. Mann could reflect today on a few fruitful results of his 21 months imprisonment in East Germany:
- An increased interest in political science and current events.
- And much more capability “to appreciate, human qualities.”
- Fluency in the German language, even to the point where he had almost forgotten some English.
- And much more capability "to
But Mann, 20, released by the Communists in Berlin last Wednesday, said upon his arrival at Los Angeles International Airport yesterday, "I can't recommend prison to anyone."
THE HANDSOME Stanford University student said he had "no regrets" over his attempt to get a Belgian passport for an East German student trying to escape to the West—for which he was arrested by East German police on Jan. 22, 1962. Six months of his imprisonment came before a secret trial and the first three months after his conviction was spent in solitary confinement.
"You look just the same except for your haircut. It's longer," Mrs. Mann told him. "We got your apple pie all cooked." she added, remembering her son's request over the telephone from overseas.
His parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Mann, brothers John, 18, and Donald, 7, and sister Nancy, 13, embraced him at the airport and agreed he looked in good condition.
IN A NEWS conference following the family welcome, the student said following his six months' study at Stanford's overseas campus at Stuttgart, he went to Berlin because he "wasn't satisfied with my German" speaking ability.
Mann, dressed in the same clothes in which he was arrested, expressed surprise at the growth of the younger members of his family, "Donald, you're pretty darn big . . . Nancy, holy cow, you look very nice."
His involvement with students from the Free University in East Berlin led to his arrest and imprisonment. He said he had to face numerous interrogation sessions in prison. "They sit you in a room in a corner," he said. "If they know you know something, they keep you under pressure until you say it."
"I don't think they tried to convert me (to Communism) directly or personally." he said in response to a question. "They probably have changed my philosophy on many things, but not the way they wanted to."
As for the future, Mann said he is "planning to go back to college," but that his first desire was "to get a little peace and quiet."
freshmen offices. Deadline for filing applications for the freshmen offices was Friday.
THE ONLY CANDIDATE to withdraw thus far has been Carl Lindquist, Prairie Village junior and UP large men's residence hall candidate. Lindquist, president of Joseph R. Pearson residence hall, informed Marvin last week that other activities would prevent him from running. He was replaced by Cordell Meeks. Kansas City junior.
Mike Miner, Lawrence junior and chairman of the ASC Election Committee, said last night that only one candidate is running unaffiliated. She is Peggy Conner, Wichita junior.
Vox ASC candidates are;
Large Men's Residence Halls Jim Cline, Rockford, Ill., sophomore; Bill Brier, Overland Park junior, and John Traylor, Great Bend freshman.
Large Women's Residence Halls—Sandra Garvey, St. Louis senior; Linda Bolan, Wichita junior, and Nancy Barta, Los Angeles junior.
Fraternities—Jerry Bell, McLouth junior; Ray Edwards, Bethesda, Md., junior; Richard King, Prairie Village sophomore, and Tom Schumacher, Russell junior.
Sororities- Jackie Caesar, St. Louis sophomore; Saria Crites, Great Bend sophomore, and Susan Hartley, Atwood sophomore.
Small Men's Residence Halls—Dave Doane, Hutchison sophomore, and Leo Schrey, Leavenworth sophomore.
Small Women's Residence Halls- Mary Beth Gast, Paola sophomore.
FRESHMAN WOMEN'S Residence Halls—Nancy Sodderstrom, Wichita; Linda Tebbe, Memphis, Tenn.; Judy Bernhardt, Lawrence, and Cinda Waller.
Professional Fraternities and Coops-Conrad Wagenknecht, St. Joseph, Mo.. junior.
Unmarried and unorganized Mike Miner, Lawrence junior, and Brian Grace. Lawrence senior.
Married— Gary Walker, Wichita sophomore.
UNIVERSITY PARTY candidates are:
Large Men's Residence Halls—Fred Hoffman, Topeka senior; Cordell Meeks, Kansas City senior; Gregory Swartz, Overland Park senior; John Simmons, Hoisington freshman, and Craig Twyman, Kansas City sophomore.
Large Women's Residence Halls Kay Whitaker, Lawrence sophomore; Sharon Anderson, Topeka junior, and Nancy Lane, Hoisington senior.
Fraternities—Bob Ritter, Kirkwood, Mo., junior, and Bob Stewart, Bartlesville, Okla., junior.
SORORITIES — Jane Lefebvre,
Prairie Village junior.
Small Women's Residence Halls— Jeanette Jeffrey, Topeka sophomore.
Professional Co-Ops-Bill Panning. Ellinwood junior.
Small Men's Residence Halls—Ray Germonprez, Topeka freshman.
Freshman Women's Residence Halls — Cathy Coleman, Wichita; Terry Beach, Hays, and Jill Kleinberg, Lawrence.
Unmarried and Unorganized Chuck Marvin, Lawrence senior, and Vinay Kothari, Bombay, India. senior.
Married— Mike McDowell, Great Bend junior.
Candidates for freshman class offices are:
President—Jim Aust, Prairie Village; Jim Prager, Atchison, and Dean Peer, McPherson.
Vice President — Don Beahm,
Great Bend; Mike Breeding, Blue
-Rapids, and Don Ringer, Emporia.
Treasurer—Gary Little, Prairie Village; Cheryll Fits, Topeka, and Barbara Nance, Wichita.
Secretary—Linda Boone, Wichita; Keith Kinvon, Greensburg, and Bobbi Johnson, Raytown.
SLAM IN BRIDGE
DUNDEE, Scotland — (UPI) — Four women bridge players were hurt yesterday when the ceiling fell in on them while they were playing in the Dundee Unionist Association bridge club rooms.
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University Daily Kansan
Page 8
Monday, Oct. 28, 1963
Mitchell Frets About KU Pass Defense
By Roy Miller (Sports Editor)
Question: "Coach, what was the big factor in today's game?"
Question: "Coach, what's KU's main strength?"
Answer: "I don't know. I can't tell you. We played so poorly."
Question: "Coach, how do you think your team will do against Iowa State next week?"
Answer: "What do you think?"
With that, Coach Phil Cutchin of the Oklahoma State football team tightened his grip on his attache case and boarded a bus waiting next to Memorial Stadium.
Whether the new Big Eight coach was more irritated by his team's 41-7 loss to KU here Saturday or the habit-ridden, unanswerable questions of a reporter is not known.
At any rate, part of his stern-faced, tight-mouthed composure must be attributed to his team's fifth consecutive loss of the season and by the biggest margin.
FOR THE JAYHAWKS, it was their first Big Eight victory of the season.
| | W | L | P | OP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Missouri | 3 | 0 | 56 | 17 |
| Nebraska | 3 | 0 | 90 | 19 |
| Oklahoma | 2 | 0 | 55 | 27 |
| Iowa State | 2 | 2 | 43 | 49 |
| Colorado | 2 | 2 | 59 | 67 |
| **Kansas** | 1 | 2 | 73 | 45 |
| Oklahoma State | 0 | 3 | 13 | 94 |
| Kansas State | 0 | 4 | 33 | 104 |
Saturday Schedule
Kansas State at Kansas
Colorado at Oklahoma
Nebraska at Missouri
Oklahoma State at Iowa State
But, despite the unmistaken noise of a victory celebration in the KU dressing room, not everything was happy.
For one thing, Gale Sayers, KU's all-America candidate, was sitting on a raining table with pressure and an ice pack applied to his thigh.
SAYERS LIMPED off the field in the first quarter and was sent immediately to the training room. He returned to the game in the fourth quarter. On his first two carries then he picked up gains of eight and 14 vards.
Dean Nesmith, KU trainer, said he wouldn't know until today how serious Sayers' injury was. The injury was a charley-horse of the left thigh.
The same type of injury was suffered against Oklahoma by Tony Leiker. Leiker was able to play in the game after he suffered a charleyhorse, but the starting slot-back couldn't run well in practice all last week and was used only for one putting assignment against the Cowboys.
COACH JACK Mitchell took five reporters off into a secluded laundry room in the dressing room and began thinking about KU's game here Saturday with Kansas State.
"I dread to think of Kansas State," Mitchell said. "They're definitely capable of beating us the way their passing is. There's no way in the world we can beat a good passing team the way our pass defense is."
His Platter on a Head
MIKE MILLER, the Cowboys' quarterback, completed 7 of 21 passing attempts for 93 yards. But, as
"I just wonder if we'll be able to get the ball next week."
"They (K-State) probably have a better chance to beat us than any other team in the conference because of our pass defense. I don't think we are as good on defense as they are in passing.
LONDON—(UPI)—Waiters at the Pigalle, a London night club, threatened to strike today because singer Jill Day crowned a waiter with a silver platter full of peas.
"That damn waiter got on my nerves," Miss Day said of the Saturday night incident. "All through my act he was stacking dishes on a tray and sorting out knives and forks. I grabbed the first thing I could lay my hands on and sloshed him over the head with it."
KU Runners Win Again
In 17 years as KU's cross country coach, Bill Easton's teams have a 67-3 won-lost record for dual meet competition.
The 1963 Jayhawker cross country team ended its dual season Friday at Norman by defeating Oklahoma, 17-46. It was KU's 21st consecutive victory in over-all action and its 40th straight conference victory.
The Jayhawks won seven of the first eight places with the entire KU
squad finishing within a 31-second span.
Paul Acevedo placed first. He covered the three-mile course in 14:52 and finished about 69 yards ahead of his nearest rival, teammate John Lawson, whose time was 15:01.
Finishing behind Acevedo and Lawson were Chick Fero, Walt Mizell of Oklahoma, Ken Holm, Tonnie Coan, Herald Hadley and George Cabrera.
Cutchin pointed out, Cowboy receivers weren't catching the ball too well at all.
Time after time a pass would be thrown from Miller into the hands of a potential Cowboy receiver in open field. But, the receiver couldn't hold onto the ball.
"Gosh, I don't know," Mitchell said after the game. "We still have our problems on defense. I don't exactly know what they are, but we've got them."
defense not only involves knocking the ball down, but we aren't getting a good enough rush on the passer and we aren't adjusting properly."
"The weakness we've had in pass
FOUR PASSES, one a 28-yard play, set up Oklahoma State's only touchdown. Miller scored on a 2-yard keeper.
Sayers scored for KU on 23- and 5-yard sweeps. Ron Oelschlagger got his first touchdown of the season on a 14-yard sweep as did Sid Micek who scored from the 7 on a rollout.
1-yard plunge and Ken Coleman ran the ball in from the 11.
Armand Baughman scored on a
Gary Duff kicked two extra points, Mike Johnson kicked another and Dave Crandall picked up a twopoint extra point play on a run.
In other Big Eight games.
Oklahoma 34, K-State 9; Nebraska 41, Colorado 6, and Missouri 7, Iowa State 0.
TCU, KU's opening game opponent was idle; Syracuse beat Oregon State, 31-8, and Wyoming defeated Utah, 26-23.
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SUA Minority Opinions Forum Presents:
Hendrik Louwrens Buurman
Radio and Television Officer of the Information Service of South Africa. Editor of South African Digest, a weekly newsmagazine.
Who Will Speak On:
The Case For Apartheid
In the Forum Room of the Kansas Union 4:30 p.m., Tuesday, October 29th
Monday, Oct. 28, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 9
ASC Considers Record Budget Tuesday Night
By Fred Frailev
A record $8,300 budget will be considered by the All Student Council tomorrow night in a special meeting.
The Budget Committee of the ASC released recommendations this week-end, granting funds to nine of the twelve organizations that applied.
A special appropriation of $1,150 from the University boosted ASC receipts to $8,300. The council's normal appropriations come from a percentage of student activity fee receipts, which this year amounted to $7,150. The extra allotment was requested because of the large amount of funds applied for by campus organizations.
EVEN WITH the added $1,150, all but two organization's requests were cut, and three groups were struck from the Budget Committee's recommendations.
The largest request to be turned down was a $450 application from the Association of University Residence Halls. The AUR requested the money for the purchase of a music system, and records, and for advertising, bands and publicity to be used for the "Whatchamacallit" dances it sponsors.
Charles Portwood, Shawnee Mission senior and ASC treasurer, said last night that although the council is authorized to grant funds to the AURH, the Budget Committee felt that financing of "Whatchamacallits" should be left to those who attend the dances.
"FRATERNITIES are also social organizations, and if we were to grant this request, we would set a precedent that would lead to fraternities asking for money also." Portwood said. "Greek social organizations do not ask the ASC to finance their functions."
Also left out of Budget Committee recommendations were the KU delegation to the National Conference on Race and Religion, which asked $325, and the junior class, which requested $50.
None of the groups turned down were granted ASC funds last year.
Portwood said the race and religion conference is "completely divorced from any type of student government," and that the request from the junior class was for coverage of general expenses.
"The normal procedure on class debts is to hold them on the books until the senior year, when they are paid by senior dues," he said.
OF THE TOTAL budget, $2,000 was granted by the University as a special appropriation to People-to-People. Expenses of the ASC as outlined by the Budget Committee will reach $3,583, including $1,200 to conduct elections, leaving $2,717 for disbursement among other organizations.
The groups besides P-t-P submitting applications asked a total of $5,524, or twice the amount available.
Only the Current Events Committee, asking $1,000, and the Business School Council, asking $198, were granted their total requests by the committee.
Other recommendations include:
Engineering School Council, $400 of a $753.08 request. Alpha Phi Omega,
service fraternity, $180 of a $248.61 request. Mortar Board, $180 of a
$212.25 request. Radio Production
Center, $400 of a $979.38 request.
American Pharmaceutical Association,
$200 of a $570 request. Student
Bar Association, $159 of a $725 request.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m., St. Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road.
Graduate Student Discussion, 7 p.m.
St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center,
Fort Wayne Road. The Lutheran
Church of David G. Johnson, Asst. Prof.
of Religion.
KU Dames, 7:30 p.m. Watkins Room,
Kimberly, All student wives welcome.
Skipper, All student wives welcome.
Episcopal Eventing Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
TOMORROW
Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m. 5 p.m. St.
Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Strat-
ford
inquiry Forum, 7 p.m. St. Lawrence
College Student Center, 1915 Stratford
Broad.
Western Cliv. Discussion, 9 p.m. St.
Louis College Student Center, 1915
Stratford Road.
Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
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University Daily Kansan
Monday, Oct. 28, 1963
4 6
Catholic Liberals Want Less Talk, More Action
VATICAN CITY — (UPI) — The Ecumenical Council is suffering from a bad case of too much talk and not enough action.
Many council fathers are growing restless. They are hoping for some kind of dramatic break during the coming weeks—perhaps a personal intervention by Pope Paul VI—to get things moving and insure that this council session will have some concrete accomplishments to its credit.
More than 2,000 Roman Catholic bishops from all parts of the world met here Sept. 29 for the second session of the first Ecumenical Council in nearly a century. There were high expectations that this time the proceedings would move swiftly and efficiently, instead of bogging down in interminable talk as they tended to do at the first session in the fall of 1962.
THESE EXPECTATIONS have gradually given way to disappointment. As of today, the council fathers have spent four weeks debating a single "schema," or theological document, on the nature of the church. They still have at least one, perhaps two, chapters of the document to discuss, and there is no word as to when, how or whether they will have a chance to vote on the key proposals embodied in the document.
It is true that the fathers have done a great deal of voting. Scarcely a day goes by without balloting on a batch of propositions. But this voting has been solely concerned with details of the liturgical reform project which the fathers debated at length and approved in principle at the first session last year.
The schema on the church—entitled in Latin "De Ecclesia"—is the priority business of this session, as Pope Paul pointed out in his opening address to the fathers. And many fathers feel frustrated in not having had a chance to vote on any of its detailed contents so far.
THE DOCUMENT contains at least three highly significant sections, which are endorsed by librals and opposed by conservatives.
The most important in its impact on the church, establishes a principle which council theologians love to call "the collegiality of bishops". This bit of ecclesiastical jargon simply means that all the bishops of the church are successors to the original 12 apostles, and therefore have
God-given right and duty to function as a body (or "college") which shares with the Pope the responsibility for the teaching and government of the entire church.
Conservatives fear council approval of this principle may undermine the Pope's primacy and open the door to heaven-knows-whatkind of future theological developments. Liberals see it as the necessary theological basis for breaking the Roman Curia's iron grip on the effective reins of power in the Catholic Church, and clearing the way to a much-needed decentralization of authority.
JUDGING from his public comments on the matter, both at the council's first session when he was Cardinal Montini and at the opening of the second session, Pope Paul is unequivocally on the Liberals' side. He has, in effect, invited the bishops to assert their right to be his partners in the heavy task of administering a global church.
The other significant sections of "De Ecclesia" would:
- Restore the ancient new testament clerical order of deacons, as a rank of ordained clergy below priests, and would permit them to be married men instead of celibates.
- Affirm the idea, long cherished by Protestants but a distinctly new note in modern Catholic theology, that laymen also have a "priesthood" or ministry, and share by right rather than sufferance in the mission of the church.
During four weeks of debate, council fathers have proposed hundreds of amendments, revisions and deletions to the text of "De Ecclesia." Some would water it down, others make it still more liberal in tone.
ALL THESE PROPOSALS now reside in the council's theological commission, which must decide which of them will be brought up for a vote, and how, and when.
It is a massive understatement to say that many council liberals view the theological commission with a measure of suspicion. Its chairman is none other than Alfredo Cardinal Ottaviani, head of the Curia's holy office, and leader of the conservative bloc.
One of the suspicions entertained about Ottaviani's commission, and widely voiced in council corridors,
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is that its conservative members, knowing they are sure to be overwhelmingly outvoted on any issue that comes to the floor, are quite content just to sit on the proposed revisions of "De Ecclesia," thus making it impossible under the rules to bring the document itself to a council vote.
Day or Night
**THIS MAY be unfair.** Some liberals close to the commission insist that it is doing its best with the revisions, but is swamped with work.
Be that as it may, the fact is that no one has given the fathers the least indication when, if ever at this session, they may get a chance to vote yea or nav on the major issues involved in "De Ecclesia," such as
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An effort was made to bring about such a vote, but it has suffered a mysterious fate.
On Oct. 15, one of the council's moderators, the liberal Belgian Cardinal Leo Joseph Suenens, announced that votes would be taken on Oct. 18 on key issues related to "De Ecclesia."
BUT NO such votes have taken place, and the fathers have never
been given an official reason why not.
The unofficial explanation passed through the council grapevine is that Ottaviani's conservatives blocked the vote by asserting that it was not provided for in the council's regular rules of procedure.
This dispute has been threshed out during the past week at a series of top-level secret meetings attended by liberal and conservative cardinals. Pope Paul sat in on at least one of these meetings.
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ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLEANERS New Electrolux and a limited number of rebuilt, fully guaranteed. All parts available. Equipment picked up for service and delivered. Frank V. Cox, Local Manager-1904 Barker. Call VI 3-327-72
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Two, large room modern basement apartments. For one of two young men. Out-room. Bills paid. No drinking. smoking. See first house south of campus, 1616 Ind. 10-30
Vacancies for young men in contemporary home. Swimming pool, private entrance and bath. $45 monthly. Home cooked meals if desired. 3-96335. 11-20
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HELP WANTED—Linotype operator, 9 to 3 daily. Must be experienced on newspaper slightmatter. University of Kan- press, 117 Flint Hall. Phone UN 12828.
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University Daily Kansan
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Typing: Dissertations theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines; 35 special symbols. Instructor's course. Customer service. Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI-1546 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI-3057. **tf**
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Monday, Oct. 28, 1963
Astronauts To Have More Flight Control
CAPE CANAVERAL —(UPI)—On future U.S. manned flights into space, astronauts are going to have more control over their own destinies.
This intent has placed another heavy burden on the shoulders of engineers. Theirs is the task of now determining where human capabilities leave off and superhuman demands begin.
And still paramount is the utmost demand for safety that characterized the Mercury man-in-space program and the "follow-on" projects Gemini and man-to-the-moon Apollo. Strik ing a happy medium between the roles of men and machines on space flights is not proving easy.
U. S. ASTRONAUT Frank Borman, considered one of the best bets for an early flight aboard the two-man Gemini spaceships, offers a general rule-of-thumb for deciding what man can do and what he cannot be permitted to attend to on hazardous space journeys.
"... The pilot will have to be able to prove that he offers some unique capability that will help to insure mission success."
In other words, the astronaut is not to be given a task simply in order that he will have something to do. He first has to prove that, in some way, he offers an advantage over the machine.
Project Mercury, which sent six astronauts into space on missions of varying lengths, was an acid test. "As a result of the Mercury experience," said Borman, "the pilot in both the Gemini and Apollo missions will have a demanding role."
Borman cited a vivid example—the decision to let astronauts monitor the blast-off and powered flight and, if necessary, select a means of "aborting" a Gemini shot in an emergency. In project Mercury, most of this delicate task was handled from the ground.
GIVING THE astronauts more say-so in the matter, said Borman, was based on one simple fact: "The
pilot provided the most reliable, lightest method of selecting and initiating the proper one of Gemini's three different abort modes (methods)."
On the other hand, there have been suggestions that human pilots pre-empt automatic guidance systems and actually fly the entire rocket and space capsule into orbit. The idea was nixed, at least for Gemini.
Again, there was a simple engineering answer, Borman said. "In the Gemini, it was considered simpler and more reliable to mechanize autopilot guidance for the restrictive, down the groove, type guidance problem encountered."
The young astronaut cited the Apollo manned lunar landing mission as an example of a still more complex relationship between man and machine, especially in the area of "aborting" the flight in case something goes wrong.
"In examining the Apollo abort problems," Borman said, "we found that there were certain malfunctions which required superhuman reaction times to permit safe abort. The reaction times actually vary with the time of flight."
THE ANSWER in this case was to leave the decision to the pilot's own judgment—whether to trust his own reactions to the tricky task, or to turn them over to an automatic system. Equipment is being built into the Apollo space capsule for both contingencies.
Borman, for one, has no objection to leaving the blast-off and re-entry jobs in the hands of computers, guidance systems and other machines. The pilots will have plenty of time to prove their own unique value and importance along the rest of the space trip.
"Too often," he said, "undue emphasis is placed on the pilot's role during boost and re-entry. These phases of flight are transition phases for a true spacecraft.
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The Supreme Court rejected today an appeal of the Mobile County (Ala.) school board from an order requiring a start on public school desegregation this fall.
Court Rejects Appeal To Block Integration
Earlier the board asked Justice Hugo L. Black to block the order pending appeal, on the ground that it would seriously disrupt the education of the county's 75,000 school children.
Black refused to do so on Aug. 16. He said the board has known for nine years that it was running its school system in an unconstitutional manner but has done nothing about it.
The Mobile decision was the first directed towards Alabama public schools below college level since the Supreme Court's famous school desegregation ruling of 1954.
Earlier Federal District Judge Daniel H. Thomas of Mobile had ruled that the county schools could delay their integration plan until the 1964-65 school year.
Reversing Thomas, the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals first ordered a step-ladder plan this year starting with the first grade. Later it revised its order to base it on the state pupil placement law because another panel of the same court had issued such an order for Birmingham.
Two Negro students have now been admitted to high school classes in Mobile.
U.S. Wheat Sales To Remain Static
WASHINGTON —(UPI)—A government official cautioned businessmen today against expecting a large expansion of American markets in Russia because of the pending Soviet-U.S. wheat deal.
Eugene Braderman, chief of the Commerce Department's foreign trade bureau, said the Soviet demand for wheat was a special situation due to a poor harvest. Russia, he said, is normally a wheat exporter, and will try to resume this position.
KU Journalism Pioneer Named to Hall of Fame
The late Leon Nelson Flint, former head of the KU journalism department for 25 years, was named to the Kansas Newspaper Hall of Fame Saturday at Kansas Editors' Day here.
Flint was the 47th journalist selected for the Hall of Fame. He taught journalism here from 1906 until his retirement in 1947 and was department head from 1916 to 1941. Prof. Flint established a national reputation as an author of journalism textbooks and as a pioneer in journalism education.
FLINT HALL, the building housing the William Allen White School of Journalism and the University of Kansas Press was named in his honor in 1955.
Approximately 150 Kansas journalists attended the Editors' Day program which was highlighted by a review of a summer in Africa by Burton W. Marvin, dean of the School of Journalism, and John McCormally, editor of the Hutchinson News.
The roll of high schools in encouraging student interest in journalism as a career was discussed by other working newsmen, educators and editors.
Dean Marvin, McCormally and two other American newsmen conducted two-week seminars this summer at Addis Ababa, Ethiopia; Dares Salaam, Tanganyika, and Lagos, Nigeria.
"THE AFRICAN journalist's worst fault is his almost complete preoccupation with politics," McCormally said. "This is understandable, however—Kansas newspapers in the 1870's were the same."
The speaker said the American newsmen attempted to convince their African counterparts to publish other news in addition to politics.
Concerning American journalism, John DeMott, professor of journalism, appealed to editors to show an interest in high school journalists in their towns.
Mel Adams, professor of journal- interest in high school journalists in teachers for failing to construct the right image of newspaper work, adding that they regard their jobs of teaching journalism as "only a sideline."
ADAMS recommended that editors provide summer jobs for promising high school journalism students as an encouragement.
Lee Porter, city editor of the Topeka State Journal, said members of his staff visit Topeka high schools each year to discuss newspaper work with students.
BOBBY THOMSON, WHOSE dramatic home run won the 1951 National League playoff for the New York Giants, was born in Scotland and raised in Staten Island, N.Y.
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WANTED: Watermelon Seed Specialists To Beat Our Record
ENTER NOW!! Contest Starts Tonight
★ Fraternities ★ Sororities ★ Organized Groups Come out Tonight and Cheer for your Entries.
★
Free Watermelon To all Spectators and Fans
Top-Seeded Shooter Stuns Allen's Crowd
LAWRENCE, Kans. Oct. 27—(Speech)—Wind gods of up to nine miles an hour and a possible record that marked the International Wintershow Seed Splitting Feeliminations were Thursday.
The preliminaries were held at Allen's Drive-In Red Restaurant, 1104 W. Ford St., shortly before 10 o'clock. As a record crowd of ten persons watched breathlessly, James Payne, M. Troyko wrote, not an apparent world's record of 30 feet 2 inches.
RULES
Fun Awards
1. A student in good standing of any high school, college or university in the United States of America.
2. There may be up to three representatives from any recognized home—room, dormitory, sorority, fraternity, club, etc.
3. Official competition must be held on the parking area of a drive-in restaurant.
4. All students must not exceed 10 miles per hour.
5. Official competition hours and dates must be approved by the manager of the drive-in restaurant.
6. Distance will be measured from point of rest to the center of spitting line. Court width is 15 feet.
7. Contestants feet must remain behind the spitting line until seed comes to rest.
8. Eaten contestant will be allowed three seeds. These may be split one at a time or all at once.
9. Sweatless contestant rest in seeds and not have come in contact with any object or person from delivery until it is officially measured.
10. Carnals for the record must be signed by the contestant, the drive-in manager or owner and the official.
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THE FIXED STORAGE SYSTEM IS COMING UP.
—Photos by Bill Gamm
DECORATION FRAMEWORK-Al Bendure, Kansas City, Mo., junior; Carl Lindquist, Prairie Village junior, and Eric Petersen, Poughkeepsie, N.Y., senior, work on the homecoming decoration at Joseph R. Pearson Hall.
The image shows a person bending forward while grabbing something with their hands. The background is indistinct, but it appears to be an indoor setting.
PAINT BREAK—Lenora Ho, Honolulu, Hawaii, junior, and Becky Loffin, Wichita sophomore, work on a homecoming decoration in the basement of Lewis Hall.
STEPHEN MAYER
PLAYER STUDIES—George Hornung. Spearville sophomore and an alternate guard on the KU football team, isn't the least concerned about all the homecoming fervor. He contentedly studies at his desk.
Homecoming Decorations Falter
By Linda Ellis
Higher education is a fine thing—in its place.
That seems to be the consensus of a majority of homecoming decorations chairmen.
for the houses and halls being "far above the golden valley."
The theme for homecoming decorations this year is a translation of the motto of Kansas ("To the stars through difficulty") with the guiding principle
Many living groups, fraternities and sororites are giving up homecoming decorations this year because of the theme.
creative decorations, they say.
THE GROUPS planning to decorate are hesitant and lack enthusiasm, according to the chairmen in the houses. The theme does not lend itself to
Gamma Phi Beta will not have decorations this year because of lack of interest. Their decision not to decorate hinged on the fact that the theme did not lend itself to many good ideas, according to the house homecoming chairman.
Daily hansan
(Continued on page 12)
61st Year. No.33
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Tuesday, Oct. 29, 1963
Representatives Attack ASC Budget Decisions
"They are designed as an event which anyone can attend," Swarz said. "The AUHR has been the only organization to take active steps to offer an alternative to barn parties."
Nancy Lane, Hoiisington senior and large women's residence hall representative, said the ASC should consider the proportion of the student body which an organization serves when the council debates its budget.
SHE ADVOCATED appropriations to the AURH and the delegation to
By Fred Frailey
Independent representatives on the All Student Council were expected to ask tonight that the Association of University Residence Halls be granted at least part of its budget request.
Gregory Swartz, Overland Park senior and large men's residence hall representative, said the "Whatcha-macallits" financed by the AUHR are not restricted to members of residence halls.
All three residence hall representatives contacted last night criticized the rejection by the ASC's Finance and Auditing Committee of the AURH application for $450 to finance "Whatchmacaillt" dances.
At the same time, however, other ASC members upheld the committee's decision.
THE ASC WILL vote on its record budget of $8,300 in a special meeting at 7 p.m. in the Kansas Union.
the National Conference on Race and Religion—both of which were omitted from the Finance and Auditing Committee's recommendations—and to the Radio Production Center.
that they need the entire $450
though."
"The 'Whatchamacallits' are open to all students, not just to independents," Miss Lane said. "The AURH cannot charge admission to help pay expenses. I don't know
She said KU was the only Kansas school invited to send delegates to the Washington, D.C., race and religion conference.
"The conference is sponsored by all religious faiths and is, of course, inter-racial," she said. I am anxious
(Continued on Page 32)
First Homecoming Queen Returns for 1963 Event
It was the year that Alf M. Landon was governor of Kansas; E. H. Lindley was chancellor of KU, and Glenn Cunningham, then a KU student, was a member of the U.S. Olympic track team.
Mrs. Gentry, of Winfield, will be a guest of honor at the annual homecoming luncheon Saturday.
It was the year that Lucy Trees, representing Chi Omega sorority, was chosen KU's first homecoming queen. It was 1933.
The former Miss Trees, now Mrs. Richard A. Gentry, will return to the 1963 homecoming celebration as the representative of the "Queens of the Past."
She will be presented with a bouquet at the crowding of this year's queen at the KU-K-State football game half-time ceremony.
KU's first homecoming queen is active in business as executive vice-president of the Trees Oil Co. in Winfield.
She has three children: Mrs. Robert L. Bishop of Winfield; Gilbert, a former KU student now a senior at Southwestern College, and Darrrell, a sophomore at Winfield High School.
Her husband is president of the Gott Manufacturing Co. He is a graduate of Washburn University.
Russian Space Aims Questioned
By Clare Casey
Premier Khrushchev's recent announcement of Russia's withdrawal from the moon race was met by skepticism by several members of the KU faculty.
One of the skeptics, Ethan Allen, chairman of the department of political science, questioned whether the Soviets have an intention of halting work on a lunar venture.
"I do not feel that it will make any difference at all," Prof. Allen said. "Their program will probably not change in any way."
OTHER faculty members felt that it is too early to tell if Khrushchev's announcement had any validity behind it. Most suggested a wait-and-see attitude.
Several of the persons interviewed suggested Russia's current economic problems might have an effect on the Soviet Union's space program.
"We must consider the economic problems that are now taking place in Russia," Donald McCoy, associate professor of history, said. "The agriculture problem which they now face could very well mean that they will have to tighten up their economy in other areas."
This question of cutting of military expenditure was recently put to Khrushchev, who replied that it had no validity.
"ACTUALLY, who knows what Khrushchev is saying or thinking?" Prof. Allen said. "There may be such a cut, but we do not know for sure, and at the same time we cannot believe what Khrushchev says."
Most of the faculty members interviewed believed there would be a re-evaluation of the U.S. space program as a result of the Russian announcement.
"I do not see any immediate change in our program." Prof. McCoy said. "However, I do believe that Washington will begin a new examination of the present situation."
Prof. McCoy felt the space agency would begin talks in the immediate future, and that members of Congress will be insisting on a new look into the matter.
PROF. McCOY believes the announcement may cause the United States to even think of dropping out of the race.
"I think that this thought may be considered," Prof. McCoy said. "There is always this possibility. But, as things now stand, there are no leaders in this field, perhaps with the exception of Dr. Pauling who has always been opposed to the race."
Weather
When Lt. Col. Gerald E. Hallas,
professor of air science, was confronted with the question of a possible reduction in the U.S. space effort, he said:
The low tonight is expected to be 40 to 45. the Weather Bureau reported today. Skies in the Lawrence area are expected to be partly cloudy and the temperatures warmer today through Wednesday.
"I also imagine that there will be a lot of talk along these lines, but it must be remembered that you cannot just turn off a project of this nature. Right now, the project is going along very well, and we have a lot of money invested in it."
ONE OPINION that was first expressed by Prof. McCoy and accepted by the others, was the United States might enter into an international agreement in reaching the moon.
"This type of international body would help to alleviate the cost of the United States in such a venture," Prof. McCoy said. "The United States would probably remain the leader, but, at the same time, this type of international body might induce the Soviets to rejoin the race."
"I have never been an advocate of the moon race in the first place," Ambrose Saricks, professor of history said. "But, I do feel that this will probably be the only way that anyone will ever be able to get there. An international body is definitely the answer."
Prof. Saricks also said the recent Russian announcement,coupled with the test ban treaty,will go toward easing tensions on both sides of the Iron Curtain.
"We now have the opportunity for cooperation among countries," Prof. Saricks said. "I think this will help in providing better working areas."
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday. Oct. 29, 1963
New Blood
October marked the beginning of the end of an era in the Western World.
Konrad Adenauer, 87, stepped down from his post as West German chancellor.
And from a hospital bed in England, Conservative Harold Macmillan announced his resignation as British prime minister to a nation still stunned by the Profumo incident.
FORMER U.S. PRESIDENT Dwight D. Eisenhower celebrated his 73rd birthday, and winked at rumors that he is considering running for vice-president in 1964. And a man the same age, French President Charles de Gaulle, toured Europe trying to stabilize his fluctuating popularity in time for the 1965 elections.
De Gaulle insists he'll continue as president as long as he has the strength. But soon even De Gaulle must admit that the tide of public opinion is changing.
Throughout the Western World, statesmen who weathered the rise and fall of the swastika in Europe are fading into the pages of history.
Adenauer re-built the West Germany economy and restored the German image of democracy to its rightful place among the governments of the world.
Macmillan's tireless efforts for an enduring peace saw the signing of the nuclear test ban treaty before he left office.
Eisenhower, the war general, known as the man of peace, sent economic and military aid to a faltering Europe.
De Gaulle steadied the continually collapsing French government and intensified French nationalism and leadership in the European community.
BUT NOW THE MEN of peace are passing from the world scene. They are being replaced by youthful statesmen, determined and dynamic, leaders who are pledged to peace and dedicated to prosperity.
Election of Kennedy and his progressive New Frontier may have been a hint of the trend in Western World politics.
The emphasis is on moving ahead.
This is the idea of Harold Wilson, 47-year-old British Labor Party leader most often mentioned as a safe bet in approaching elections.
STRESSING A PROGRAM of scientific socialism. Wilson hopes to move Britain ahead 25 years in the next five—industrially, educationally, socially. Whether he can, or whether scientific socialism is the best way to do it, are moot points. That is his program.
Cigar-puffing Ludwig Erhard, new West German chancellor, is an economics professor ready to inject more economic prosperity into an already thriving West German economy.
Called the "fat one" at 66, the jovial chancellor radiates hopes for co-operation throughout the Western World and liberal philosophies of progressive economic planning patterned after American capitalism.
The tone of the new era is progress, prosperity, peace and closer unity among the nations of the world.
It is difficult to imagine how a status quo, or sometimes belligerent, Goldwater or an aging De Gaulle could change tune enough to blend into the harmony of the new era of Western World leadership.
—Rose Ellen Osborne
Editor:
Who's Naive?
It has just been brought to my attention that a recent article in the Daily Kansan reported Prof. Grant Goodman of the KU Department of History as stating that he thought critics of the Ngo Dinh Diem regime in South Vietnam were "politically naive self-styled liberals, . . . who are the victims of oversimplified propaganda slogans."
It should be pointed out to Prof. Goodman, that he stands alone in regarding President Kennedy as politically naive. Since most of the distinguished Americans who fall within the scope of Prof. Goodman's immoderate and sweeping generalization will ignore him, as he deserves to be, we might let the matter end there. If Prof. Goodman, however, seriously wishes to defend these and certain other similarly ludicrous contentions made in his talk to the KU-Y Current Events Forum, I should be glad to help him demonstrate just who is naive about the events in Vietnam.
Instructor of Political Science
Klaus H. Pringsheim
Skin-deep Liberalism Editor
For the past six weeks I have been attending KU and I have been favorably impressed with most facets of student life here. The all-University parties and functions compare with those found in the New England area (of which I am a native), the Lecture Series is excellent, and the Sexual Morality debate of a few weeks ago represented a topic rarely discussed anywhere, much less a university campus. Apparently, the opinion one would formulate of KU is one of liberalness.
This laissez-faire attitude of liberalness, however, is not even skin deep. In the progressive colleges and universities of the Eastern area, the student is allowed to exercise his judgement concerning the matters of consumption of alcohol and entertaining female guests in his room. The usual procedure for allowing women in male residence rooms (and males in female residence rooms) is to sign the guest at the main desk and have the guest checked out at 10:30 p.m. on weekdays and 1:00 a.m. on weekends.
The People Say..
This system is not as far-fetched as it sounds, as all the people involved in this method of socializing realize that the success and continuation of the program is directly correlated to the savoir-faire ot the individuals. The question of alcoholic beverages is left up to the student, most mature students realize that drunkenness does not coincide with respectable grades, and therefore few people drink other than for social purposes. I would propose a plan such as this for consideration at KU; I realize that this plan could possibly (?] raise the furor of the WCTU and Dean Taylor, but, after all, it has worked for other universities, and I fail to see why it would not work here. If KU prides herself on liberalness, why not practice it amongst her students.
Harry N. Krause 216 Templin Hall
Editor:
Mr. Banks in his article (Kansan, Oct. 24) rightly deplores the past and present plight of Negroes in the U.S. He states that, "America owes Negroes a great debt." This is an untenable position. As we accrue no virtue from the lives of great leaders such as Washington and Lincoln, so also do we amass no debt from the misdeeds of our fathers. What could possibly repay a man for his oppression at the hands of another man? Nothing. An act once committed cannot be canceled. All that we can or need be concerned with are present wrongs for which we are to blame.
A key concept here can be noticed in this question: who are we? On one hand, Mr. Banks desires a degree of social equality yet unachieved, on the other he says, "We ask for the payment of overdue debt." As long as the problem of social equality is thought of in terms of "us and them" rather than "you and I," no solution is in sight. Everyone's freedom is diminished when
Dailij Hansan
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one man is denied his rights and we agree that real brotherhood cannot exist in a fraternity or elsewhere in an atmosphere of racial or religious exclusiveness. Real brotherhood requires great effort, and we note that man will generally settle for a lot less. A man whose vision extends past his front door is the exception, not the rule, and no sort of legislation will change this. It is obvious too that forced acceptance produces nothing but ill will. Making a fraternity accept a Negro when it is set against it would be a Pyrrhic victory at best. What the barest sort of common decency requires—this can be put into law, and no more. We have all seen how the problem is only accentuated by laws, not solved. I think, Mr. Banks, seeing the accelerating "legalized equality" of the Negro, disregards the fact that there is a large area into which law cannot go. I use the fraternity example, as it was cited by Mr. Banks, but there are others. Law by its very nature of forcing compliance cannot create respect or acceptance. The laws are just and have been long in coming, but they are coming. Now opens the larger problem of real social acceptance.
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Mike Miller Managing Editor
Miller Managing Editor
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Blaine King Editorial Editor
When we see that respect and acceptance proceed from an individual's freedom, not from his necessity, we are no longer in the legal realm, but have uncovered the knottiest problem of all, that of the social equality Mr. Banks wants. When a person is free, he chooses to regard another as subject, not as object; he sees that the similarities between himself and others are of much more fundamental importance than the differences. Now skin color is a very obvious difference, a difference for the slavery of suspicion and fear to grasp. Does law abate suspicion and fear? Will rules change "us and them" to "you and I"? There is the possibility that love can cast out fear and suspicion, but alas, groups cannot love groups; only one individual can love another. But what can be freely given can never be extorted.
So we wish that men were wise and good, but they often are not. The only person a man can even have a chance of making wise and good is himself. As for rights, no man has a moral right, either to take or to get. So we look within, to our own hearts, to solve the moral problem, and not to the law.
Michael L. Clark Deerfield, Illinois
REDS!
LIARS!
PINKS!
LITTLE SOLDIERS OF FORTUNE
Clap your hands for
More Wheat
HIGH OCTANE
BARBEQUE
SAUCE
©1963 HERRLOCK
THE MAJOR EDITOR
"And So's My Old Man!"
Down With Conformity But It Isn't Social
The present-day college woman is getting a head start in one of the biggest races of American life — that unending race to keep up with the Joneses.
With this pursuit of the attainable, she is sacrificing a privilege which is most readily available at this time in her life - her individuality.
THE FIRST LURE to the college woman's individuality comes in the way of an AWS brochure describing just what the modern college woman should wear, what she should say, how she should eat, and all kinds of indispensible information.
And skirts. Can the woman with a well-proportioned figure be content to wear well fitting clothes? How absurd!
These suggestions are outlined in broad terms, however, and can be helpful in orienting freshman women to the social patterns of a university.
However, the freshman soon discovers that to be a member of the "in group," she must wear faded, dirty cutoffs that might have fit her perfectly at age 10. To add extra status, the seat of the jeans will have the Greek letters of one of the top 10 fraternities permanently inscribed with the whitewash.
THE FRESHMAN SOON discovers that the status symbols of college take very unusual forms. For example, blue jeans. Now, for the outside observer, who would take into consideration the patrician background of most college students, the ideal pair of blue jeans would be clean, unfaded, and neatly cuffed.
The danger comes when she arrives at the University and makes contact with a very luring pitfall - Miss Conformity Jones.
The costume regulations of Miss Jones are unlike those of the Dean of Women. They are inflexible. They are centered around keeping pace with the ever-present, but unattainable status symbol.
Hairdos are another point where the college woman must keep an ever-watchful eye on Miss Jones and figure on being joined by thousands of other coeds in the search.
Gone are the days of the smooth, feminine hairdo. A few years ago, the girls rushed to the beauty (or barber) shop to see who could get the most boyish, ducktail haircut. After discovering that their efforts toward masculinity were futile, they let their tresses grow till a rear view looked like a horse swishing flies.
THE SKIRT COMES in two extremes. It must either be three sizes too small and fit like the girl was sewn into it, or it must be three sizes too large and fit like she could raise a family inside it
offic wat
R K
A NEW SYMBOL reared its bouffant head, however. Quick, to the beauty shop to be shorn of the pony tail and see just how high the hair can be backcombed. It was the day of the exploded head.
When 95 per cent of the campus women resembled mushrooms, Miss Jones lead the status seekers on another binge. The comb was in the "out group" and the casual look was in.
The tragic thing about this search for the status-laden Miss Jones is not the physical appearance of the girl. Most of the fads are rather becoming — on the right kind of girl. Of course the archaic (last month's) style was also becoming on the right kind of girl.
Perhaps the epitome of the status search is the beatnik look.
Besides, everybody is dressing that way.
Mike Miller
Tuesday, Oct. 29, 1963
University Daily Kansan
Page 3
Campus Politicos See JFK-Goldwater Race
Bv Rick Mabbutt
President John Kennedy and Sen. Barry Goldwater will meet in the 1964 presidential election, two campus political leaders agreed in separate interviews last night.
Talks with Kansas college political leaders and members of both parties have convinced Sam Evans, Salina junior and KU Young Republicans chairman, and Max Logan, Holliday senior and Young Democrats chairman, that Goldwater could win the election easily in Kansas.
"The general trend of most state officials is toward Goldwater. Goldwater has a big lead," Evans said.
LOGAN AGREED and added, "I would say Goldwater would carry this state by a terrific margin." Goldwater's popularity, is due to
the wave of "conservatism" that is moving across the country. The whole movement is a reaction to action in Washington. Even many Democrats in some states are leaning towards conservatism, Evans said.
The President's economic policies and the current civil rights battle have contributed to this movement, he said.
However, Logan viewed the "wave of conservatism as "superficial."
"It is a reaction setting in concerning the economic cycle. The people can see a change in the relationship between the government, business and society; they see a threat and react at it," he said.
"They (conservatives) are not strong but loud." he added.
BOTH EVANS and Logan expressed doubts about Goldwater's chances in a national election.
The Republicans feel the only way
Goldwater can win is to carry the South. If he were nominated he would carry some of the South, particularly Alabama and the other states where has been the most racial trouble. Evans said.
"Neither Jerry (Dickson, national collegiate YR chairman and a first-year law student) nor I believe he can do this (carry the South)," he said.
"Kennedy by a landslide," predicted Logan.
"I do hope they run Goldwater He is dead in the big cities and in the industrial north, and that is where the votes are," Logan said.
gested that Rep. William Avery of the 2nd Congressional District, will be the Republican nominee for governor.
"I would say, that through my contacts, Avery is in the minds of most people," Evans said.
GOLDWATER would run slightly ahead of Gov. Nelson Rockefeller of New York, but behind former vicepresident, Richard M. Nixon, he added.
There is a little jockeying for the Democratic nomination, but Jack Glaves of Wichita is the man out in front, Logan said.
The party in the state recognize this fact and as a consequence Glaves has forged a good deal of party support. Logan said.
GLAVES IS A young man, and very progressive and the perennial people in the party are too old; it is time for young blood to be added, he said.
The Democratic party in Kansas is trying to organize itself on all levels, to build up a core of good
On the state level, Evans sug-
workers, and to enter vigorously in the political campaigns, he said.
However, it would be difficult to have a liberal Democratic party in the state of Kansas due to the basic conservatism of the agricultural interest in the state. Logan said.
Research Center Reviews Kansas Legislators' Work
THE MAJOR controversies in the Kansas Republican party are (1) Goldwater versus Rockefeller and (2) who will run for governor, Evans said.
A 60-page section on "General Government" is the largest part of the book. It deals with decisions ranging from the civil code to salary increases for state officials to the Sunday closing law and fallout shelter liability.
In addition to Avery as a likely nominee for governor, Evans listed four other candidates which have been mentioned as possibilities: Attorney General William Ferguson, Lt. Gov. Harold Chase of Salina, Huck Boyd, who ran for governor against Gov. John Anderson in 1960 and Robert F. Ellsworth, representative of the 3rd Congressional District.
All major bills of the 500 passed by the Legislature are reviewed in the 158-page publication, and others are mentioned. James T. McDonald, senior analyst at the center, is author of the book, titled Decisions of the 163 Kansas Legislature.
What Kansas legislators did or did not do in their 1963 session is summarized in a KU Governmental Research Center book published this week.
The major share of a section on "Education and Libraries" discusses the Wichita University and school unification bills.
"It is not the intent of the author
to comment on the advisability of what the legislators did," said Ethan P. Allen, director of the center and chairman of the department of political science.
The summary was made with the hope that Kansas will become more familiar with the work of the 1963 legislature, he said.
"Our form of democracy is necessarily strengthened when the general public keeps informed of the actions of public officials," he continued. "Since the legislative decisions influence the long-range future of all of us, the citizen is entitled to know what his representatives did or did not do."
The new publication, to be received by 150 institutions, including public libraries, is available on request from the KU Governmental Research Center.
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Oct. 29, 1963
Soviet Bloc Flags Attract Limber Thieves In Strong
By Linda Machin Kansan Society Editor
To many the flags of 85 nations which line the Strong Hall Rotunda are a familiar sight.
For the more acute observer, the empty standard which is numbered 84 is a familiar sight also.
Upon inquiry, Harry M. Buchholz, superintendent in Buildings and Grounds, said that Flag No. 84, the Yugoslavian flag, has been missing for several months.
"We usually have two or three flags missing each year but last year we had 12," he said. "Just before the Model UN meeting we always have to take down at least two flags for safety's sake: the Russian flag and the United Nations flag."
Flag stealing, according to Tom Yoe, KU news bureau director, used to be a popular KU sport. Before the University replaced the old woodenpoled flags with aluminum ones in new metal holders four years ago, flags were stolen frequently-particularly those of Communist bloc countries.
"Inevitably, the ones stolen were hammer and sickle flags—they seldom actually got the Russian flag itself," he said.
Prior to 1960, when office space blocked the hallway on the north side of the rotunda on the second floor, the Communist bloc flags were placed on that inaccessible side of the rotunda in an attempt to discourage flag thieves.
"The buildings and grounds men used to have a difficult time themselves reaching the flags. They had to crawl through my office windows to replace the flags," Yoe said.
However, this didn't seem to hinder the thieves.
"In those days, you had to be somewhat of an acrobat to steal a Russian flag," he said. In order to accomplish the feat the thieves had to crawl over the railing and walk along the inner ledge to reach the flags.
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The flags were o. originally placed in the rotunda after World War II, to represent each country in the newly formed United Nations. Students attending KU from countries not represented by flags in the rotunda began presenting Chancellor Murphy with flags.
In case you are from Yugoslavia, or otherwise partial to that country's missing flag, don't worry. The red, white and blue striped flag with a large red star in the middle, is being replaced—at the cost of $15 to the University.
821 Mass. Open Thursday Till 8:30
Jean Hord, Kansas City senior. Alpha Phi, to Charles Swank, Nortonville senior.
Analye Elizabeth Burgs, Arkansas City senior, Alpha Phi, to Thomas David Beissecker, Topeka graduate student, Acacia.
A European tour will be the subject of the Nov. 7 meeting of the University Women's Club at 2 p.m.
Engagements
A talk, by Mrs. Goff, entitled "A Look at Far Horizons," will feature Prof. and Mrs. Lewin Goff's tour of Europe last summer. He is director of the University Theatre.
Sharon Kaye Rogers, Shawnee Mission sophomore, to David William Newcomer, Shawnee Mission senior, Phi Delta Theta.
To Tell Highlights
Betti Anthony, Dodge City junior, to Dwight Egbert, Dodge City junior, Pi Kappa Alpha.
Patricia Koch, Haven senior, to Glenn Hunt. Kansas City.
Ann Leffler, Pittsburg sen'or, Pi Beta Phi, to Fred Kauffield, Atchison senior.
The Nov. 8 meeting of the University Women's Club will include a dessert and theater party with their husbands at 7 p.m.
Barbara Ann Schmidt, Orlando, Fla., to Jon K. Bell, Salina junior, Delta Chi.
'Lavered Look' Leads
The layered look in fashion goes back to school this fall. It turns up in the form of flannel jumpers pulled over long-sleeved dresses of printed calico, or in shiny red slicker skirts worn apron-style over turtle-necked jersey dresses.
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
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Just listen to their Capitol album, "New Directions in Folk Music." You'll hear the rocking, driving way the Journeymen sing "Someday Baby," a low down blues out of Chicago. The fun they have with "Stackolee," the wild song about a legendary terror of New Orleans. Their quiet and moving version of "All the Pretty Little Horses," one of the most beautiful lullabies ever written. Their spirited ragtime rendition of "San Francisco Bay."
Then you'll know what's new in folk songs. And what's best.
Look for-ask for-the Journeymen in concert on your campus.
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Adjusting Horses and Study Challenging to KU Student
If you think its hard to co-ordinate study with class hours, try adjusting horses with study and class hours.
By Willis Henson
When Miss Mayor entered KU two years ago, she decided to give up horseback riding. However, instead, she began giving private lessons to a grade-school boy at Lake Quivira, her home.
"It's rewarding to introduce children to such a wholesome pastime," Miss Mayor commented. "Riding gives them confidence and teaches them responsibility. Half of them earn money for their lessons—so they don't have time to get into trouble."
According to Elsie Mayor, Kansas City sophomore, it's difficult but rewarding.
"It was especially hard during American Royal Week. That was a real rat race." she said.
THIS YEAR three of her students entered and placed in equitation competition in the American Royal Livestock and Horse show which ended last weekend. They won fourth, eighth, and tenth places among sixty entries.
"Im just really pleased," Miss Mayor said in regard to their performance. She explained that equitation judging deals with horsemanship, rather than jumping ability. Her young students were judged on riding style and management of their horses.
ANOTHER OF Miss Mayor's students who placed, a 12-year-old boy.
University Daily Kansan
Pinnings
Martha Ahrens, Topeka sophomore, Delta Gamma, to Ed Bachofer, Salina junior, Kappa Sigma.
Barbara Reeves, Ridgefield, Conn,
sophomore, Delta Gamma, to John
Baldridge, Fredonia sophomore,
Kappa Sigma.
Karen Cox, St. Louis sophomore to Bill Miller, Prairie Village junior, Sigma Nu.
Shannon Athy, Topeka senior, to Richard Johnson, Hutchinson senior, Sigma Nu.
was entered in the hunter class. He was the youngest competitor. In 1953, she, herself, was the youngest junior rider in the show. "This year, I had the privilege of coaching the youngest," she said.
At the age of nine, she began her career in horsemanship. After learning the basics of riding and jumping, Miss Mayor spent several years training horses and riders.
DURING HER eleven-year teaching span, she has had up to six students a month and earned from $40 to $100 a month, in "an enjoyable, profitable business."
She wes a top show rider and assistant instructor for Capt. William C. Meyer at the Meyer Remount Farm at Leavenworth.
During the school year, she goes home each weekend and gives lessons on Saturday mornings.
Magazine Pictures 'Best Dressed Girl'
Martha Yankey, Wichita sophomore, is pictured in the November issue of Glamour Magazine wearing an evening coiffure created by a firmed hair stylist.
Miss Yankey was chosen by the magazine last spring as one of the 1963 "Ten Best Dressed College Girls in America." As a winner of Kansas University's contest co-sponsored by the All Women's Association, she competed against candidates from 250 colleges all over the country.
She also appeared in the August issue of the magazine wearing some of the latest campus fashions.
Clothing and Textiles Topics of Discussion
Current emphases in clothing and textiles was the theme of the fall conference on the teaching of home economies at the University of Kansas Friday, Oct. 18.
Dr. Lois Gilmore, associate dean of home economies at Ohio State University, was the keynote speaker, discussing the directions clothing and textiles studies are now taking.
Other speakers from the KU home economies faculty were Profs. Muriel Johnson, Ruth Franzen, Glen Christen en and Judith Wiley.
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HOMECOMING DANCE
SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 2
8:00 to 12:00
featuring
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AND ORCHESTRA
Tickets $2.50 per couple sold at Information Booth,
Union, or at the door.
"Maybe someday I'll have one of my own," she said.
Miss Mayor plans to major in zoology and become a high school teacher. "At least I'll have summers to keep up my interest in riding and horses."
One peculiar thing about Miss Mayor's riding career: she has never owned her own horse.
"The clothes you wear are an extension of your personality," says Dr. Ernest Dichter of Motivational Research Institute, Inc. "We become emotionally involved in the clothes we wear."
Clothing Reflects Personality Traits
If such be the case, and survey questionnaires suggest it, then character, talents, ability, attitudes and your acceptance or aversion to your environment can be detected by observing your clothing.
Tuesday, Oct. 29, 1963
KU Women In Sports
After a brief break for six weeks examinations, the women in the WRA-sponsored, round robin basketball tournament begin the fourth round of the contest. Thirteen games are scheduled for this week.
The teams play within their divisions and the winners will vie for the championship.
By Dolores Orman
The following are the basketball round robin tournament divisions:
DIVISION 1
Carruth OLCary
Miller
Corbin I
GSP 1 East
Alpha Delta Pi
GSP 1 West
Douthart
DIVISION II
Kappa Kappa Gamma
GSP 2 West
GSP 4 East
Theta
GSP 4 East
Delta Delta Delta
Chi Omega
Pi Beta Phi
GSP 3 West
Omega
Grace Pearson
GSP 1 East
Delta Gamma
Lewis
Alpha Omicron Pi
Phi 2
GSP Ground Floor
Watkins
GSP Crossbar
Alpha Phi
DISSION III
Hashinger
DIVISION IV
Twelve new members of the Quack Club, a synchronized swimming organization have been chosen, reported Barbara Hobson, instructor of physical education and adviser to the group. The members of the swimming club will spend the rest of the semester planning a program to be presented in the spring. They will practice such swimming strokes as the dolphin, porpoise, and alternate ballet legs. A total of 17 strokes were listed for the organization's tryout period earlier this month.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansa
Tuesday, Oct. 29, 1963
Senate Probe of "Lyndon's Boy" Begins Today
WASHINGTON. —(UPI)— There is a saying that no man is a hero to his valet—and that may be one reason the investigation starting today into the activities of former Senate Democratic Secretary Robert G. (Bobby) Baker will be held behind closed doors.
For Baker, who came from the Piney Woods country of Pickens, S. C., 21 years ago to become a Senate pageboy, has been a sort of valet to some of the most powerful men in America for a good many years.
"HE KNOWS where the bodies are buried and who buried them," one veteran Capitol Hill observer noted. As secretary to the Senate majority, Baker was unknown to the public, but in the halls of congress he was sometimes referred to as the "101st Senator" and "Lyndon's boy."
Baker won his spurs as "Lyndon's Boy" back in 1949 when he became the unofficial aide of the then freshman Senator from Texas, Lyndon B. Johnson. Johnson appointed him Senate Democratic Secretary in 1955 when the Texan was named majority leader.
The Senate Rules Committee's inquiry into Baker's multiple "outside activities" opened today with advance notice that it might be denied any information "of a criminal nature" turned up by the FBI or the General Accounting Office.
Sen. B. Everett Jordan (D-N.C.) the courtly, 67-year-old chairman of the committee, explained that the Justice Department did not want to compromise any legal case that might arise from its findings.
THE COMMITTEE'S inquiry is to determine whether there has been a violation of conflict of interest laws in any of Baker's many lucrative outside deals.
These include: his partnership in a vending machine company which obtained profitable installation contracts from defense industries; his interest in a $1.2 million Maryland motel; his interest in a Washington travel agency; his occupancy of
$125,000 home in an exclusive section of the city; a $38,000 windfall profit he allegedly reaped in a stock market deal; his activities as a charter member and onetime secretary of the Quorum Club, a high-style hideaway in a Capitol Hill Hotel for members of Congress and lobbyists; his ownership of a $28,000 town house where his secretary, Nancy Carole Tyler, lived with another girl for a time, and his onetime partnership with Commerce Secretary Luther H. Hodges in a North Carolina motel.
Though he may have been active in the Quorum Club, the club in which Baker felt most at home was the Senate, which has been called "the greatest club on earth." His South Carolina ancestry gave him an entree to the Senate "establishment"—that small group of insiders, mostly southerners, who rule the Senate. And his detailed knowledge of how and why the Senate operates made him almost indispensable.
THE SENATE saga of Bobby Gene Baker began in 1942 when, at the age of 14, he was named a page by the late Sen. Burnett C. Maybank, (D-S.C). It ended, formally at least, on Oct. 8 when he resigned his $19,612-a-year job as Senate Democratic Secretary.
"Developments during the past few weeks have made it apparent to him that it would be best if he withdrew from office," said Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield, Mont. "I deeply regret the necessity for his resignation and the necessity for its acceptance." Mansfield was not merely being polite. He and other members of the Senate were profoundly sorry that Baker had to quit.
For the first nine years of his Senate career, Baker was one of that group of somberly dressed youths who scuttle about the corridors of the Capitol, keeping Congressional inkpots filled, carrying messages and generally being of use to the legislators.
ONE OF THE legislators then Sen. Lyndon B. Johnson, took a liking
to the alert, fast-talking Bobby. When Johnson became Democratic whip in 1951, Baker moved up to the job of assistant Democratic secretary.
In 1955, when his mentor became majority leader, Baker was promoted to the top job.
Technically, the majority secretary supervises the Senate Cloakroom, sees to it that the Senators are on hand for voting, and generally keeps tabs on the membership for the leaders. "The job is what a man makes of it," one observer said, and Bobby Baker made the most of it.
As a protege of Johnson, who himself first came to the Capitol as the youthful secretary of a Texas congressman, Baker aided the then majority leader in many ways. Because he had to know where to contact the members at all times, he tended to have a fairly confidential intimate kind of relationship with the Senators. He improved on this by being discreet, deferential and eager to be of service—by being the perfect legislative valet, one who studied and knew the moods of his master, the Senate, as few Capitol veterans did.
PERHAPS the most important part of his job was counting noses, finding out who was for what and why. Under Johnson's leadership, he became one of the most expert census-takers on the hill. Members often asked him how a vote would
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come out because they knew he could interpret developments to almost the exact outcome.
For these duties the 35-year-old Baker was well rewarded. Besides
nis own ample salary, only $2,888 less than a Senator, his wife was paid $11,757 a year as records manager for the Senate Internal Security subcommittee.
A
On Campus with Max Shulman
(Author of "Rally Round the Flag, Boys"
and "Barefoot Boy With Cheek".)
HOW SMALL CAN YOU GET?
Today let us address ourselves to a question that has long rocked and roiled the academic world: Is a student better off at a small college than at a large college?
To answer this question it is necessary first to define terms. What, exactly, do we mean by a small college? Well sir, some say that in order to be called truly small, a college should have an enrollment of not more than four students.
I surely have no quarrel with this statement; a four-student college must unequivocally be called small. Indeed, I would even call it intime if I knew what intime meant. But I submit there is such a thing as being too small. Take, for instance, a recent momentate event at Crimscott A and M.
Crimscoot A and M, situated in a pleasant valley nestled between Philadelphia and Salt Lake City, was founded by
What, exactly, do we mean by a small college?
A. and M. Crimscott, two brothers who left Ireland in 1625 to escape the potato famine of 1841. As a result of their foresight, the Crimscott brothers never went without potatoes for one single day of their lives—and mighty grateful they were! One night, full of gratitude after a wholesome meal of French fries, cottage fries, hash browns, and au gratin, they decided to show their appreciation to this bountiful land of potatoes by endowing a college. But their generosity contained one stipulation; the enrollment of the college must never exceed four students. They felt that only by keeping the school this small could each student be assured of the personalized attention, the camaraderie, the esprit, that is all too often lacking in larger institutions of higher learning.
coaching minds in the maze.
Well sir, on the morning of the big game against Minnesota,
its traditional rival, a capricious fate dealt Crimecott a cruel blow—in fact, four cruel blows. Sigafos, the quarterback, woke up that morning with an impacted incisor. Wrichards, the slotback, flunked his taxidermy exam and was declared uneligible. Beerbohm-Tree, the wingback-tailback, got his necktie caught in his espresso machine. Yuld, the fallback, was stolen by gypsies.
higher institutions or higher Well sir, things went along swimmingly until one Saturday a few years ago. On this day Crimscott had a football game scheduled against Minnesota, its traditional rival. Football, as you can well imagine, was something of a problem at Crimscott, what with only four undergraduates in the entire college. It was easy enough to muster a backfield, but to find a good line—or even a bad line—baffled some of the most resourceful coaching minds in the nation.
So you can see how only four students might be too meagre an enrollment. The number that I personally favor is twenty. Why? you ask. Because, I reply, when you have twenty students and one of them opens a pack of Marlboro Cigarettes, there are enough to go around for everybody, and no one has to be deprived of Marlboro's flavor, of Marlboro's filter, of Marlboro's staunche and steadfast companionship, and as a result you have a student body that is brimming with sweet content and amity and harmony and concord and togetherness and soft pack and Flip-Top box.
Consequently, none of the Crimscott team showed up at the football game, and Minnesota, its traditional rival, was able to score almost at will. Crimscott was so cross after this humiliating defeat that they immediately broke off football relations with Minnesota, its traditional rival. This later became known as the Saco-Vanzetti Case.
That's why.
© 1963 Max Shulman
* * *
There are twenty fine cigarettes in every pack of Marlboros, and there are millions of packs of Marlboros in every one of the fifty states of the Union. We, the makers of Marlboro and the sponsors of this column, hope you will try our wares soon.
Tuesday, Oct. 29, 1963
University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Long War Seen If Allies Join Sahara Battle
By Phil Newsom
UPI Foreign News Analyst
UPI Foreign News Analyst
In Rabat, a UPI correspondent just back from the scene of the desert fighting along the Algerian-Moroccan Frontier, sat down at his typewriter and endeavored to sort out his impressions.
“... like something out of Beau Geste.” wrote UPI man Carlos Mendo.
"In Hassi Beida, I counted eight date palm trees. No town. No vegetation except for those pitiful palms
clustered around one well. . ."
Indeed, it scarcely seemed worth a man's life.
BUT AROUND the small Hassa Beida oasis men were dying, even as leaders of both Africa and the Arab world maneuvered for peace.
There were compelling reasons for settling the quarrel quickly. But there also were reasons why peace would not come easily and why, if it did come, it might prove as illusory as Arab or African unity.
A compelling reason for peace was fear that, if continued for long, the fighting could not be confined to a single border.
In Paris, with intimate knowledge of both, there was a belief that militarily the Moroccans were better trained and equipped for this kind of fighting and would win out over Algeria.
to save Algerian President Ahmed Ben Bella from disaster.
BUT THERE was also the belief that United Arab Republic President Gamal Abdel Nasser and the Communist bloc would intervene
Eventually, such a war would engulf the whole of North Africa.
There were plenty of would-be peace-makers, including virtually every head of every state bordering on the Sahara. The belligerents also spoke of a desire for peace but continued military maneuvers to negotiate from positions of strength.
But these were moves viewed from the short term.
IN THE LONGER view, Ben Bella
of Algeria and King Hassan of Morocco had become the personifications of a struggle convulsing both the Arab and the African worlds.
Ben Bella is a dedicated socialist, an admirer both of Nasser and Fidel Castro of Cuba.
And Moroccans ask Western reporters:
"Have you forgotten Cuba?"
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Page 8
University Daily Kansan Tuesday. Oct. 29, 1963
Around the Campus
A United States Public Health Service grant of more than $130,000 has been awarded to Dr. Byron S. Wenger, associate professor of comparative biochemistry and physiology, for a study of the earliest stages of life.
Project Gets Grant
Funds of $30,358 have been awarded for the first year of the six-year study, and smaller amounts have been allocated for subsequent years.
THE PROJECT, titled "Metabolic Pathways in Early Chick Embyros," is a new one, although research is related to that conducted by Wenger for several years.
"In the past, our studies have been devoted to the development of functions in the central nervous system." Dr. Wenger said. "Now we are more concerned with the earlier states of development when patterns first develop."
He said the early development of an embryo makes us of quite different pathways of metabolism. For example, in later life and in the adult, a maximum amount of energy is taken from the food. But in earlier stages, the food is used primarily for the developing organism.
Wenger said the metabolic processes are related to defects in development that result in congenital malformation. He is studying this problem with a $40,082 grant from the National Foundation-March of Dimes.
Assistants on the new grant are Mrs. Jeanne Ellermeier, wife of Robert Ellermeier, director of the KU electronics laboratory; Mrs. Lucy Yu, wife of Yun-Sheng Yu, associate professor of engineering mechanics, and Miss Mary Ruscha, all of Lawrence.
Zoologist Joins KU
Dr. Herbert Glenn Wolfe, staff scientist at the Jackson Memorial Laboratory in Bar Harbor, Md., has joined the University of Kansas zoology department as assistant professor and research associate.
Wolfe will teach and conduct research in the Hall Laboratory of Mammalian Genetics on inherited defects such as anemia and muscular dystrophy.
Wolfe received his Ph.D degree from the University of Kansas in 1960 and the bachelor's degree from Kansas State University.
Fredericks To Explain Basic Football Points
Foreign students who find themselves at a loss when it comes to understanding football will be instructed on the basic points of the game at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
Assistant basketball coach, Bob Fredericks, will explain the game, using films of recent KU team contests. The program has been sponsored by the KU People-to-People Special Projects Committee.
Clarence A. Davis of Prairie Village has been appointed to the newly created position of purchasing agent at KU.
Purchaser Named
Davis, who will be responsible to Keith L. Nitcher, the University comptroller, will work with departments and divisions of the University in preparing specifications for purchases and assisting with general problems of buying. His office is in Room 2 Strong Hall.
Davis has been in purchasing operation for industry many years. He was with the Studebaker Corporation 30 years, finally as assistant purchasing agent for procurement of equipment and supplies for plants.
In 1956 he joined the Aviation Gas Turbine Division of the Westinghouse Electric Corp., as manager of purchasing and traffic and held that position until the plant in Kansas City, Mo., closed in 1961.
Seniors To Discuss Scholarships and Work
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences will show graduating seniors how to apply for scholarships and how to seek employment at two separate meetings this week.
Scholarships will be discussed by George R. Waggoner, liberal arts and sciences dean, at the first meeting today at 3 p.m. in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union.
A question and answer panel will deal with employment problems tomorrow at 3:39 p.m. in the Forum Room.
Senior Gets Cash
[Image of a cartoon character]
Thomas D. Clutz, Rochester, N.Y., senior at the University of Kansas, today received the Solon E. Summerfield senior award in business administration for the spring semester of 1963.
The $150 cash award was presented by Dean Joseph W. McGuire at a School of Business honors coffee for students whose grades in the spring semester of 1963 qualified them for the school honor roll.
The award is made twice a year to the School of Business senior, who has completed the junior year the preceding semester, with the highest grades in required business administration and economics courses through the junior year.
The Solon E. Summerfield Foundation, Inc., through a gift to the KU Endowment Association, makes possible the award. Its purposes are to recognize the honor outstanding scholastic achievement in business administration and to encourage capable students to do their best work.
Clutz, an accounting major, earned an A in all the required courses, which total 35 hours. In addition, he was on the School of Business honor roll both semesters in 1962-63 and recently was elected to Beta Gamma Sigma, national honorary society in business and commerce.
Award to Scholar
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Letha Marie Schwiesow, Shawnee Mission sophomore, is the 1963-64 recipient of the Genevieve Sterling Altman award which is made annually to a Watkins Scholar.
Miss Schwiesow is majoring in Slavic and Soviet Area Studies and French. She is a member of Cwens sophomore women's honorary society.
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Team members were Chuck Marvin, Lawrence senior; David Seal, Independence, Mo., senior; Walter Bliss, Omaha, Neb., sophomore, and William Howard, Parsons sophomore.
Talkathon Continues- Individual Record Falls
The Joseph R. Pearson-Margaret Hashinger Hall talkathon reached the 336 hour mark today at 1 p.m., but not before the 10 hour individual talking record set last week fell.
Mary Kay Adams, Prairie Village sophomore, and Charles Weisel, Overland Park freshman, talked from 2:30 a.m. until 1:30 p.m. last Sunday to set an eleven hour record.
"We just got this brainstorm around 3:30 a.m. to break the record." Miss Adams said. "It seemed like we had talked for so long by then that it seemed like the logical thing to do."
"YOU MIGHT say we broke the old record and set a doubles record." Weisel said. "Name it, we talked about it. Courses in school, what we plan on doing when we graduate, movies, actors and actresses, . . . everything under the sun."
She, too, said the conversation included everything, but listed chemistry, mathematics, their life histories, and nursery rhymes as particular topics that she could recall.
The next tournament will be in Edmond Okla., on November 14-16.
The KU Varsity Debate team won two debates and lost four to the Emporia State Teachers College team last weekend in Emporia.
KU Debate Team Wins Two Matches
"I'd never do it again, believe me," Miss Adams said. "Anybody who talks for that long must be out of his mind."
"AT THE end we had nothing left to say," Miss Adams said, "so we started telling children's stories with offbeat endings. Like Cinderella never lost her shoe and the prince never found her. She lived to be an old maid."
"If two people do break our record, we'll try again, as long as it's okay with her (Miss Adams)," Wei-sel said.
When informed that a JRP resident is contemplating talking for 26 hours, Weisel said, "He'll never make it. Our 'doubles' record will still stand though, if he does."
The topic to be used throughout the year for the debates will be "Federal Aid to Education."
THE AMERICAN BOWLING Congress sanctioned approximately 12,000 tournaments with prize funds totaling $22 million in 1962.
Official Bulletin
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road.
Western Civ. Discussion, 9 p.m.. St.
Lawrence Catholic Student Center, 1915
Washington College.
Inquiry Forum, 7 p.m. St. Lawrence
Catholic Student Center, 1915 Stratford Road
TOMORROW
Episcopal Holy Communion, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m. 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road
El Atenco se reunirá miércoles, el dia
30 de octubre, la 4:30 de la tarde en la sala 11 de Fraser. Un grupo de profesores y alumnos presentará una lectura le escenas escolgidas de Don Juan Ternorio por José Zorrilla segun la tradición hispánica. Todos estan cordialmente invitados.
Timely Topics, 7 p.m. St. Lawrence Student Center, 1915 Stratford Road. "The Eastern Orthodox Churches"—Rev. Brendan Downey, O.S.B.
KU Amateur Radio Club, 7:30, 118 New Engineering Bldg.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
AUGUST 25, 1963
TOMMY AND MICHAEL
1950
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Of course, some men may use Mennen Skin Bracer because of this effect.
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Tuesday, Oct. 29. 1963
University Daily Kansan
Page 9
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—Photo by Don Black
FREDERICK J. WILSON
BICYCLE CHECK-A campus policeman at the traffic control station by the Chi Omega fountain checks one student's bicycle license as another student speeds by on the way to classes.
Warning Increases Bicycle Registration
The campus police are pleased by the number of students registering their bicycles, Joe Skillman, chief of the KU traffic and security police, said this week.
Les Blevins, a local bicycle dealer, estimates there are between 1,000 and 1,500 bicycles on the KU campus. Judging from his figures, less than half the bicycles owned by KU students are registered.
Students were responding to a report on Oct. 20, telling about Lawrence and KU bicycle regulations, Skillman said. By Oct. 28, 148 students had bought a 25 cent bicycle license required by a Lawrence ordinance. Cyclists can be fines $25 for cycling on an unlicensed bicycle. Since school began, 319 bicycles have been registered.
THE LICENSE AIDS police in locating owners of lost or stolen bicycles when they are recovered. Injured cyclists can also be identified by the license.
William Cox, chief of the Lawrence police department, said he had ordered one thousand new licenses. "The city loses money on them at 25 cents a piece," he said. But he was opposed to charging fifty cents. "Too many poor families might not be able to register their bicycles," he said.
Police observed that cyclists were riding more safely too. However, one accident involving a bicycle and a parked car did occur in front of Strong Hall Thursday night. Dick Carlisle, Kansas City, Mo., freshman, was riding an unlighted bicycle when he collided with a car owned by Sydney Radinovsky, an entomology research associate.
POLICE REPORTS show that relatively few bicycle mishaps occur on the campus. Nevertheless, students are frequently hospitalized with injuries suffered in cycle wrecks on the steep grades around the campus. In these accidents, the small braking surface and inherent instability of bicycles contribute to the danger.
Carlisle was treated for a cut on the shoulder.
Lewis Linzell, associate professor of mechanical and aerospace engineering, was asked to make a theoretical calculation of the bicycle's braking distance.
Taking the reaction time to be one second, and using an arbitrary friction coefficient, he concluded it would take a bicycle traveling five miles an hour about nine and a half feet to stop. At 10 mph it would take 20 feet, and at 20 mph it would take 50 feet.
At 20 mph, it takes a car 45 feet to stop.
Linzell said the band brake is not
THE TRAFFIC and Safety Committee of the All Student Council has been investigating student complaints about the traffic booths during the last few weeks.
as efficient under wet conditions as under dry ones. This brake grips the rim of the bicycle, and when the rim is wet, the brake slips.
Jay Strayer, committee chairman, said that no major automobile or pedestrian accidents have occurred since the booths were opened last year, according to Joe G. Skillman, campus police chief.
There have been some abuses of the traffic booths. Students have attempted to enter the campus by saying they had a doctor's appointment or needed to go to the hospital.
Students may be passed by the policeman if they are moving equipment onto the campus.
Traffic problems involved in picking up dates at Carruth and O'Leary, temporary parking permits and parking problems at Ellsworth are also being discussed by the committee.
HOW TO SUCCEED IN PRO BALL!
Jerry Lucas, one of the all-time great college basketball stars, is now a pro. In the December issue of SPORT magazine, you'll find out what Lucas (and every college star) has to learn to "succeed" as a pro, as his former roommate John Havlicek gives him inside pointers on the NBA and its stars...Plus the SPORT spotlight is on college football, with exciting photo reports on George Mira, the nation's No.1 college quarterback...Coach John McKay of USC and Mel Renrof of Oregon. SPORT covers college sports in depth, and you get behind-the-scenes coverage on all pro sports. In December SPORT you'll also want to read "I Say Listen is Good For Boxing," an exclusive article by Rocky Marciano. SPORT magazine keeps you upcase of all events on the sports scene...with authoritative coverage, sharp analysis, informative profiles and action-packed photos...Get
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Ali Mouhine, Casablanca, Morocco senior, said that he believed that the dispute would end in a meeting and an eventual agreement. He said that the dispute is a political one between Morocco's King Hassan II and Algeria's Ben Bella and is not one which is felt, to any great degree by the masses of people in either of the countries.
S
"The border between Morocco and Algeria has always been indefinite. The disputed area has never been formally surveyed. When Morocco became a protectorate of France, the borders of the country was still indefinite—a line drawn on a map," Mouhsine said.
While the border was ambiguous, there were certain outposts in the frontier area which were clearly understood to be Moroccan and certain other outposts which were, equally clearly understood to be Algerian, he said.
KU's only Moroccan student said last night that he was not deeply worried about the outcome of the present border dispute between Morocco and Algeria.
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Conflict on Algerian-Moroccan Border Is Political, Says KU Moroccan Student
"After Morocco achieved its independence from France and when Algeria was fighting for its independence, it was realized that the indefinite borders would eventually pose a problem for both countries. With this in mind, the rules of both countries met in Rabat (Morocco). It was there decided that the two governments would form a council to decide exactly where the border between the two countries was. Because of the revolution occurring within Algeria at the time, it was decided to postpone the meeting of the council until the Algerian government became definite," Mouhisine said.
"Many of the Moroccan outposts which are now in dispute were, as a matter of fact, used for training of Algerian troops during the Algerian war of independence with France." Mouhuis said.
The differences in the areas are almost entirely political; the differences between the people themselves are not great. he said.
In past years, the people of Morocco and Algeria had no particular feeling of nationalism at all. The separation of the countries from France gave rise to a feeling of national unity to the tribes in these
countries much as the American Revolution created a feeling of unity in the colonies of America, Mouhsine said.
When the Algerian war ended, certain situations prevented the meeting over the undecided border. Then dissention in Algeria threatened Ben Bella's government and he proceeded to use the disputed border as an instrument to unite his country around him, but King Hassan refused to yield and the border war was the result, he said.
"I believe that the press has distorted the facts somewhat in reporting this dispute. An example is the importance which the press places upon ore deposits which are supposedly located in the disputed area. Even if these deposits actually exist, they are not of great importance because of the lack of equipment and engineers to mine them." Mouh-sine said.
"It is unfortunate that some will have to die because of the struggle of two systems. It is a shame that the leaders of the countries cannot be placed at the front—if Hassan or Ben Bella heard a shell whistle by their ears, you can bet there would be a meeting called promptly," Mouhuis said.
He said that the countries will probably cease fighting soon because they are economically unable
to support the war, "They have to import the bullets," he said.
"The Communists are, of course, always a threat. Any disorder is in the Communist interest," he said.
Mouhsine said that he would personally like to see both Hassan and Ben Bella replaced. He said that they represent opposite unsatisfactory extremes. Ben Bella, he said, desires a one-party system and Hassan represents a monarchy.
Senator Morse To Speak at KU
Sen. Wayne Morse, D-Ore., will speak at 8:00 p.m. Dec. 11 in Hoch Auditorium.
The topic for his speech has not been selected. Sen. Morse's speech will be sponsored by Student Union Activities' Featured Speaker series.
Bob Enberg, chairman of the Featured Speakers committee, also said "Vance Packard, author of "The Snow Sackers" will speak at KU next spring.
Morse was graduated from the University of Wisconsin, received his LLB. degree in law from the University of Minnesota and an honorary LLD. degree from Drake University. He is a member of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity.
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HEAR...
the PRESIDENT of the AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION WORLD MEDICAL ASSOCIATION DR. EDWARD R. ANNIS
discuss the
Medicare Program
Thursday, Oct. 31 at 4:30
Kansas Union Ballroom
OPEN TO THE PUBLIC!!
Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Oct. 29, 1963
RIDGWAY
PHIL DOUGHTY Can KU's defense ...
14
LARRY CORRIGAN
... stop K-State's running ...
15
DOUG DUSENBURY
... and passing attack?
Swimming Costs Buffalo Football Team
Bv United Press International
By United Press International Hang your clothes on a hickory branch, but don't go near the water.
Colorado football coach Eddie Crowder should have used that old verse as an order Monday when he gave his team the day off to go swimming.
One of his reserve halfbacks, Tim Hogan, reinjured a dislocated shoulder while swimming and will not be able to return to the lineup this week as expected.
THE DISAPPOINTMENT of losing Hogan again was tempered, however, with a medical report showing halfback Bill Harris suffered only an abdominal strain last Saturday against Nebraska.
Crowder said Harris, the team's leading scorer with six touchdowns, will be able to play this week
against Oklahoma. The injury at first was thought to be more serious.
Oklahoma football coach Bud Wilkinson, not one to send his youngsters into a swimming pool during practice hours, praised his squad Monday but warned the players against overconfidence.
"I think we have been playing pretty well this year," he said. "But Colorado possesses more big, fast backs than anyone else in the conference—with the exception of Kansas and Nebraska."
MISSOURI, tied with Nebraska for the conference lead, suffered a blow to its hopes for Saturday's game against the Cornhuskers when physicians said Monroe Phelps will be sidelined for the remainder of the season with a torn knee cartilage.
er with 265 yards and also is the top pass receiver with eight catches for 82 yards.
Kansas and Kansas State groomed Monday for the renewal of their traditional intra-state rivalry next Saturday at Lawrence.
Kansas State Coach Doug Weaver returned Doug Dusenbury to a starting halfback slot Monday and moved Jack Christensen from halfback to fullback. Willis Crenshaw, expected to be Kansas State's best back this year, was taken off the depth chart because his injured leg has not responded to treatment.
AT OKLAHOMA STATE, the Cowboys heard a disquieting report Monday on their next foe, Iowa State.
"It was amazing to see Iowa State hold Missouri to only 18 yards rushing," said Scout Leon Fuller, Missouri won, however, 7-0.
Iowa State coach Clay Stapleton tossed some interesting news to Oklahoma State, however. He said he may give fullback Tom Vaughn a rest next Saturday.
Oklahoma State should like that. Vaughn is the Big Eight's second-best rusher this season, averaging 4.6 yards every time he runs with the ball.
"Two yards for me, and one for you."
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Tuesday, Oct. 29, 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 2 pm. on the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion.
FOR SALE
Slide projector; almost new Agfa "Diam-
ator H." 150 watt semi automatic $40.00
or best offer. Stu Schlemmer. Call V
2-1200. 10-31
1957 Volkswagen, 1959 Volkswagen to sell. Ralph Schmidt, Ed. Kansas. 10-30
1955 Olds. full power, radio. Real sharp -
$-3950km. 1954 Ford. top mechanical
condition. clean-$2250 km. Benson. 1901
Ford. clean-$24 of 4-H grounds. VI
5-1626. 11-2
Encyclopedia set for sale. Late edition of New Standard Encyclopedia - $179.95 for value but will sell for 000 or best offer. Phone VI 3-123-456. 10-31
Hair Dryers! Hair Dryers! All famous brands. 25 models to choose from—all at discount prices. New dryer. Hood as low as $5.00. Ray Stonebacks. 929 Mass. 11-2
1960 MGA convertible, red with red leather interior. New W/W, good car pad, clear rubber seat and found in perfect condition. $1,100. Call Ted 1635 Cambridge. VI 3-8823.
Austin Healy 3000, 1961; wire wheels electric over drive radio and heater, soft-top, tonneau. Excellent condition. One owner, leaving for Europe $1,550.00 Factory Hardtop -$150.00. Extra. Phone York, Kansas City. DE 3-9414 9 to 5.
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Cordless automatic toothbrush by Universal! Special offer to Kansan readers only who bring in this ad. $10.001 Complete with 4 brushes at Ray Stoneback's. 929 Mass. (Quality products at discount prices.) 11-1
G. E.'s finest Multiplier stereo. AM-FM list $179.55–has damaged spot and reduced sound quality in month 2004. radio, broken corner $289.00. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. St. 11-1
Compact car owners. $5.95 front seat covers reduced to $3.00 while they last at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. (Also terry cloth $6.88.) 11-1
1961 Volkswagen Sedan. Excellent condi-
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35' x 8' Mobile home, 2 bedrooms and ex-
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RENAULT—two, 1957 and 1959, both in good shape. Am asking $325.00 for the 1957 and $495.00 for the 1959. Call VI 3-5139 or go to 1523 W. 22nd St. Terr.
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You can own your own clean used mobile home for as low as $200.00 down and $34 per month delivered. Large selection of new mobile homes from TODD MOBIL HOMES, 738 N. 2nd, Lawrence, Kansas. Call VI 3-8846 or VI 2-3111. 11-1
Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extremely comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. ti
New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500
1005 Mass. -$85 Lawrence Outdoor
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1957 "88" Oldsmobile convertible; white,
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Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outline of the course; all classes. Formerly known as the Thetails. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50
ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLEANERS New Electroux and a limited number of rebuilt, fully guaranteed. All parts available. Equipment picked up for service and delivered. Frank V. Cox, Local Manager-1904 Barker. Call 913-3277.
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General Psychology study notes. Excel-
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FOR RENT
Spacious 4-room apartment. Very attractively furnished. Private bath and kitchen be convenient to KU's downtown. $60 plus 4part of utilities. Call VI 3-6696. 10-30
Two, large room modern basement apartments. For one of two young men, Outsiders. Bills paid. No drinking. Smoking. First house south of campus, 1616 Ind. 10-30
Town Manor Penthouse apartment available Oct. 28th. Private entrance, beautifully furnished large kitchen, steam heat, armchair, sitting room, kettle, oven, cocktail equipment. Lease. Couple or mature students. No small children or pets. Call VI 3-8000. 10-31
Vacancies for young men in contemporary home. Swimming pool, private entrance and bath. 45 monthly. Utilities. Cooked meals if desired. VI-3-9655. t11-20
Duplex. 2 bedrooms, stove, refrigerator.
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Want a girl to share my apartment, Connie Teen. After 4:30 on week days. 10-2
Furnished, clean 2 and 3 room apartments in-closets, bath, no driveway. Ohio.
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Part time help wanted: Qualifications:
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PARTY TIME: School house available for private parties, dances, meetings—skipped with piano, tables, chairs, fresh food and coolers. VI-745-431 Forrest.
Would like to care for child in my home
References. Call VI 3-1626. 11-2
BUSINESS SERVICES
Complete line of soles and heels, laces, cosmetics and polishes. Have new meryl shades. Have purses, smoke toes. Burgerst. One Day Shoe Service — 1113 Mass. St. 11-11
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gowns. Ola Smith, 939½ MH
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Experienced typist, fast and accurate.
Call Mrs. Hays at VI 2-0057. 11-22
Professional typing by experienced secretary,
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VI 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles
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Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 2047 Yale. VI 2-1648.
JOE'S BAKERY new location at 616 West 9th 25c delivery VI 3-472
New electric typewriter. Reasonable rates for themes, term papers, dissertations, and theses. Mrs. Barta, 1955 Miller Drive, VI 3-6994. ff
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Want guitar lessons. Have instrument (Mexican classic) and music. Interested in playing upbeat, reasonablelee. See Saturday preferred but not required. Lee Hirschberg VI. 21-430.
1 or 2 male students to share apartment.
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TRANSPORTATION
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign colts, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart, 1025 Mass.
Ride wanted -Kansas City, Kansas, to KU and return, daily. Live near 18th and Quindaro. Will discuss terms. Call Ronnie VI 3-9474. 10-30
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Page 12
University Daily Kansan
Tuesday, Oct. 29, 1963
Homecoming Decorations Falter-
(Continued from page 1)
(Continued from page 1) Linda Gilna, special events chairman of Corbin Hall, said:
"We were not given the official theme until it was too late to start anything, consequently, we won't have any decorations."
THE THEME WAS a poor choice anyway, she added.
A tea for alumnae will replace homecoming decorations at the Delta Delta Delta house. The decision to forego decorations this year was made so that present members may become better acquainted with old members.
Another protest to the theme was raised by Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity which will not decorate this year because of the theme. Walter Wulf, Humboldt freshman, said "we will not decorate this year because of the poor choice of theme. If the type of theme is changed next year, then we will decorate again."
The house is located at the far west edge of the campus, thus making it hard for people to come to see decorations, a spokesman said.
THE HOUSES AND halls that have decided to decorate have had problems getting people to work on the project because of the theme.
Merry Moore, Raytown. Mo, senior and Carruth-O'Leary homecoming chairman, said:
"It is difficult to get people to work on a theme that is so dull. The traditional theme of defeating the other team was easy to work with. It brought out a lot of school
spirit to see the Jayhawk killing our opponent."
Although Alpha Tau Omega is constructing decorations this year, it has had a hard time coming up with many fresh ideas that would go along with the over-all theme. According to one house member, several themes were discarded before an idea was selected.
MIKE ELWELL, Wichita senior and president of Sigma Nu, said his house was putting up decorations but that "there is no enthusiasm because of the theme."
He said the reason so many houses and halls are dropping out of the competition is because they dislike the theme and want to show their disapproval by not participating. It is a type of passive resistance, he said.
There are still those groups that feel the theme is not bad and seem to have enthusiasm and drive for the decorations.
Hashinger Hall is continuing the tradition of decorations this year and the chairman of the decorations committee has had no problems getting people to help with preparations. She thought the theme was a bit "different" but not very difficult to work with.
ANOTHER GROUP that is going to keep the tradition is Sigma Chi fraternity. The pledge class is already at work putting the final touches on the decorations and their will to work has not been hampered by the theme, according to house members.
Joseph R. Pearson Hall, Chi Omega sorority, Alpha Phi sorority, Lewis Hall, Fred Ellsworth Hall and Templin Hall will all participate this weekend in showing
giant Jayhawks and their troubles in achieving a higher education.
The problem of the theme has hit almost all of the houses on campus in some way. General opinion seems to be that if next year's theme is not the traditional type, there may be an even sharper dwindling of decorations for alumni to see when they visit for homecoming.
The homecoming theme for 1963 may seem uninspiring to many campus groups, but to Bob Oyler, 13. son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert B. Oyler, 700 Mass, it is another opportunity to show KU school spirit.
Bob, a student at West Junior High School, has made his own set of homecoming decorations every year since 1959.
HE WAITS UNTIL the KU theme is announced and then uses his own imagination to construct a decoration. He gets his materials for his display from sororities and fraternities at the end of each homecoming weekend to be used in the next year.
He has received assistance from Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity which has given him many materials in the last few years.
In recent years, Bob has recruited the help of several school friends to build the decoration. This year he plans to portray a KU professor teaching KU football players how to build a rocket to fly to the moon.
Since there will be a teachers conference for Lawrence school teachers Thursday and Friday. Bob will have those two days off to do additional work on his decoration. He should have it completed by Friday.
JFK Foes' Rights Bill Rejected
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — President Kennedy today won his battle to block a civil rights bill he felt was too strong to pass Congress when the House Judiciary Committee rejected the measure by a vote of 19-15.
The committee action climaxed strenuous personal intervention by Kennedy and other top administration officials in the civil rights fight.
After the long-delayed showdown vote, the committee turned to consideration of a less sweeping civil rights bill which, like the strong bill it replaces, would touch on nearly every area of racial tension.
THE VOTE ON the strong bill was the first order of committee business when it met behind closed doors. Members who left the room after the balloting disclosed the vote.
Democrats and Republicans who had been lined up for the stronger bill went into the judiciary meeting conceding that they probably had been beaten. Some of them already were calling the proposed compromise a good bill that they could support.
The showdown came less than an hour after President Kennedy called both Democratic and Republican House leaders together for one final effort to nail down agreement on the compromise. He obviously was successful.
"substantial progress" toward agreement on a bipartisan bill.
There had been reports following announcement yesterday of a possible compromise that Kennedy would pay tribute publicly to Republicans for giving the White House a hand if the move were successful in getting out of committee a bill the administration believes can pass.
SPEAKER JOHN W. McCormack had given somewhat of an advance tipoff to the committee action after the White House meeting of leaders of both parties with Kennedy. He was clearly optimistic in reporting
Kennedy called on Republican House leaders after his weekly session with the Democratic Congressional leadership.
McCORMACK SAID the compromise civil rights measure, which is substantially in the form originally proposed by Kennedy, would "go a long way toward guaranteeing first class citizenship for all Americans without regard to race or creed."
He added, "I am confident the bill will be passed because this is not a partisan political issue; it is a moral issue of the greatest magnitude."
Those attending the joint meeting after the regular legislature breakfast by Democrats with Kennedy included GOP leaders Leslie Arends, Ill.; Charles Halleck, Ind., and William McCullough, Ohio, the latter ranking GOP member of the Judiciary committee. On the Democratic side, the conferees included the speaker. House Democratic leader Carl Albert of Oklahoma, and judiciary chairman Emmanuel Celler, N.Y.
leader Mike Mansfield, Mont., was asked how the compromise civil rights bill might fare in the Senate.
He chose not to make an predictions on what will happen in the Senate, where a Southern filibuster is certain when the legislation comes over from the House.
WHEN THE Democratic leaders left the President's office, Senate
"We will, of course, wait for the House bill to reach us and then take a look at it." Mansfield replied.
to hear the reasoning as to why the request was cut completely."
MISS LANE SAID the Radio Production Center's appropriation should be doubled from the $400 recommended by the finance committee. The center—which has distributed an explanation of his requests to most ASC members — asked for $979.38.
(Continued from page 1)
Jane Breckenridge, Louisburg junior and women's small residence hall representative, agreed with Swartz and Miss Lane.
"Right now the "Whathatchmacallis" are financed by the residence halls." Miss Breckenridge said "They should be financed through the ASC because they are open to the entire University."
Tom Woods, Arkansas City junior and fraternity district representative, said "Whatchamacallis" are, in reality, residence hall functions.
"THE AURH ITSELF is not representative of the entire student body." Woods said. "We should look at these requests from the standpoint of what the organizations do for the University as a whole."
Woods said he is satisfied with the finance committee's proposals.
Representatives Attack-
Guaranteed to shock, to excite, to titillate the cerebral functions.
Dr. Wilhelm Wolfgang Schuetz, executive chairman of Council for Reunification — "Germany Indivisible" — will speak at 4 p.m., Nov. 5, in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union on "The European Community and the Atlantic Partnership."
Dr. Schuetz has lectured widely in Europe and North America as a representative of the West German government.
THE BOOK RACK
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Index of Bidden Books
German Executive Will Speak Nov. 5
A former Swiss newspaper correspondent and presently a radio political commentator in Stuttgart, Dr. Schuetz was elected to head the Council for Reunification in 1957 and again in 1961.
In 1963 he headed a West German delegation to the Commission on Human Rights of the United Nations which protested the erection of the Berlin wall.
St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center
1910 Stratford Road
Charles Portwood, Shawnee Mission senior and ASC treasurer, said the AURH sponsors the "Whatchamacallits" mainly for the residence halls.
Dr. Schuetz received his Ph.D. in political science from the University of Heidelberg in 1934.
"The fact that everyone is invited is fine," Portwood said. "But just because the AURH invites everyone on campus to attend these functions is no reason why the council should support them."
"I realize that few organizations get what they ask for." Crowther said. "But I am particularly interested in this appropriation since I am a representative of the School of Law. However, I have found nothing in the recommendations which appears particularly controversial to me."
Marshall Crowther, Salina second-year law student and School of Law representative, said he will ask tonight why the Student Bar Association is recommended only $159, compared to $250 granted it last year by the ASC.
JOHN STUCKEY, Pittsburg senior and ASC chairman, said he is "very satisfied" with the recommendations of the finance committee.
"A lot of careful planning went into the committee's report," Stuckey said.
Bob Tieszen, McPherson senior and fraternity district representative, would not comment on the financing committee's recommendations.
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ASC Reverses; $100 to AURH
Bv Fred Frailev
The All Student Council gave the Association of University Residence Halls a $100 appropriation at 2:15 this morning, climaxing a seven-and-a-half hour budget meeting.
Reversing a decision made against the allotment six hours earlier, the ASC granted the funds to the AURH to aid in financing "Whatchamacallit" dances.
ASC Chairman John Stuckey, Pittsburgh senior, cast the deciding vote in both instances after the council twice deadlocked on the issue. 13-13.
ACTUALLY, the AURH appropriation was $94.23. After making preliminary decisions on grants to 12 student organizations, the ASC found itself $91 over its record budget of $8,300.
At this point, Harry Bretschneider, Kansas City, Mo., senior, moved that the AURH be given $100 and the resulting $191 deficit be charged proportionately against the appropriations of all organizations except the ASC and People-to-People. Bretschneider's motion passed, 14-12.
Then, Larry Bast, Topeka sophomore, proposed to eliminate the AURH grant. The vote was a tie, and Stuckey, who as chairman may vote only in case of a tie, decided in favor of the AURH.
Six hours earlier in the session, Stuckey had broken the first tie by voting against a $240 appropriation to the AURH.
"MY FIRST vote was based upon personal feeling against the AURH application," Stuckey explained afterward. "The second time, however, I felt the council wanted the money to go to the AURH."
The AURH's original request for $450, none of which the ASC Finance and Auditing Committee recommended, was the first item discussed and a major source of conflict between council members.
Jim Tschechtelin, Shawnee Mission junior and AURH president, told the council that the "Whatchamacallis" were begun last year in response to the University administration's criticism of barn parties.
"THE AURR TOOK it upon itself to provide an alternative," he said. "No other group has tried anything like this on a regular basis."
Tschechtelin said the dances, held in the large residence halls, are open to all students.
Tieszen said the AURH should finance the dances, "which it takes upon itself to hold."
ANOTHER BUDGET request which the finance committee did not recommend was also partially granted. The ASC voted $94.23 to its Human Rights Committee to send two delegates to the National Conference on Race and Religion in Washington, D.C., next month.
Cordell Meeks, Kansas City senior and KU civil rights coordinator, asked the ASC to give the eight-man delegation at least a portion of the $225 it requested because of the relevance the conference will have on campus problems.
Several council members said the finance committee's opinion that the race and religion conference is not connected with student government was illogical.
GREG TURNER, Seattle, Wash., senior, said the ASC should have had a voice in choosing the delegates, who were picked by other groups. He then moved that the $94.23 be given to the HRC instead of to the delegation as a whole.
All organizations except the ASC and the Engineering School Council were granted at least the amount recommended by the financing committee. The ASC appropriation was lowered $400 to $3,183 through $200 cuts in the elections and printing funds.
The finance committee recommended $400 for the Engineering School Council. This was trimmed by the ASC first to $300 and then to $282.69 when the $191 over-appropriation was distributed.
People-to-People was not included in the proportional distribution of the deficit because it was given $2.000 by the University in a special grant which the ASC could not allot to other groups.
Other appropriations approved were:
Current Events, $942.30; Business School Council, $186.58; Alpha Phi Omega, service fraternity, $169.61; Mortar Board, $200; Radio Production Center, $723.35; American Pharmaceutical Association, $188.46, and Student Bar Association, $235.55.
See Related Story on page 8
Daily Hansan
61st Year, No. 34
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Wednesday, Oct. 30, 1963
THE PUBLIC LIBRARY OF BOSTON
BIRD'S EYE VIEW—KU students and visitors may get an aerial view of the campus by looking at a scale model in the Kansas Union lobby. The
one inch to 100 feet scale model was given to the University by the Class of 1962. All the present buildings and some proposed constructions are included in the $4,500 display.
KU Police Chief Skillman Dies
Joe Skillman, chief of the KU traffic and security department, died suddenly early this morning of a heart attack at the KU Medical Center in Kansas City. He was 51.
Chief Skillman became ill early last night and was rushed to the Medical Center.
CHEIF SKILLMAN had been with KU since 1948 and had been chief since 1951. He had formerly been at Baxter Springs.
He leaves his wife, Mrs. Ruth M. Skillman, 2413 Ohio; one daughter, Mrs. Eula Belle McNiff, 508 W. 25th, and a sister, Mrs. Lavene Mitchell, 1515 Engel road, all of Lawrence, another sister, Mrs. Hershel Sease, Kansas City, Mo., his mother and stepfather, Mr. and Mrs. Don Pattus, Baxter Springs, and two grandsons.
Chief Skillman was born in Joplin, Mo. He was active in the International Association of Chiefs of Police, past Noble Grand of the L.O.O.F., and a member of the Acacia Masonic Lodge No. 9. He was active in Boy Scouts for 20 years and held the Silver Beaver Award. He was a member of the First Christian Church.
Captain Willard Anderson of the department will serve as acting chief of the Traffic and Security office at KU.
and in the Lawrence community have lost a great personage. Mr. Skillman played an important role in the life of the University in a quiet and reassuring way yet with great forcefulness. He was my friend, as he was a friend to many. I feel the loss deeply."
CHANCELLOR W. Clarke Wescowc aid, "All of us in the University
PARKER
Chief Joe Skillman
Keith Lawton, vice chancellor for operations, said;
"Joe skillman played a highly significant role in the development of the parking, traffic and security program of the University through the difficult growth years since 1950. His rare talents of remarkable native judgment, intense loyalty and understanding of young people were strong assets to all operations.
"His ability to rise to the ever increasing responsibility of his position was outstanding."
Skillman initiated the traffic program last year that resulted in the traffic booths on campus.
HE WAS A LEADER and a forceful influence in the Boy Scout program of Lawrence and the area. He was Pelathe district chairman for two terms and was serving on the Kaw Council executive committee.
The University, his co-workers and I personally have suffered a great loss."
Funeral services will be at 10 a.m., Friday at the First Christian church, and at 10 a.m. Saturday in the First Christian Church of Baxter Springs. Burial will be in the Forest Park Cemetery, Joplin, Mo.
Friends may call at the Rumsey Funeral Home until 9 p.m. tomorrow,
Playboy Philosophy Dissected at PBOAE Lecture
Bv Clare Casey
The Playboy philosophy of Hugh Hefner, editor of Playboy magazine, received detailed examination last night at the second lecture of the Philosophical Bases of Absolutely Everything (PBOAE).
John North, assistant instructor of sociology, and Myra Olstead, assistant professor of English, gave a report on the "Playboy Philosophy" as they understood it after reading Playboy magazine.
North said he had reviewed the magazine in the hopes "of finding the naked truth of things." He said he found Playboy presented a bold, fearless, and revealing portraital of the facts.
NORTH SAID the magazine is based primarily on "lookership" rather than readership.
North said the underlying purpose of the Playboy philosophy is to breach this gap between "lookership" and readership.
"At the same time, the magazine is designed for the young, urban male who can afford the tastes described in the articles," he said. "The main emphasis is placed on truth and beauty as it is concerned with the liberal mind."
He said Hefner seemed concerned with three basic ideas: religion, censorship and sex. But, North said Hefner's interest in religion was only to the extent it influences the attitudes of sex, and his interest in censorship goes only so far as it repress the ideas that reflect sex.
"THEREFORE, we see that Hefner is mainly interested in sex," North said.
However, Prof. Olstead said, "Mr. Hefner's philosophy is for the young, but unfortunately it is assimilated by youngsters of all ages."
However, Prof. Olstead said.
prof. Olstead said one reason a young man is attracted to women is
for the purpose of further defining his masculinity. She also said there is a constant fear in young men of the failure which comes with sex.
"It appears that this fear of failure is what Hefner is against." Prof. Olstead said. "The sense of wonder and beauty in sex is taken away by Hefner for he makes it artificial, and the young man loses his sense of natural discovery."
PROF. OLSTEAD said Hefner presents no philosophy, but merely a discussion. At the same time, she said he misunderstands the historical issues behind sex and love and, he places too much emphasis on the medieval attitudes toward sex.
Weather
Skies will be partly cloudy tomorrow with slightly warmer temperatures expected. The low tonight will be 42 to 48.
Prof. Olstead referred to Hefner's Playboy magazine as a "curiosity book for beginners."
"He (Hefner) tells the beginner what he must do and what he must wear if he is to be successful." Prof. Olstead said. "If everything then fails there is always the 'come to the laboratory.'"
PROF. OLSTEAD said Hefner seems to narrow his words down to the basic relationship between men and women for the simple reason that it promoted his magazine and clubs.
Prof. Olstead said Playboy does not warn the young men of the legal aspects or the social responsibilities that he is facing.
"Mr. Hefner is not a selfish scholar seeking truth, but a man trying to say what he knows his audience wants to hear, because it will put money in his pocket and increase his ego," she said.
North said we are living in a world of double standards in the sense that we are preaching and practicing at the same time.
"MY COLLEGE DAYS were spent on 40 acres of Christian atmosphere." North said. "If what went on today, should have happened then, the 40 acres would have plowed themselves up."
North added, however, the gap between practice and preaching in sex is slowly becoming narrower.
"Today we are doing less preaching and more practicing," North said. "Even the religious groups are undergoing change. Recently, the Methodist church decided social drinking was acceptable.
"Today, we are living with three generations, and new adjustments take time. The older generation is always wanting to mai-tain the status quo."
Page 2
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 30, 1963
Human Document
(Editor's Note: The letter below was written by a young Negro in the U.S. Air Force to Ralph McGill, editor of the Atlanta (Ga.) Constitution. McGill has long supported the Negro cause in his newspaper.)
Dear Mr. McGill: After watching you on television on June 11 following the telecasting of the Alabama espisode I decided I would write you a letter. I am a Negro currently serving in the Air Force and I am from the South (N.C.). I have always been proud of my race and the strides we as Negroes have made and are making but I must confess that I had very little pride in being an American. You must find this quite hard to believe. I do not consider myself an extremist and I deplore such organizations as the Black Muslims as you must certainly deplore the Ku Klux Klan.
Until recently I felt nothing towards the white race, neither hate nor love. Even though I suffered numerous indignities as a Negro youth growing up in the South I did not hate; I was confused and could not understand why the color of one's skin made him superior or inferior. But as I grew older my confusion changed into a feeling of distrust and finally dislike but not hate. When I read of incidents taking place in other Southern states such as the murder of Emmet Till and his murderers being allowed to go free, or when a Negro prisoner accused of rape was dragged from his cell and murdered in broad daylight, or when a Negro girl is raped by six white soldiers and they get suspended jail terms of 18 months, when in a similar case the woman was white and the attackers Negro they were all put to death, I felt that a gross miscarriage of justice had occurred and true I felt I should hate all white persons but this feeling was short lived.
I did not really begin to hate your race, Mr. McGill, until I saw pictures of Negro women and children being bitten by police dogs and being battered by fire hoses. I felt a consuming hatred which stripped away any feeling of national pride that I might have had. Members of my race have died to protect this country. What did they die for? Did they die in vain? Did they die so that their children and their children's children would
be forever discriminated against? Did they die for a country safe so that the Bull Connors, George Wallaces and Governor Barnetts would be free to persecute their children? Is a Negro death on the battlefield justified by the type of society we are forced to live in?
During World War II both white and Negro soldiers died together on the battlefield fighting an intruder who would have destroyed our way of life, or should I say your way of life and the kind I was some day hoping to have. Who were these intruders? The Germans and Japanese, of course. Now a German or Japanese can come to this country and move freely in a society from which I am barred. What type reasoning dictates this?
I ask you these questions, Mr. McGill, because you are white and you are a Southerner. I would like your side of this issue explained to me.
I know that we as Negroes have a long way to go and that we should be prepared to assume the responsibilities as well as the privileges of first class citizenship. There is an untapped reservoir of talent in the Negro race. As soon as the Negro can escape the stigma of being a second class citizen, as soon as it is found that he can do more than dance and play baseball, or to be a house maid or elevator operator, the faster his talents can be discovered and guided into the proper channels, the sooner we will as a race be able to make some concrete contributions to our country. Did you ever think of what a country might have had if this racial question had been settled years ago as it should have been?
I know that being a moderate or liberal in the South has its drawbacks, but being a Negro is far worse.
It will only be through the efforts of men committed to doing what is right that this problem can be solved. Demonstrations won't do it and police dogs can't do it either. I would like to take this opportunity to thank you for your efforts to bring about a solution to this problem. If we can have enough men of commitment on both sides there would be no Black Muslims, Ku Klux Klan, Adam Clayton Powell or George Wallace.
About These Athletes—
High school athletics is the most overemphasized institution in American society today. It is my contention that instead of building strong bodies and keen competitors as advertised, they are for the most part making a national physique of fat-heads and jelly-bellies.
The fat-heads are the young athletic heroes and the jelly-bellies are the young worshippers. Eventually—around the age of 25—the two rendezvous around some middle ground—the throat (a strong siney organ, the most notable function of which—in the athletic world—is to holler with at the game).
TAKE THE AVERAGE high school hero—call him Easy Ed. He has poured his guts out from age 5 up to get the big holler from the stands. What's more, he's working on sports that will be as beneficial to him in later life as a banana in the ear—show me a man past 25 who is running at the track, shooting baskets at the gym, or hitting the tackle dummy down at the stadium and I'll show you an idiot or a saint, the latter being as secrese as brick-layers at the Stork Club.
Easy Ed gets a distorted view of society. He may sit by a genius in class, but to our hero the genius is "that squirrelly guy." Big and smiling, a friend to all, our Ed learns that he isn't expected to contribute anything useful to others except his athletics. All he has to do is play at the current sport of kings and let the world slide by, which it does as soon as it can find a new hero, leaving Easy Ed discarded and unloved and talking his head off to hark back to the good old days.
Now the worshippers—Lil' Albert. Albert is a hearty fellow who wants to be one of us, or one of you, or one of them. When he was a kid, Albert was no great shakes at basketball, but he was good at kick-the-can and annie-annie-over. He would go down the slippery slide backwards if it wasn't a rainy day, and the girls squealed almost as loudly when he pushed the merrygo-round as when our future fat-head did. Come high school time, Li'l Albert didn't make it—maybe he grew slowly or his mama wanted him to play a clarinet in the band. Now Albert is on the side-lines at the game.
BUSTY LITTLE SUZIE MacAfee is leading the cheers and there's nothing for him to do but holler till the arteriosus grandus pops in his forehead. Can't look like a bad sport. He sits and cheers and his belly sags.
And that, precisely, is why the system stinks. The physically endowed are encouraged to participate in sports too strenuous to be of lasting value. The masses are expected to genuflect before the hero. The net effect is a nation which talks about athletics instead of participating in them.
However, Albert's advantage over Ed should by this time be obvious—he has a head start on exercising the organ making the greatest contribution to the athletic world—the tough, sinewy throat.
Archery, hiking, sailing, golf, and other such sports are overlooked in high school sports education programs, and the person who happens to learn one of these to carry with him in later life is lucky indeed.
But, perhaps this is just as well. We Americans might not have anything to talk about, and then the throat—the mighty, sinewy throat—would become as flabby as the rest of the national physique.
Tom Coffman
GOLDWATER VS. GOLDWATER
STATEMENTS STATEMENTS
- BUT -
- HOWEVER -
- ANYHOW -
- YET -
- STILL -
ALTHOUGH
© 1963 HERSLOCK
"Why Should I Debate Rockefeller?"
BOOK REVIEWS
THE REINS OF POWER, by Bernard Schwartz (Hill and Wang, $4.50).
Without pretending to do an all-compassing job on the Constitutional history of the United States, Bernard Schwartz has provided for the new Hill and Wang series on American history what is at least an illuminating essay. It is a small book, but one with interesting perceptions.
Schwartz, for example, gives somewhat more background on the legalistic backgrounds of the American system and less discussion of developments. To him, English constitutional history is highly important, but not merely because of the platitudinous name of John Locke. Sir Edward Coke, he feels, may be even more significant, for Coke's views were not academic speculation but the law of the land, and as a judge himself he handed down important pronouncements on the law.
Beyond this early phase, which Schwartz calls "Seedtime," the predictable history unfolds—the American Revolution, the fight over the Constitution, the important decisions of Marshall and the beginnings of judicial review, the pre-Civil War disputes over state rights and nullification, the crisis of the war itself, the high-riding Gilded Age days of Congress supreme, the early 20th century power of the Supreme Court, the revolution of the thirties and the ascendancy of the executive, and the recent series of decisions that culminated in Baker v. Carr on legislative apportionment.
Of this last case, Schwartz suggests that the court may have handed down a decision that will lead to revitalization of the legislature itself, a thought that obviously has not occurred to the many who have damned the high bench for daring to encroach once more upon political property of the states.—CMP
THE SANDBOX and THE DEATH OF BESSIE SMITH, by Edward Albee (Signet, 60 cents).
These are two one-act plays by the playwright now riding so high because of "Who's Afraid of Virginia Woolf?" Albee is a man in his early thirties who made his debut with "The Zoo Story" and followed it with "The American Dream" and "Virginia Woolf."
"The Sandbox" is a little episode taking place at the beach where Mommy and Daddy are shown preparing Grandma for her burial. "The Death of Bessie Smith" is based on a newspaper account of the death of the great blues singer in Memphis. And a third play, "Fam and Yam," a dialogue between two playwrights, is included.
Al Sh
University of Kansas student newspaper
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Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904, triweekly 1908, daily Jan. 16, 1912.
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Member Inland Daily Press Association, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by National Advertising Service, 18 East 50 St., New York 22, N.Y. News service: United Press International. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas.
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BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Bob Brooks ... Business Manager
Page 3
AUFS Scholar Lauds Interest Shown in Current Affairs Today
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A visiting foreign area expert said last night that he is pleased to note that students in American colleges and universities are taking an active interest in the affairs of the day.
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Louis Dupree, an American Universities Field Staff (AUFS) representative, said when he was attending college in the 1950's, there was a feeling of apathy prevalent among students concerning the events which took place around them. But, he said, in the 1960's, this apathetic attitude among students has been replaced by one of active curiosity and interest.
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He arrived here Monday for a 10-day visit, during which he will deliver about 24 lectures to classes at KU and Lawrence High School.
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"This show of interest gratifies me very much. It is good to see the students take part in activities such as the Peace Corps. It shows that their interest can be aroused, that they can rally around a cause," Prof. Dupree said.
PROF. DUPREE, an anthropologist, has specialized in the Indo-European areas of the Middle and Far East countries.
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Wednesday, Oct. 30, 1963 University Daily Kansan
After earning the M.A. in 1953 and the Ph.D. in 1954 at Harvard University Graduate School, Prof. Dupree joined the faculty of the Air University and later was appointed Associate Professor of Anthropology at Pennsylvania State University. He still holds this position concurrently with his AUFS job.
Editor
Bomber Bombs Bomber
SYRACUSE, Sicily — (UPI) — An anonymous telephone tipster told police yesterday a bomb had been planted in a movie theater where an anti-Fascist film, "Allarmi, Siam Fascisti" (To Arms, We Are Fascists), was being shown.
manager
Police cleared everyone out of the theater and found a ticking package under a seat. They opened it carefully and found an alarm clock.
Prof. Dupree explained that the AUFS was established after World War II as a co-operative program among 12 member universities for the purpose of establishing a staff of experts on certain areas of the world. These experts are rotated between the United States and the countries in which they are specialists. While in the U.S., the specialists visit all the participating universities and lecture on their specialty area.
"THE PURPOSE of the AUFS is to find men who know a particular area. The men must know the language and background of the people. They may be economists, sociologists, geographers or scholars from almost any discipline. The men are
sent to the particular part of the world where their particular knowledge will be most useful," Prof. Dupree said.
Prof. Dupree said he became interested in his specialty area (the area around and including Pakistan and Afghanistan) by sheer accident.
"I was stationed in the Far East during the war, and I liked the area. When the war was over and I went to college, I majored in anthropology and specialized in the Far Eastern area. One day, when I was an undergraduate at Harvard, a professor asked me if I would like to go on a field study trip to Afghanistan. On that trip, I fell in love with that part of the world." Prof. Dupree said.
Do you know Robbe-Grillet? Butor? Sarrute?
A Chicago University scholar who does know will present the second Humanities Series lecture this year at KU at 8 p.m., Nov. 5, in Fraser Theater. The lecture on "The French New Novel" by Bruce A. Morrisissette, professor of French literature, will be followed by an informal reception by the Faculty Club.
French Literature Expert To Give Humanities Talks
He also has a lively interest in the new French and Italian motion pictures, and will lecture on them at 4 p.m. Nov. 4 in the Forum Room of the Kansas Union at a matinee program sponsored by Student Union Activities. He will speak on "The Evolution of the New Cinema in France and Italy."
DURING HIS three-day visit, Prof. Morrisette will also speak to classes in English, recent European history, and French literature. At dinner Monday evening with members and guests of Phi Delta Phi, French honor society, he will speak on "New Light on Rimbaud's Sonnet, 'Voyelles'" The dinner will be
He has lectured at Oberlin, Iowa. Emery, and other universities, and he taught at Johns Hopkins and Washington University before joining the Chicago faculty.
He was born in 1911 in Richmond, Va, received a B.A. degree at the University of Richmond, Doctorat d'Univ., at Clermont-Ferrand, France, and a Ph.D at Johns Hopkins. He was a Guggenheim Fellow in 1958-59, and was honored at Chevalier dans l'Ordre des Palmes Academiques. He has presented papers at many learned society meetings, including two at the College de France, Paris.
at 6 p.m. in the English Room of the Kansas Union. He will also have two luncheons with French faculty members.
Besides articles and criticisms in American and French publications, he has published several books, including "Life and Works of Marie-Catherine Desjardins," "The Great Rimbaud Forgery," and "Les Romans de Robe-Grillet."
The Classical Film Series
presents
"Last Year at Marienbad"
a French language film with English subtitles directed by Alain Resnais in 1960
***
Wednesday,30 October
Fraser Theater - 7:00 p.m.- Admission 60c
Season tickets now specially priced at $3.50 for nine films
On sale at Kansas Union ticket desk
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 30, 1963
African Revolution Would Halt Race Unrest, Prof. Harris Says
Violent overthrow of the white government is the only solution to the racial problem in the Republic of South Africa, Errol E. Harris, professor of philosophy, said last night.
Since the black people in South Africa cannot vote, there is no constitutional means of changing the government and settling the racial issue. This means the government must be changed by non-constitutional methods, and, in this case "non-constitutional means violence," he said.
"If I had been true to myself, and I was saying this at the time I lived there, there is nothing we can do today except form a revolution," Prof. Harris said.
HIS COMMENTS came as he answered questions from the audience after his talk on the apartheid policy (the physical separation of the white and black races) of South Africa.
$a_{1}$ present there are sporadic protests and strikes, but if the movement became organized it could become widespread. The question then becomes one of time. If the revolt could last long enough for aid to arrive from outside countries it could succeed, Prof. Harris said.
Communist China and India would send arms and supplies to the rebels, he said. India is indignant about the treatment given her citizens in South Africa, he said.
FASSIVE RESISTANCE requires too much organization of the black people. The white South Africans prevent this consolidation of a liberal movement through legislation and force he added. Agitators are prevented from speaking and are labeled Communist or deported. Speakers advocating positions unpopular with the white government are "banned," meaning they cannot meet in groups of more than two people, Prof. Harris said.
A trade boycott and other economic sanctions, although going a long way, will not be successful because South Africa has a booming economy, he said, and, it would be difficult to prevent foreign capital from being invested in the country and even harder to discourage all trade to South Africa.
"Anyway, I don't believe it would change the internal government," Prof. Harris said.
The attitude of the black south African towards the rest of the white people in the world depends on the support the U.S. gives the white government. The only way to stop a negative attitude towards all white people is to make it clear to Africans that the apartheid policy is equally deplorable to us, Prof. Harris said.
"What does a white liberal do in South Africa? Pack up his bags and leave?" , a student asked.
"I packed mine," Prof. Harris said, smiling.
moves ahead
moves ahead
He said the racial unrest is brought on by the white South African's attitude. They feel that integration would lead, gradual steps, to a breakdown of values, resulting in miscegenation or racial intermarriages, Prof. Harris said.
THIS IS a prospect that white South Africans oppose.
The country must deal with this attitude and perhaps the policy of apartheid is the best answer in his context, he said.
Other alternatives to apartheid are integration or "parallelism (a policy of equal, but separate facilities. Integration is unacceptable and parallelism is ineffective due to the economic conditions which depend on the black worker for labor in South African industry, Prof. Harris said.
The white government has set up a plan of racial separation which still allows them to dominate the black African. This plan proposes placing nearly 12 million African Bantus on reserves which account
for about 13 per cent of the area of the nation, he said.
THE MINORITY, some three million white people, would have that part of the country which contains most of natural resources of the nation.
Prof. Harris said the Bantu natives will be allowed to work in the industrial areas of the white region out will not be allowed to increase their skills in order to compete with the labor supply.
The natives in their region will elect representatives but these people will have no part in the governing of South Africa. They will not be allowed to form a police force, that being the duty of the white government, he said.
The tie between black and white will be one of economic "interdependence" Pror. Harris said.
PATRONIZE YOUR
• 'ADVERTISERS •
Lecture Recital Set | Bored Choir Strikes
Reinhold Schmidt, professor of voice at the University of Kansas, will give a lecture-recital at the district convention of the National Association of Teachers of Singing. The meeting will be held Nov. 12 at the University of Oklahoma.
BEDWORTH, England — (UPI)—Eight choir members at All Saint Angelican Church were on strike today, complaining they were tired of singing the same old hymns the same way week after week.
"Some of the choir members," said Curate Rev. Peter Dominy, "are out of harmony with the organist."
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Homemakers Learn to Save Time
The home management house located on West 16th near Watkins hospital is a proving grounds for the principles home economics majors learn in classes.
While practicing household tasks of cleaning and cooking, KU women students learn how to save time and energy with motion reductions at the home management house.
In addition to the time-motion studies, the five women students, plan the buget, all meals, cleaning, shopping and other management at the house while carrying all full course loads.
The five women students living in the house now, end their period of experimental living this week. Judy Sims, LaCygne senior, explained one recent time-motion study. In which two methods of cleaning a floor were tested to find which was quickest and most efficient.
Time-motion studies in all phases of home management including child care, personal grooming, cleaning and sewing have been carried out by the students.
THOSE WHO live in the house the first half of the semester are: Jean Peterson, Lawrence senior; Sandra Ray, Ft. Lewis, Wash. senior; Susan Schrader, Kingsley senior; and Judy Sims, LaCygne senior.
Mrs. Helen Adams, assistant professor of home economics and house supervisor, says the girls learn skills while living there that will benefit their future jobs and lives as homemakers.
Tennis Singles End
For the Women's Recreation Association Tennis single finals at 4 p.m. today, Bea Baxter, Little River sophomore, Douthart Hall, will face Marie Siefken, Lawrence graduate student on the Mallott courts.
Page 5
The final match winner is determined by the best two out of three sets.
About 45 women representing 13 living groups entered the tournament competition which began September 30.
In her semi-final match Miss Sayre defeated Judy Waterman, Wichita junior, Miller Hall. 11-1 and 11-4.
The WRA badminton intramural singles ended last week with Joyce Sayre, Southwest City, Mo. senior, Lewis Hall, the winner. She defeated Eleanor Burkhead, Kansas City, Mo. senior, representing Jayettes, in the finals, 11-8 and 11-4.
Miss Baxter had defeated Camille Storey, Overland Park sophomore, Pi Beta Phi, in the semi-finals last week: 6-2 and 6-1.
In her semi-final match Miss Siefken won over Ardie Bond, Kirkwood, Mo. junior, Kappa Alpha Theta: 6-1 and 6-3.
Miss Burkhead had previously defeated Marie Siefken, Jayette representative. 11-9 and 11-1.
The badminton singles began Oct. 1 with 60 entrants from 15 living groups.
DIVISION I
ROUND ROBIN basketball tournament win-loss records for teams in the contest as it began the fourth round this week are:
Win Loss
Carruth O'Leary 3 0
Miller 1 2
Corbin I 1 1
GSP (3 E) 0 3
Alpha Delta Pi 2 1
GSP (1 W) 0 2
Douthart 1 1
Lewis Win Loss
Alpha Omicron Pi 2 0
Corbian II 2 1
GSP (Ground Floor) 2 2
Alkyns 2 0
GSP (Crossbar) 2 0
Alpha Phi 1 1
DIVISION II
Wednesday, Oct. 30, 1963 University Daily Kansan
DIVISION III
| | Win | Loss |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Hashinger | 1 | 2 |
| Kappa Kappa Gamma | 3 | 1 |
| GSP (4 W) | 1 | 1 |
| Kappa Alpha Theta | 1 | 2 |
| GSP (4 W) | 1 | 2 |
| Jayettes | 0 | 3 |
| GSP (4 E) | 2 | 1 |
| Delta Delta Delta | 1 | 2 |
Chi Omega Win Loss
Pi Beta Phi 0 3
GSP (3 W) 2 1
Alpha Chi Omega 1 2
Grice Pearson 2 2
GSP (1 E) 1 1
Delta Gamma 2 1
DIVISION IV
A study by University of Southern California scientists found that tattooed men showed a higher rate of divorces plus a greater number of courts martial than did non-tatooed men.
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"There's Charles de Gaulle—right under the 'Cafe-Bar' sign!"
By Margaret Hughes
Slides Bring Back Memories of Paris
"Remember that street? We got lost there the first morning and had to eat sardines for breakfast because that's all we knew how to order."
"And will you look at Breon (Mitchell, Salina senior) painting the view from his bedroom window in his pajamas."
THESE WERE some of the reminiscent comments heard as about twenty of the students who went to France last summer on the Summer Language Institute met last night in the Union to show slides of their trip.
"Oh, there's me!" squaled Sharon Staleup, Lawrence sophomore, looking at a back view of a short, dark-haired girl in a black and red-plaid dress.
"It might be me," piped in Lawrie Cena, Arkansas City sophomore. "I wore that dress almost as much as you did."
THE GROUP saw views of Notre Dame, the Loire valley, stained glass windows, and French boys playing in the parks.
And the boys finally got an inside view of the girls' rooms at the "Protection de la Jeune Fille."
However, the strongest memories seemed to be aroused when Sheila Reynolds, Hutchinson sophomore, showed a slide of shelves of French pastry.
Several of the "Instituters" showed slides of their trips during the "free week," when everyone could travel on his own. Mary Geiger, Topeka sophomore, had pictures of Rome; Ann Flood, Topeka sophomore, views of Switzerland; Paul Piper, Parsons sophomore, scenes on the Riviera; and Vicki Gillespie, Indianola, Iowa, sophomore, pictures of London.
KU SENT 35 students to France for nine weeks last summer to study in Paris and tour France.
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University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 30, 1963
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FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE
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Paper bounds are no longer stacked numerically under individual publishers No longer will frustrating time be spent tracking down titles Now all paper-bounds are grouped according to subject classifications 26 total groups 85 total subject sections All related titles are together Handy Satisfying All subject sections are plainly marked Quick identification is possible Directories are posted to assist you even more All sections keyed to published guides Yes, it is much better now Drop in and look around Browse.
KANSAS UNION BOOKSTORE
P. S. Our gigantic Book Sale will be held November 6, 1963 See the Kansan on Tuesday, November 5, for the complete listing Don't miss it.
Wednesday, Oct. 30, 1963 University Daily Kansan
Page 7
Age 70 Means Travel, Writing
Bv Leta Cathcart
He had the highest bowling game score (298) in Lawrence in 1943.
He taught in a country school the year after he was graduated from high school.
He has heard Teddy Roosevelt and William Jennings Bryan speak.
Prof. Buehler said the last year before retirement is rather embarrassing. He said he doesn't know quite how to act when a question of next year's policy arises. "You can't say it doesn't make any difference. I won't be here."
He is the author or co-author of 22 books.
After his retirement, Prof. Buehler hopes to write an article on how to act during the last year before retirement. He also hopes to catch up on his reading, collaborate on a high school speech textbook, and travel.
The man? Ezra Christian "Bill" Buehler, professor of speech and drama at KU.
PROF. BUEHLER will retire this spring after 39 years of teaching here. He thinks "retirement is just normal."
"GREECE AND IRELAND are musts." He said the only connection he had with either country was that he knew of an Irishman that is President of the United States. He and his wife may also take a trip around the world. "Mrs. B. likes to travel," he said.
Prof. Buchler was born in Sterling, Nebraska, on Friday, May 13, 1894. He said Friday the 13th has always been a lucky day for him. He attended grade school in a country schoolhouse that had eight grades in one room.
Prof. Euehler worked on a wheat farm in Washington for two summers to earn money to go to college. He said one of the reasons he went to college in the days when few had such ambitions was that he didn't like the farm.
Prof. Buehler was interested in the ministry for a short time, but World War I interrupted. He was a corporal in the 350th infantry, 88th division, in Europe.
AFTER THE WAR, he decided not to go into the ministry. Prof. Buehler said, "I lost my naive ideals."
Prof. Buehler is a man "without a college." He was graduated from Central Wesleyan College in Missouri in 1920. It was a German, Methodist-supported school. It closed shortly after World War I, due to what Prof. Buehler termed "the prejudice against Germans."
Prof. Buehler said he "more or less drifted into the field of speech." He did graduate study in this field
WASHINGTON — (UPI) — The House pushed long-pending college aid legislation over the additional hurdle yesterday, agreeing to a House-Senate conference on conflicting versions passed by the two chambers.
College Aid Bill To be Debated
Sent to conference by voice vote also were differing versions of a separate bill to continue and expand federal aid to vocational schools, continue student college loans and aid to high school science programs, and continue federal aid to so-called "impacted" school areas.
Both versions of the college aid bill call for grants and loans to public and private colleges and universities, including those with church connections. None of the money could be used to build facilities used in religious instruction.
The action further bolstered hopes of school and backers for favorable action at last on the thorny issue of college aid, as well as on the less controversial questions of vocational and impacted areas aid.
The House Armed Services committee yesterday approved a "freedom of expression" bill for the joint chiefs of staff, lengthening their term in office to four years. The committee ignored arguments that the president should be allowed to determine the length of such terms himself. But Rep. F. Edward Hebert, D-La., the chairman of the subcommittee which recommended the measure, said he expected it to be vetoed if passed by congress.
at Northwestern University in Chicago. He received a Bachelor of Oratory degree from Northwestern in 1921. It was the last degree of its kind to be given. He received his Master of Arts degree in speech in 1923. This was the first degree of its kind given at Northwestern. He did further graduate study at London University and the University of Colorado.
And 39 years ago, when Ernest Lindley was chancellor, Prof. Buehler came to KU.
HE SAID he had three "professional loves." The first of these is forensics, argumentative oratory. Prof. Buehler established the Campus Problems Speaking contest that is held annually on the campus.
Prof. Buehler's second major interest is speech communication in business and industry. He has conducted 112 seminars for professional people in 15 states during his career at KU. He worked for Spencer Chemical Company for five summers in this capacity.
One of his students was the lead pilot in the convoy that took Winston
Churchill and Franklin D. Roosevelt to the Casablanca conference. Another student became a state governor.
PROF. BUEHLER's third love is the Speech 1 program at KU. He said this is "the most significant area in our field." He said this is the only contact most students have in speaking before an audience. Eleven hundred students are involved in the Speech 1 program this semester.
"I am extremely happy in my work," Prof. Buchler said. "I can't understand why so many people have been so nice to me."
As an example, Prof. Buehler told of a student that sent him a Christmas card from South America a few years ago thanking him for the knowledge he had gained in Prof. Buehler's speech class. The student took the course in 1929.
Prof. Buehler said he had heard over 3,000 speeches in his teaching career at KU and he is still never bored. He said, "It is exciting to watch the human mind in action. You see that in a speech."
selves." He said his role as a teacher was as a "servant to the student."
Prof. Buehler has noticed some changes in the typical college student in the last 30 or 40 years. He said most students are much more confident than they were. "Stagefright is no problem any more."
"I TRY to teach people to find themselves. Then they teach them-
He also said college students have a wider range of knowledge on more subjects than did former college students.
Prof. Buehler said today's college student has more demands on his time. This preoccupation grows out of the amount of work involved in his classes and the number of extra-curricular attractions, such as Big 8 football and basketball.
PROF. BUEHLER said the college student "is more of a conformist, less of an individualist." He attributed this to the many patterns that today's student has to follow.
One disappointing factor in the speech field that Prof. Buehler pointed out was that of the quality of oratory has declined. "Churchill was the last of the orators of some significance."
He Wasn't Worth It
LONDON—(UPI)—Gregory Baverstock, 15, was sentenced to only 12 months in jail for killing his father with a cricket bat.
His mother had testified that the father was "a miserable, violent and jealous drunk" who beat her constantly.
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Page 8
University Dally Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 30, 1963
---
2. ( )
ASC Members Yawn Through Budget Session
"It's so late now that we're past the point of knowing what we are doing," said an All Student Council member sometime after 1 a.m. today.
DAN WANAMAKER, Salina junior, proposed $91 from the Radio Production Center allotment be applied against the deficit and that $100 of the $1,000 Current Events Committee grant go to the Association of University Residence Halls.
The ASC had been considering its $8,300 budget for more than six hours. It was then trying to decide, after tentatively approving $8,391 in appropriations, how to eliminate that extra $91.
In quick succession, several additional amendments were stacked on top of the original amendment until Bob Steffens, Staten Island, N.Y., graduate student, pointed out that the "amenders" had "overamended" the motion.
There were several objections to Wanamaker's motion, so Greg Turner, Seattle, Wash., senior, amended it to read that the $91 be taken from Business and Engineering school councils, the Student Law Association and the American Pharmaceutical Association.
This amendment eliminated the AURH grant, and it also brought objections.
In proposing solutions, so many amendments to amendments were added to original motions that proceedings often halted while the council figured out just exactly what it was voting on.
Each amended amendment was a different plan. For example:
BY THIS TIME, however, it was apparent that a majority of the ASC would not agree on any one of the amendments, so they were voted down one by one until only the original motion remained, and it also was rejected.
The process began anew.
The yawns came closer and closer together as the weary council continued to search for a compromise. Finally, at 2:15 a.m., the ASC approved a motion to give the AURH $100 and eliminate the resulting $191 deficit by charging it against the appropriations of all 12 organizations receiving funds except the ASC and People-to-People.
Introducing a motion immediately afterward to strike the AURH appropriation, Larry Bast, Topeka sophomore, said "For once, let's not add any amendments.
Senior midshipmen officers of the Naval ROTC unit at KU have been chosen for the fall semester.
Bast's motion was defeated by one vote and thus the All Student Council ended one of the longest sessions in its history.
The primary purpose of the midshipman battalion is to develop in the student Naval officers qualities of leadership and an appreciation for responsibility through practical experience.
Midn. Capt. Henry M. Dodd, Jr., midshipman battalion commander, Kansas City, Mo.; captain, Jr., executive officer of the midshipman battalion, Cleveland, Ohio; Midn. LCDR Neil Wood, operations officer, Topeka, Kansas; Rifle Rider, Bartlesville, Okla.; Midn. Lt. Stephen F. McCannon, supply officer, Kansas City, Missouri; public information officer, Kansas City,
Senior Officers Chosen by Navy
Officers are;
Midshipman company executive officers are:
Midn. Lt. (jg) Bart E. Blackwell, Isabell seni; Midn. Lt. (jg) Paul F. Erickson, St. Ann, Mo; Mid. Lt. (jg) David William Newcomer, Shawnee Mission.
Midshipman company commanders are:
Midn. Lt. Douglas W. Pickersgill,
Kansas City, Mo.; Midn. Lt. Lerry J.
A Wiens, Hutchinson; Midn. Lt. Leslie D
Meyer, Kirkwood, Mo.
Midshipman platoon commanders are:
Midn. Ens. David F. Pulmerlee, Law-
rence; Midn. Ens. Clayton R. Ramskill.
Midn. Ens. Bennie S. Riggs; Joseph Thiel, Joplin, Mo.; Midu Ens.
David Grant Mackenzie, Prairie Village;
Park; Midn. Ens. Thomas A. Frame, Overland
Park; Midn. Ens. Roland L. Rogers,
Garden City.
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Page 9
Professor Explains Homecoming Theme
The purpose of the change in the type of homecoming theme for house decorations this fall is to give alumni a chance to see another side of University life, said the general homecoming chairman.
Richard H. Benson, associate professor of geology, and general chairman of the faculty homecoming committee, said yesterday the decision to revise the type of theme this year was made to give students a better chance at leadership and originality in decorations.
Prof. Benson said the homecoming weekend, with all the celebration and decoration, is designed for visiting alumni. It is usually the only chance a graduate has to come and see the place where most of his ideas were formed, Prof. Benson said.
Rather than having the traditional theme pertaining to defeating an athletic opponent, this year's theme is a translation of the state motto—"To the stars through difficulty."
The image of the University is often conveyed by what the alumni see during that one weekend of the year, he said. The theme for this year is meant to show the broadening of the scope of the University in recent years.
Plans for homecoming decorations for individual groups this year are of better quality than in previous years, he said. The theme gives students more of a chance to express their pride in the University in a
different way, Prof. Benson said.
Roof Turns Sky Blue
OFFHAM, England-(UPI)-Frank Brown, 70, woke up one recent morning, opened his eyes and saw the blue sky overhead.
"The alumni come to homecoming, to see what the University is doing, he said. They know of the vital role of the University in the state and nation, and its affect on the future of the nation, he said.
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El Atenei se reunita hoy, a las 4:30 de la tarde en la sala 11 de Fraser. Un grupo de profesores y alumnos presentar una tectura de escenas escogidas de las universidades de Jose Zorilla según la tradicción hispalaica. Todas estan cordialmente invitadas.
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence
Cemetery, Stratford Road.
Civil Bldg. Office.
University Daily Kansan
Official Bulletin
Timely Topics. 7 p.m. St. Lawrence Student Center, 1915 Stratford Road. "The Eastern Orthodox Churches"—Rev. Brendan Downey, O.S.B.
TODAY
American Society of Civil Engineers,
7:30 p.m. Engineering Building,
KU Amateur Radio Club, 7:30. 118 Engineering Building.
AURI, 9 p.m. Parlor A, Kansas Union.
EARAL, Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth.
TOMORROW
Latter-Day Saints Institute of Religion,
3:30 p.m. Oread Room, Kansas Union.
Catholic Masses, 6:45 a.m. 5 p.m. St.
Lucian's Catholic Chapel, 1810 Stratford Road
Der Deutsche Verein trifft sich am
Dennerstag, den 31. Oktober, 4:30 in 502
Fachsaecke, den 31. Oktober, 4:30 in 502
Studentenliefer singen. Alle Studenten
sed herzlich eingeladen. Erfirschungen.
Poetry Hour, 4.36 p.m. Music Room,
kids' suite will read the poem of Robert Lowell,
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Student Peace Union, 4:30 p.m., Pine Room, Kansas Union.
Christian Science Organization, 7:30 pm,
Danforth Chapel. Everyone welcome.
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Mid-American Assembly to Meet
The Mid-American Assembly on 'Cultural Affairs and Foreign Relations' will be held Nov. 7-11 here.
About 60 prominent leaders in industry, labor, government, education, and communications will come from Kansas and adjoining states for the conference, the first assembly held in Kansas.
The group will meet in small discussion groups for three days to exchange ideas and opinions on pertinent issues. On the fourth day the group will consider a report of findings and recommendations in the plenary session.
One of the main speakers will be Francis Pickens Miller, special assistant to the Secretary of State, who will speak to the group Nov. 7.
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Page 10
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, Oct. 30, 1963
Kansas Schools Become League Statistic Leaders
KANSAS CITY, Mo.-The Kansas constituents of the Big Eight Conference have gained a near-monopoly on Conference individual statistical rankings as the 1963 season heads into its seventh week of play.
Individual performers from Kansas and Kansas State own the leading spots in four of the seven statistical classifications, pose definite threats for the lead in two of the seven departments and boast a bevy of darkhorses in runner-up positions.
BIG EIGHT leaders from the Kansas institutions are:
Gale Savers, Kansas, rushing, with 555 yards on 81 carries for a 6.9 average; Larry Corrigan, Kansas State, passing, with 48 of 99 completions for 499 yards; Steve Renko, Kansas, total offense, 226 rushing and 404 passing for 630 total yards; and Doug Dusenbury, Kansas State, punting, 37 kicks with a 41.4 average.
In addition, Kansas State's Ralph McFillen is threatening Dick Limerick of Iowa State for the pass receiving lead and the Wildcats' Ron Barlow stands second in punt returns behind Oklahoma State's Larry Elliott.
SAYERS, PLAYING only parttime against Oklahoma State, picked up 104 yards in seven carries against the Cowboys to regain the Conference rushing leadership from Iowa State's Tom Vaughn, 555 to 536. The week before, Vaughn posted a nine-yard lead in Conference figures to stand third among the nation's rushers while Sayers ranked fourth nationally.
Portraits of Distinction
"A Perfect Christmas Gift"
The big jump in Conference rushing this week went to Jim Grisham of Oklahoma, who moved from sixth to third with a 152-yard effort against Kansas State—best of the day for Conference runners—and ran his five-game total to 432 yards.
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727 Mass. VI 3-7164
"Smoking is our only Business"
THE NAME FOR SERVICE
★ WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT
★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK
★ BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED
★ MUFFLER SERVICE
BUSINESS MACHINES CO.
★ OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M.
9th & Mississippi VI 3-9897
★ TUNE-UPS
ART'S TEXACO
One Stop Service
Generator & Starter Repair
★ Engine Tune Up
912 Mass. — VI 3-0151
PORTABLES - $49.50 up
SERVICE SALES RENTALS
All Kinds Office Equipment
Printing, Mimeographing
and Duplicating
Pick up — Delivery
Brake Repair
★ Lubrication & Oil Change
WRECKER & ROAD SERVICE
SKELLY SERVICE
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300 W. 6th
SKELLY
Pick up Delivery
Fraternity Jewelry
Badges, Rings, Novelties Sweatshirts, Mugs, Paddles Cups, Trophies, Medals
411 W. 14th VI 3-1571 AL LAUTER
VI 3-9271
Balfour
MATHEWS
PETS UNLIMITED
Fine furnishings for all pets.
Choice tropical fish and equipment.
"The only pet for college students."
DX Servicenter
6th & Michigan VI 2-9410
Fast Car Wash
Minor Tune up
Brake Work
Mufflers & Tail Pipes
REE PICK-UP & DELIVER
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FREE PICK-UP & DELIVERY
STUDENTS
1824 Almira VI 2-3393
LUBRICATION ... $1.00
Motor tune-ups, wheel balancing
BRAKE_ADJUSTMENTS ... $.98
$ \frac{3}{4} $ mile E. of Mass. on 19th
LOW COST
Kermit Hoffmeier special insurance agent VI 2-0266
PAGE-CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE
1819 W 23rd VI 3-9694
FREE—one quart of oil with each oil and filter change — all major brands —
365 day hospitalization
$8-$20 daily benefit
$300 miscellaneous expense
$400 surgical expense
Pitchers----75c
Thursday night at the Purple Pig 810 New Hampshire
838 Mass.
TGIF at the Stables TGIS too!
Gene Bailey — Mark Patton
JIM'S CAFE
OPEN 24 hrs. a day
BREAKFAST OUR SPECIALTY
HAVING A PARTY?
We are always happy to serve you with
Ice cold beverages
Ice cold beverages Chips, nuts, cookies
Variety of grocery items
Crushed ice, candy
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OPEN TO 10 P.M. EVERY EVENING
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616 Vt. Ph.VI 3-0350
TRAVEL RESERVATIONS NOW!
Make your airline reservations now and be assured of your travel for Thanksgiving and Christmas vacation.
For fast, efficient service call our Mrs. Rose Abels.
- Airline and steamship reservations -
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
746 Mass.
Travel Agency
VI 3-0152
Wednesday, Oct. 30, 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
the day before publication is desired. Not responsible for errors not reported before second insertion.
FOR SALE
Motorcycle, record player, wedding gown.
Mirror, record player, wedding gown.
room set. CAI VI 3-9264. 11-5
1953 Pontiac, "stick" needs no work-
runs perfect as it stands. Call Jeff Mitchell, VI 2-1200, Templin Hall evenings.
11-5
One 12-string guitar and one 6-string
guitar and new, excellent tone
VI 3-4087
11-7
Slide projector; almost new Agfa "Diamater H." 150 watt semi automatic. $40.00 or best offer. Stu Schlemmer. Call VI 2-1200. 10-31
1957 Volkswagen, 1959 Volkswagen.
to sell to Ralph Schmidt, Ernst Kansas.
10-30
1955 olds. full power, radio. Real shark,
$395.00. 1954 Ford, top mechanical
coolant, clean—$225.00. Benson, 1902
Harp, 16-4H of 4-H grounds.
VI 3-1628. 11-2
Encylopedia set for sale. Late edition of New Standard Encylopedia-$179.95 original value but will sell for $60.00 original best offer. Phone VI 3-2225 p.m. 10-31
Hair Dryers! Hair Dryers! All famous brands. 25 models to choose from—all at discount prices. New dryer and Hood as low as $5.00. Ray Stonebanke $929 Mass. 11-2
1960 MGA convertible, red with rea leather interior. New W/W, good car charger, and found in perfect condition. $1,100. Call Ted 1635 Cambridge. VI 3-8623.
Austin Healy 3000, 1961; wire wheels, electric over drive, radio and heater, soft-top, tonneau. Excellent condition. One owner, leaving for Europe-$1.550.00. Factory Hardtop-$150.00. Extra. Phone York, Kansas City. DE 3-9414 9 to 5.
G. E.'s finest Multiplex stereo. AM-FM list $179.95–has damaged spot and reduced sound quality. Monthly cost of radio, broken corner $20.90. Ray Stone-back's, 929 Mass. St.
Cordless automatic toothbrush by Universal! Special offer to Kansan readers only who bring in this ad. $10.00! Complete with 4 brushes at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. (Quality products at discount prices.) 11-1
Compact car owners. $5.95 front seat covers reduced to $3.00 while they last at Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. (Also terry cloth $6.88.) 11-1
Quindaro. Will discuss terms. Call Ronnie VI 3-9474. 10-30
1961 Volkswagen Sedan. Excellent condi-
tion. 240 cu. ft. DcDougal at 11-6
9431 or see at 1244 Ls.
GUNS: 38 Stubnose, Roger 22 single slx,
scope match miniature, scope match
scope matched miniature, Coll dueling
pistols, Roger 44 magnum carbine, BB
rifle, Roger rifle, Many more
824 Ark, VI-31100
You can own your own clean used mobile home for as low as $200.00 down and S34 per month delivered. Large selection of mobile homes. New mobile now. TODD MOBE HOMES, 768 N. 2nd Lawrence. Kansas. Call VI 3-8846 or VI 2-3111.
Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extensively comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500
team — $85 Lawrence Outlook
1005 Mass
1957 "98" Oldsmobile convertible; white;
excellent condition; power windows,
stores; fire radio, seat, brakes. Four new
resorts. Will take offer. Call: Bill Murdoch
V 2-42828
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outlines of biology classes. Formerly known as the Theta notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50.
ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLEANERS New Electrolux and a limited number of rebuilt, fully guaranteed. All parts available. Equipment picked up for service and delivered. Frank W. Cox Manager--1904 Barker. Call VI 3-2677-12-13
Typewriters, new and used portables,
standards, electrics, Olympia, Olivetti,
Royal and Smith Corona portables. Type-
writer and adding machine service and
rental. Lawrence Typewriter, 730 Mass.
Call VI 3-3644. tt
General Psychology study notes. Excel-
cled. Psychology sections. $4.00 per
copy. Call VI 2-3978.
Save on tires! 1,000 tires (snow and regular) at lowest discount prices in Kansas —Ray Stoneback's (Discount tire center)
929 Mass. 10-30
MISCELLANEOUS
PARTY TIME: School house available for private parties, dances, meetings, refreshment with piano, tables, a freshwater bottle and coolers. VI 3-7453--431 Forrest.
FOR RENT
Four-room furnished apartment. One block from Union. All utilities paid. See at 1244 La. or call Mrs. McDougal, VI 2-9451. tf
Spacious 4-room apartment. Very attractively furnished. Private bath and kitchen. $60 convenient to KU and downstown. $80 plus part of utility. Call VI 3-6966. 10-30
Town Manor Penthouse apartment available Oct. 28th. Private entrance, beautifully furnished large kitchen, steam heat, V parking, lovely patio with cookbook equivalent. Lease or mature students. No small children or pets. Call VI 3-8000. 10-37
Two, large room modern basement apartments. For one of two young men. Out-crawling. Bills paid. No drinking or smoking. See first house south of bus. pus, 1616 Inc. 10-3¹⁰
Vacancies for young men in contemporary home. Swimming pool, private en-
suite, both. $45 monthly. Unpaid. Cooked meals if desired.
VI 3-1693.
Two bedroom duplex, unfurnished, wall to wall carpeting, fenced yard, large storage and utility room. 2 small children acceptable, no pets. One year lease. $95.00 a month. 1607 W. 22nd Terr. Call VI 2-1028.
HELP WANTED
Part time help wanted: Qualifications
*earned money* Call VI 2-3617 10-33
5:30 p.m
BUSINESS SERVICES
Would like to care for child in my home
References. Call VI 3-1626. 11-2
Will take in ironing 10c a piece. Also baby sitting wanted under 3 years old. Call Mrs. James Eberhardt, VI 3-6343 or inquire at 1044 Conn. 11-5
complete line of soles and heels, laces,
cosmetics and polishes. Have new mert-
heries. Use a tuck purse, smoke toiles. Burgerst. A day Shoe Service - 1113 Mass. St. 11-1
Dressmaking-alterations, formals and wedding gowns. Ola Smith, 939 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass VI 3-5263. tt
TYPING
Ride wanted -Kansas City, Kansas, to KU and return, daily. Live near 18th and Quindaro. Will discuss terms. Call Romie VI 3-9474. 10-30
TRANSPORTATION
Typing for students, Near University,
Hay 2023. Emmanuel Dr., VI 3-2083.
Experienced typist, fast and accurate.
Call Mrs. Hays at VI 2-0057. 11-22
Professional typing by experienced secretary.
New electric typewriter, carbon
pencil, keyboard. VI 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles
(Marlene) Higley, 409 West 13th. tt
Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typrwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1648.
New electric typewriter. Reasonable rates for themes, term papers, dissertations, and theses. Mrs. Barta, 1955 Miller Drive, VI 3-6994. tf
Experienced typist for theses and term papers for Mrs. Palmer and Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Miss. VI 3-10588. ff
Prompt, neat and accurate work on wide carriage electric typewriter. Journalism Business and Secretary experience. Charlotte Weber. VI 3-3495. tf
FOUND
MILKILLENS SOS—always first quality
typing on LB.M. Carbon ribbon machines.
The transcriptions. Office
hours-7 am to 12 pm. $p121-$m521
Phone VI-3-5920 Mass
Efficient and experienced typer would like to do work in home. Prompt and guaranteed work. Call at any time. VI 3-24 10-31
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast.
Clerk will do typing in office legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577.
Typing: Dissertations theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines: 35 special symbols, carbon ribbon—if desired. Prompt, efi service. Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI2-1548 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI3–3057.
Thesis Typist, Electric typewriter
English degree. Prairie Village, NI
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type these, term papers,
journals and research reports. Former librarian roles. Electric Typewriter. Mrs. Eldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8586 f
Typing: Desertations, theses, manuscripts,
deserts, types, NV types, machines,
machines; special symbols, carbon
ribbon; if desired. Prompt. efficient ser-
vices. Mornings. 2-15/48.
Or Mrs. Droothy Moon V 3:35/47.
Ring in ladies' room, Watson Library-
249, Crown College, Bulley,
UN 4-3306. Must describe.
LOST
Man's black glasses in black teather case
Men's backpack in red D. Receives.
Term, Call VI 3-5942. 11-L
Billfield lost probably in the Hawks Nest. Marvin or Summerfield Hall. Reward offered. Contact Khaled Khalaf at VI 2-1444. 11-1
Black leather bilfoldl. Return bilfoldl and important papers, keep the money as reward. Roger Houston. 1145 La Call VI 3-4846. 11-1
WANTED
Blond Cocker Spaniel. 6 months old. Near
Tim. Call VI 2-0108 evertings. 10-21
Want guitar lessons. Have instrument (Mexican classic) and music. Interested in learning jazz or rock with reasonable fee. Saturday preferred but not required. Lee Hirschberg VI 2-1340-
1 or 2 male students to share apartment.
1 or 2 female students to room. Water
Phone VI 3-9287
11-1 I
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart, 1025 Mass. tf
TRAVEL
IT'S TIME TO MAKE
YOUR RESERVATIONS
FOR
THE HOLIDAY SEASON
The Thanksgiving and Christmas schedules are now in. CONTACT
MAUPINTOUR
at the Malls
711 W. 23rd VI 3-1211
READ and USE THE WANT ADS
PRESIDENT, AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION and
---
WORLD MEDICAL ASSOCIATION DR. EDWARD R. ANNIS
will discuss
The Medicare Program
Kansas Union Ballroom
- Thursday, October 31st
4 p.m.
OPEN TO THE PUBLIC!
Page 12
University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Oct. 30, 1963
British Say No Missiles
LONDON—(UPI) —The Kennedy administration's proposal for an allied armada of missile armed ships is under increasing attack in Great Britain as an enormously expensive concept for which there is little or no military need.
Officially, Britain has neither opposed nor supported the project, which calls for creating a multilateral nuclear force (MLF) of 25 surface ships armed with a total of 200 polaris type missiles and operated by crews of mixed nationalities.
But is is clear from information available today that British officials would like to see the proposal killed.
In current allied conferences on the possibility of creating a multilateral force, reluctantly participating London representatives are asking repeatedly: "What is it for?"
The British view is that the proposed NATO fleet would be costly means of adding only marginal power to the vast nuclear strength which already exists, and would be designed for the chief political purpose of giving West Germany a measure of control over nuclear weapons.
Convinced that there is not a military case for creating the force, the British are arguing that there are much higher priority uses for estimated $2 billion the force might cost.
One of these would be the improvement of conventional armed forces in Europe and elsewhere.
IT IS CONTENDED that the MLF, with the American President retaining a sure veto, would never be used except in a massive retaliatory attack and that there is ample power for that in present strategic forces.
London is unable to conceive of the MFL allowed to lob a single missile into Russia from a ship standing, say, in the Bay of Biscay, in the course of a less-than-all-out war.
All 'set' for '63 Homecoming?
Patronize Kansan Advertisert
---
Have your hair set and styled in our professional salon.
Call VI3-3330 today for your beauty appointment.
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Open Thursday Till 8:30
KU&
KAI
HOMECOMING DANCE
Saturday, November 2nd 8:00 to 12:00
Student Union Ballroom
featuring...
KAI WINDING
KAI
AND ORCHESTRA
dance music especially tailored for the college student
Tickets...$2.50 per couple sold at Information Booth, Student Union or buy them at the dance!!
.
Madame Butterfly Opera to Open Friday; Oriental Costumes, Hairstyles Recreated
The KU production of "Madame Butterfly" will be he first time a dramatic opera has been presented during homecoming weekend.
Dr. Lewin Goff, director of the show, said in past years a light musical comedy was presented, but he believes the Puccini opera is colorful enough to interest everyone.
Prof. Robert Baustian, orchestra conductor for the opera, conducted "Madame Butterfly" this summer with the Santa Fe Opera Company, and when he returned to KU this fall, he brought a revised set of English lyrics which are being used in the KU production.
The sets for the opera, designed by Bill Henry, are special features of the production, and consist of a hillside outside of a Japanese house, and an interior of a Japanese house.
The costumes for the opera are designed by Chez Haehl, Asst. Prof. of speech and drama. Prof. Haehl has designed costumes for this opera before, and is experienced in handling all aspects of the elaborate Japanese costumes required for this production.
Edward Sooter, Wichita graduate student, will sing the role of B. F. Pinkerton, the Navy officer; Paul Young, Shawne senior, will sing the
role of Goro; Sharon Sooter, Salisbury, Mo., graduate student is Suzuki, Martha Randall, Mankato senior is Madame Butterfly.
Other cast members are:
Robert Seeley, Shawnee Mission freshman, the Imperial Commissioner; Michael Riley, Columbus sophomore, The Bonzie; Roger Winnell, Maryville, Mo., senior, Prince Yamadori; and Jane Schendel, Topeka junior, Kate Pinkerton.
The first performance of "Madame Butterfly" will be at 9:00 p.m. Friday night.
Other performances of the opera will be at 8:15 p.m. on Nov.2, 8, and 9.
Daily hansan
61st Year, No. 35
LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Invader Breaks Up Talkathon; Talk Resumed, Record in Sight
By Charles Corcoran
The Margaret Hashinger-Joseph R. Pearson Halls talkathon was interrupted for almost an hour Wednesday morning, but the marathon telephone conversation resumed and hit a now-disputed 384-hour mark at 1 p.m. today.
The hall residents are aiming at breaking the 421 hour and 52 minute national record claimed by L. N. Lewis and Olin Templin Halls set in December, 1961, for a campus charity drive.
Wednesday's break in the conversation came after a Templin Hall resident, claiming to be the JRP man scheduled at 2:30 a.m., was given the phone.
A. LEE COHLMIA, Wichita senior
and JRP social chairman, was talking on the phone at the time. He said he did not recognize the Templinite as a JRP resident, but that he was quite tired and relinquished the phone when the student convinced him that he had signed up to be the next to talk.
Susan Lawrence, Great Bend junior, talked to the intruder. "He came on at about 2:40 a.m. and hung up about 10 minutes later." she said.
Miss Lawrence said that while she spoke to the man, she became suspicious.
MISS LAWRENCE said Cohlmia bad told her of a rumor that someone planned to hang up the phone before the standing record was broken.
THE MASTER OF HAPPY HALLOWEEN
TRICK OR TREAT TIME—The children of Mr. and Mrs. John Skie, 1201 W. Campus Rd., are ready for Halloween. Dressed in Halloween attire, Ghost Debbie, Cowboy Shelley, and Bum Sue will be trick-or-treating at many of the fraternity and sorority houses, especially the ATO's where their grandmother, Mrs. Mary Skie, is the housemother. The children aren't waiting for the big night inside this pumpkin. They were put there by photographer Dennis Bowers.
She said the Templein resident talked to her about the tape and string that was on the hook to guard its accidentally being pushed down disconnecting the call.
"He told me," she said, "that I'd hear something pretty funny pretty soon."
MISS LAWRENCE said she told Pam Banta, Colby sophomore, "that something funny was going on and asked her to go tell the residence director."
The residence director called JRF on the after hours emergency number.
Miss Lawrence then asked the boy where he was from. "First he said that he was from Kansas City, but when I said he sounded like he was from the East, he said that was correct and that he had lived there for 14 years. Then he broke in again and asked me if I wanted to hear a surprise. I told him sure and all this, but then he started talking about the record meaning a lot to 'us.' I asked by 'us' if he meant Templein. I was just sure he was from Templein and he admitted it," she said.
"Then, he said 'good-by, love,' and that was it." Miss Lawrence said.
MISS BANTA had successfully reached Walter Brauer, Bonner Springs second year law student, and his wife, Sally, Winfield senior, the JRP resident directors. By the time Brauer reached the second floor lounge phone booth, the inruders were gone. A medium sized pumpkin sat on the small shelf in the booth. On one side, inscribed in large block letters, was "NO ONE EVER BEATS TEMPLIN." On the opposite side "Smile" and "Trick or Treat" were written.
Cohlmia called Judy Phipps, Wichita junior and Hashinger social chairman, and Nancy Johnson, Caldwell junior and Hashinger president and told them of the decision. Miss
Weather
(Continued on page 8)
Cooler fall weather will continue in the Lawrence area.
It will be mostly fair and cooler tonight and tomorrow with scattered showers and northerly winds 25 to 30 miles per hour tonight. The low tonight will range in the lower to middle 30's and the high Friday will be near 60.
JONATHAN COBLE
DOES IT FIT? Sharon Scoville, Kansas City special student and a member of the cast of "Madame Butterfly" smiles as the finishing touches are put on the Oriental costume and wig which she will wear in the production which opens Friday night.
UP Platform Advocates Cabinet, Merit System
Bv Fred Frailev
A cabinet to serve under the student body president and a merit system of committee appointments are advocated in University Party's fall platform.
The platform was announced last night at a meeting of the party's general assembly.
The cabinet is needed, UP says, so that "existing committees can function adequately and can be coordinated." The platform says each cabinet member would oversee a separate category of committees.
Accusing Vox Populi of supporting the "spoils system of government," UP pledged to continue to advocate a merit system of appointments. The platform says appointments should be based on scholarship and leadership ability, as opposed to "political patronage."
Other planks of the UP platform support;
Watkins Hospital expansion. The platform recommends the All Student Council encourage the administration to expand facilities and services of the hospital in order to serve students "in a more efficient and prompt manner."
"Little Hoover Commission." UP claimed present ASC committees overlap and that lack of interest, knowledge and precedent exists among committee members. It "heartily endorses' the Little Hoover Commission" which Reuben McCornack, Ablene senior and student body president, announced last week that he would form to investigate ASC committees.
Stadium seating changes. The platform says that students should be allowed the best seats at home football games and that the UP will work with the Athletic Seating Board in efforts to move the student sections further south. UP says this can be accomplished be reserving the section south of the senior seats for juniors, "and thus move the
sophomore and new student sections south."
*Stop Weck. The platform asks that three days be set aside for studies just prior to semester examinations.
*Open books. UP "demands that the financial books on political party expenditures be kept within the bounds set by ASC legislation."
*Human rights. The platform states that problems involving human rights "can best be solved by the elimination of prejudice in individual students."
Representatives of UP and Vox will conduct a short debate at 6:30 p.m. today at Gertrude Pearson residence hall.
Gov. Anderson Here Saturday
Gov. John Anderson will crown the homecoming queen Saturday during half-time Ceremonies of the KU-K-State football game.
Robert Montgomery, associate professor of design and chairman of half-time activities for the Homecoming game, said he had "been assured" that the governor would be here.
Miss Karen Vice, St. John senior and Homecoming queen, will receive the crown from the governor and flowers from Chancellor W. Clarke Wescoe.
Miss Vice will be escorted by Henry M. Dodd, Independence, Mo., senior and Navy ROTC midshipman captain. The queen's attendants are Sherry Zillner, Shawnee Mission senior, and Patsy Kendall, Holton senior. Miss Zillner will be escorted by Montague Davis, Mission junior and Army ROTC cadet colonel. Miss Kendall will be escorted by Palmer Smith, Lawrence senior and Air Force ROTC cadet lieutenant.
Bats Hit Lewis Hall As Pranksters Flee
No bats in the belfry, but Lewis Hall did have about 18 small bats hanging from their ceiling last night.
Between 10:15 and 10:30 last night a Lewis resident saw unidentified men toss a grocery sack through the side door of the Lewis living room. A few moments later, about if small bats flew out and attached themselves to the living room ceiling. Girls, their hands over their heads, ran through the living room
screaming as the bats dive-bombed.
The Rock Chalk committee for Lewis and Templin residence halls was trying to conduct a meeting when the bats escaped. Needless to say, the meeting broke up in short order. The patrolman on duty called the campus police.
The assumption is that the whole incident is a Halloween prank.
Four KU campus policemen arrived at Lewis Hall shortly after closing, armed with long plywood
boards. An all-out attack on the bats was begun.
The policemen squashed the pats on the ceiling.
To make matters more complicated, Lewis residents had expected to hold an all-hall party in the living room at closing. One Lewis resident exclaimed, "Cider and doughnuts with bats on the ceilings!"
The party was held in the Lewis dining room instead.
Page 2
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Oct. 31, 1963
Shutting Out Sunlight
"Almighty God, we acknowledge our dependence upon Thee, and we beg Thy blessing upon us, our parents, our teachers and our country."
This non-denominational prayer was recited many times in New York public schools until it was found unconstitutional by the Supreme Court last year and ignited the flames of controversy which are still burning in the heart of Congressman Frank J. O. Becker, R-N.Y.
BECKER HAS PERSUADED 93 of his colleagues in the House to sign a petition that would reinstate prayer and Bible reading as a legal part of public school activity. This is about half of the number required to force a floor vote on the controversial proposal, which the House Judiciary Committee refuses to report on. Becker's ultimate goal is a constitutional amendment authorizing voluntary religious activities in schools.
The resolution would authorize school Bible reading and prayers and affirms that "nothing in this Constitution shall be deemed to prohibit making preferences to believe in, reliance upon or invoking the aid of God or a supreme being in any governmental or public document proceeding, activity, ceremony, school, institution or place, or upon any coinage, currency or obligation to the United States."
Rep. Becker is from New York, which prior to 1962 suggested to its public schools that the above prayer, which the state board of regents had written, be recited every morning. Anyone, it said, could leave the room if he didn't wish to say it, or simply remain silent.
The controversy began on June 25, 1962, when Justice Hugo Black gave the 6-1 majority opinion of the court. There was "no doubt," said Justice Black, that a "daily classroom invocation of God's blessing . . . is a religious activity." It was
"neither sacrilegious nor anti-religious," he added, "to say that each separate government in this country should stay out of the business of writing or sanctioning official prayers and leave that proper function to the people themselves."
Although Justice Black and a majority of the Supreme Court were at once pounced upon by such notable figures as Herbert Hoover and Cardinal Spellman, he simply had recited the doctrine of freedom of thought, which is inherent in the first amendment of the Constitution and the doctrine of separation of church and state.
THE CITIZEN' FREEDOM to believe in what he wants or not to believe in what he wants is part of the foundation of free thought, which is so important in the formulation of the public opinion which controls our governmental processes. Free discussion and thought is the sunlight which makes the plant—government—grow and mature. If it is shut out the plant wilts and dies.
Becker wants to shut out that sunlight by giving government the power to sanction a belief, when just government germinates only under the sunlight of free thought. He wants to forget those who disagree, the minority, and discard their protections and freedom.
Even though most Americans profess a belief in a God, Becker wants to ignore a minority very evident in this question—the atheist. Becker would counter this statement by saying the atheist would have the right to leave the room or not say the prayer. Yes, Mr. Becker, before the eyes of his classmates, he would walk from the room. When he came back he would be lectured on democracy. The teacher, standing under a picture of Lincoln, would then tell the class that democratic government is based on freedom of thought and all the class members would believe. Wouldn't they?
- Phillip Magers
You're The Best
Editor:
There is a great deal of truth in the UDK comment that this year's Homecoming theme is a disappointment to many people and organized living groups. (Myself not the least—as a native of Manhattan I was set to sink my teeth into the Wildcat.) However, I would disagree that the theme lacks possibilities — when the groaning ceased at Lewis Hall and the brains were put in gear, there were a number of clever and original ideas offered for decoration, and there was considerable discussion before one could be selected. To those who felt that the theme wasn't even worth a try, where is your imagination and intellect? Buried under a stuffed chicken-wire Wildcat?
As for enthusiasm, in Lewis, where such is usually hard to come by, the only thing holding back completion of work is a shortage of paint brushes.
This year's Homecoming theme does not say that there shouldn't be any rivalry between the two strong schools. It recognizes, rather, that there are two types of rivalry: one says, "Beat K-State"; the other, "WIN, Hawkers! You're the best!" And this year's theme was chosen to be executed on the basis of the latter.
Carol Borg
Manhattan sophomore
UNITINITY Daily Hansan
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UNiversity 4-3646, newsroom
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Institute, 270 Broadway. National. Mail subscription rates: $3 a semester or $5 a year. Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the university year except Saturdays and Sundays for adamination periods. Second class postage paid at Lawrence, Kansas
University of Kansas student newspaper
Founded 1889, became biweekly 1904,
1926.
BUSINESS DEPARTMENT
Dok. Brooke. Business
Bob Brooks ... Business Manager
MEN'S DEFENDMENT
NEWS DEPARTMENT
Mike Miler Managing Editor
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Blaine King Editorial Editor
NEWS DEPARTMENT
The People Say . . .
Editor:
Standards All Right
Gary Palmer
208 Templin Hall
In last Tuesday's edition of the Daily Kansan you published a letter written by a "native New Englander" who doesn't seem to like the conditions in which he is now living.
My first reaction to his letter is that if he doesn't like it here, why is he here? Scattered between the boundaries of this country are hundreds of colleges which can provide about what one desires. If a person wants to attend a school where he can partake in the consumption of alcoholic beverages and go to bed with his favorite member of the opposite sex, then he should (according to the New Englander) choose a school in the East. Instead he chooses a Midwest school and complains about the standards. He should have investigated to see what the standards were before he enrolled. If he didn't investigate, it's his own fault that's here.
I think that an outsider should feel privileged to be able to attend such a fine university. The above New Englander was permitted to enter the university and in six weeks here he is trying to change the state laws. In my estimation this is the height of immaturity and the inability to adjust to a new situation. It is people like this that cause political unrest.
His idea on the consumption of alcoholic beverages is completely insane. Taverns were built to drink in and if he feels he is too good for them, he doesn't deserve the privilege to drink. The law on alcoholic beverages is a state law and not a university regulation, and it is there for the protection of those who don't drink.
As for his views on the entertaining of the opposite sex, I have only to say that it hinges on his definition of entertaining.
A Picture on File
Today—just as yesterday, the streets and sidewalks swarm with students going to and from classes, but to those who knew Joe every open area seems just a little more vacant—just a little larger. He was not a pretentious man and few students even knew his name. I stopped by the Photo Bureau just in time to hear the university photographer answer the phone and say, "No, I'm sorry we don't have a picture of Joe Skillman on file." Yet, a picture will remain on file with many of us.
A man is dead. No picture on file. A good man—a kind man—a fair man—and a devoted man. Early yesterday morning—October 30, 1963—Joe Skillman, Chief of Traffic and Security for the University of Kansas, died.
To the University of Kansas:
As I left the bureau to return to my office I heard two students behind me talking. "Did you hear about Joe Skillman? He died last night. You know, he sure was a good old boy. He was my scoutmaster." I stopped to buy cigarettes in the Union building. The hostess said, "What will we do now. He was the most upright man I've ever known."
This, then, was the man, and that picture is on file.
H. H. Longsdorf
University Extension
BRIELLEK
SIXESHERBLOCK THE WASHINGTON POST
"Dear Gen. DeGaulle: Adenauer Has Retired. Macmillan Has Retired. Just Thought I'd Drop A Line To Ask How Are Things With You?"
-Best Wishes
String 'im Up Guys
Fie on that nasty fellow who hung up the phone and perhaps caused the untimely demise of the Talkathon. Shame, shame be upon him.
The consequences of this dastardly act are horrifying. The poor girl who was on the other end of the line could have suffered all sorts of traumatic feelings about being unwanted, unloved and undesirable over a telephone.
And the girl who was supposed to talk next. She was, no doubt, heartbroken.
The Talkathon had so many good points. First, the residents of JRP would meet the residents of Hashinger.
BUT WORST of all is that all those hours, all 300-plus of them, were wasted. And after all that effort, too. After all that unstinting devotion to the cause, with nary a thought of anything so crass as publicity, the residents of Joseph R. Pearson and Hashinger Halls are faced with the terrible fact that someone hung up the phone, shame on him.
Now everybody knows that boy-meets-girl is desirable. Some lecherous old men might insist that boy meeting girl in person is a lot more fun, but if the residents of JRP get their kicks by talking over the telephone, I say more power to them. Maybe someone could write an epic work commemorating the Talkathon. We could call it "Oedipus at Collonius Pearsonus," or "I Fell in Love with Her Voice."
WE MIGHT EVEN use Talkkons as a theme for Homecoming next year. It would be marvellous publicity for the school.
Except, of course, publicity isn't the aim of all this, and don't you believe it is. The residents of Joseph R. Pearson Residence Hall for Young Men of Distinction (their term) would never so low.
But back to that nasty fellow who hung up the phone. Word has it that he has written a letter of apology to JRP. He should, and he should be ashamed of wasting an hour of his time to go hang up a phone.
DOESN'T HE HAVE ANYTHING better to do, than to waste all that time required to drive to JRP? Here JRP and Hashinger residents were using their time to good advantage, talking on the telephone, and this mean man wastes his time to go hang up the phone.
And then insulting the dignity of the dorm by leaving a pumpkin! What a slap in the face to the conscientious men and women who had worked so hard for something so worthwhile.
Why, the unthinking Templinite who hung up the phone should be cashiered from the dorm, drummed from the University, and a black mark entered on his record forever.
I EXPECT the University of Kansas to take a firm stand against this kind of nonsense. How can officials seriously believe any student will ever again undertake any kind of worthwhile project if men who callously bring a halt to such activities go unpunished? This would put the University in the admirable position of approving of Talkathons, and I should think any University worth the name would be happy to support such useful projects.
Maybe students who participate in Talkathons could be excused from classes and class-work so they could talk.
Besides, what better proof, in these days when men are concerned about the drain on the gold reserves and the corresponding strain on the dollar, that the good old American dime still goes a long way?
Think how absurd it would have been if someone had spent the dime on a goldfish to swallow, or if the telephone booth had been used for something as childish as stuffing 20 men into it.
Talkathons are obviously much more important, and shame on the man who ended it. — Blaine King
Page 3
Thursday, Oct. 31, 1963 University Daily Kansan
"A burial party for a dead duck" is how Felix Moos, assistant professor of anthropology, described the nuclear test ban treaty in a speech yesterday.
Test Ban Valuable as Pacifier
PROF. MOOS feels that the treaty is the formalization of an unspoken agreement. As an example, he pointed out that the treaty provides for no atmospheric testing of nuclear weapons. This was already being done before Moscow signed the treaty in July.
Prof. Moos said his speech was rather anti-climactic, since the test ban treaty was signed in late September.
He did not think the treaty would "diffuse the cold war." He added that it was encouraging to note that the United States and Russia had come together, negotiated and agreed on the final document.
KANSAS CITY, Mo. — (UPI) Fourteen post-season football games have been certified as meeting National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) regulations.
The speech was sponsored by the KU-Y Current Events discussion committee.
Prof. Moos said there are some Americans who hope that the treaty
NCAA Lists Bowls
The list included the new Space Bowl game matching the champion of the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association and the Southwest Athletic Conference Dec. 14 at Houston, Tex.
Games certified were the Aviation
Bowl, Dayton, Ohio, Dec. 7; Bluebonnet
Bowl, Houston, Tex., Dec. 21;
Cotton Bowl, Dallas, Tex., Jan. 1;
Eastern (Cement) Bowl, Landsdale,
Pa., Dec. 14; Gator Bowl, Jackson-
ville, Fla., Dec. 28; Liberty Bowl,
Philadelphia, Pa., Dec. 21.
Mineral Water Bowl, Excelsior Springs, Mo. Nov. 30; Orange Bowl, Miami, Fla., Jan. 1; Prairie View Bowl, Prairie View, Tex., Dec. 7; Rose Bowl, Pasadena, Calif., Jan. 1; Space Bowl, Houston, Dec. 14; Sugar Bowl, New Orleans, Jan. 1; Sun Bowl, El Paso, Tex., Dec. 31; and Tangerine Bowl, Orlando, Fla., Dec. 28.
would end the arms race. He does not think this will happen in the near future.
"We will not slow down the arms race until Russia does," Prof. Moos said. He added that it may curb testing to some extent.
HE SAID the U.S. Senate was a sensitive instrument of public opinion during the voting on the treaty. He said four out of five Senators voted for the treaty and four out of five Americans approved of the treaty.
Prof. Moos said. He thinks the advantages will be much the same for Russia as they will be for the United States.
"The treaty won't have much more impact on Russia than it will on us."
He listed the advantages as being the good opinion of other nations, a good opinion of ourselves, a reduction of anxiety about all our nuclear warfare and a less radiation-filled atmosphere.
Prof. Moos stressed that it was very encouraging that the United States and Russia had finally agreed on major policy. He expressed hope that this treaty would lead to further negotiations with Russia.
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When You're In Doubt, Try It Out—Kansan Classified
Looking for a Homecoming Pre-Party ?
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Page 4
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Oct. 31, 1963
UP Platform
PREAMBLE
The University Party of the University of Kansas has always believed that the purpose of a campus political party should extend above and beyond the pragmatic precept of winning. In this belief, the University Party, has from its inception, followed a policy of presenting qualified candidates for election and emphasizing the positive contributions that may be made by the student and the party. The University Party consistently meets With this goal in mind, the University Party respectfully submits the following Platform:
1 STATEMENT OF POLICY
The University Party, realizing that the full cooperation of the student body is necessary to implement the aims of student government at the University of Kansas, has in the past and will in the future endorse the ideal of our students by both Greer and Green independent toward the final goal of more active and more effective, student government.
11 HUMAN RIGHTS
The University Party, realizing that the problem of human rights continues to be a pertinent issue, believes that evidence that a student has a right to be judged according to individual merit, and that discrimination infringes upon the freedom of the indi-
because the question of human rights is an individual one, the University Party believes that by the system can not be solved by the elimination of prejudice individual attitudes.
11. LITTLE HOOVER COMMISSION
The University Party, realizing that the present committee is system of bureaucratic overlapping of responsibility and lack of interest, knowledge, and precedent by committee members, heartily endorses the Little Hoover Commission, similar to the effective in 1957, with the hope that the inaction of committees will be dealt with immediately. The University Party deploys the proliferation of counsel for the purpose of obvius politic patronage.
IV. CABINET SYSTEM
To have an effective administrative branch of student government, a system is needed in which existing committees are coordinated. UP therefore proposes that a student cabinet be formed to effectively work with the student body president and to oversee and coordinate the different categories of committees now exist.
V. MERIT SYSTEM OF APPOINTMENTS
V. MERIT SYSTEM OF APPOINTMENT:
The University Party will continue to support a merit system of choosing representatives on committees of the university and each appointment should be based upon scholarship and demonstrated organizational ability as opposed to the present system of political patronage.
VI. OPEN BOOKS
Such legislation was proposed last spring, but was defeated by the majority party, which supports the spoils system of governmental control.
The University Party demands that the financial books on political party expenditures be kept open in order that campaign costs be within the limits set by ASC legislation.
VIL. STADIUM SEATING
The University Party, recognizing the fact that students should be allowed the best seats in the athletic games, pledges to work with the Athletic Sitting Board to move the section now reserved for Juniors to the south side of the general admission) and thus move the sophomore and new students two sections south. University Party feels that such a move would be justice for students are staged primarily by and for the students.
VIII. STUDENT HEALTH AND PHYSICAL FITNESS
The University Party maintains an interest in the physical welfare of students as well as their intellectual welfare at KU.
UP therefore strongly recommends that the ASC encourage the administration to augment the facilities and services of Watkins Hospital in order to accommodate the students' needs in a more efficient and prompt manner.
UP also strongly recommends that the ASC encourage the administration to provide additional recreational facilities on campus in order to provide for banded intramural program and to meet the students growing needs for physical exercise.
IX. STOP WEEK
The University Party, realizing the intellectual needs of the student body, urges that there be set as a the time period for discussion between the last of regularly scheduled classes and the first day of final week each semester. Such an interim could be used by each student to prepare himself to his maximum potential for good performance in exams.
Traveler Shows Slides After Orient Experience
With an uncertain itinerary and a will to see Southeast Asia in the most educational and satisfying way, Ray Woods, El Dorado senior, went to the Orient last summer and discovered what the Peace Corps really means.
Woods, who was not a Peace Corps member, spent last summer visiting Hawaii, Thailand, South Vietnam, the Philippines, Japan, Hong Kong and other places in order to get a
picture of the culture of Southeast Asia.
At a meeting of the Peace Corps last night in the Big 8 Room of the Kansas Union. Woods showed the slides he took last summer.
He said the role of the Peace Corps in the areas he visited was one of teacher and friend.
Woods is back at KU this year and is now a member of the Peace Corps Committee.
THE WESTERN DISTRICT COUNCIL OF CALIFORNIA IS DECLARED A SENATE BUDGET AUTHORIZING THE CONSTITUTION TO HOLD ATTENTION TO THE IMPORTANCE OF FEDERAL RESERVE PROTECTION AND THE INCREASES IN STATES' CAPACITY TO PAY FOR DAMAGES ARISING OUT OF CRIMINAL ACTIVITIES.
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Faculty Members Receive Fellowships, Travel Aids
Eight fellowship grants and several travel grants are being made available to KU faculty members.
The awards are part of a $500,000 grant which KU received last July from the Ford Foundation to support training and research in international studies over a five-year period.
Four awards will be made for faculty fellowships for the summer of 1964. Each of these awards will amount to about two months' teaching salary but will not exceed $2,000. Preference will be given to faculty members below the rank of full professor; the grantee is expected to forego summer teaching.
Three to four faculty fellowships will be awarded for the academic year, 1964-65. Awards in this category will be designed to release the faculty member from teaching one
semester or to supplement other funds or grants to facilitate two semesters of research.
Faculty travel grants will be made in conjunction with the fellowships and other research by the faculty.
Requests for these grants must be made by December 15.
In addition to these grants for faculty development, Dean Heller said, the $500,000 will be used for the development of a library in international studies, further development of studies in "unusual" languages, and encouragement of new studies in the international field.
Most of the grant has not been allotted to specific projects, Dean Heller said.
The money will be appropriated as projects are proposed, he said.
Halloween Starts Early
SAN FRANCISCO—(UPI)—Halloween pranksters struck early at the San Francisco Hall of Justice by changing the signs on the first floor restrooms marked "men" and "women."
Janitors said yesterday the signs were back in the proper places with no harm done—so far as anyone knows.
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Thursday, Oct. 31, 1963
University Daily Kansan
Page 5
Intramural Football Action Nears End
By Russ Corbitt
Assistant Sports Editor
With league competition rapidly coming to an end, playoff berths are uppermost in the minds of all the intramural football teams.
Beta Theta Pi clinched at least part of the Division 1 championship in the Fraternity A League last night, beating Tau Kappa Epsilon, 69-0.
It was the third victory without a loss for the Betas, who have one remaining game with Phi Delta Theta next week.
HAROLD DRESSER scored three of the Beta touchdowns. Edward Geiger, Darol Rodrock, and Harlan Burkhead each scored two TD's, and John McCormick accounted for the other six-pointer.
Bob Swan picked up nine points, as he kicked a field goal and six extra points.
The Beta cause was aided last night by Phi Kappa Theta, who handed Phi Delta Theta its first loss. The Phi Kaps defeated the Phil Deltis, 12-9, in a tightly-played game.
Phi Kappa Theta scored in the first quarter on a ten-yard pass
from Sandy Cahill to Rich Williams. The play was set up by an interception by Ed Williams, and then a 30-yard pass from Cahill to Ed Williams.
In the second quarter, Phi Kappa Theta twice drove inside the Phi Delta Theta ten-yard line, but the Phi Delt defense stopped the threats.
BOTH THE SECOND and third quarters were scoreless, and the Phi Kaps were still leading, 6-0, going into the final period.
On the first play of the quarter a 60-yard pass play from Dave Trotter to Gary Ace gave the Phi Delta their first touchdown and a 6-6 tie. Steve Pine kicked the extra point, to put the Phi Delts out in front, 7.6
Players' Wives Like Victories Too
By Margaret Hughes
Being married to a KU football player is hard at times.
But, the wives do not seem to mind.
Before the game, he is highly irritable. If KU loses, he is depressed. Out of town, at football practice, asleep, or studying, he hardly sees his wife during football season.
Dick Harp, varsity basketball coach, and Ted Owens, freshman basketball coach, have named their starting lineups for the annual Varsity-Freshman basketball game.
Coaches Name Friday Lineups
The Varsity lineup:
Tipoff time is 7 p.m. Friday in Allen Field House.
The Freshman lineup:
Harry Gibson, 6-3 senior, and Dave Brill, 6-5 junior; forwards; George Unseld, 6-7 junior, center; and Al Correll, 6-3 senior, and Dave Schichtle, 6-2 senior, guards.
Bill Wasinger, 6-4 Council Bluffs, Iowa, and Mike Finnig, 6-5 Troy, Ohio, forwards; Ron Franz, 6-7, Kansas City, center, and Pat Davis, 6-0, Topeka, and John Cahill, 5-10, Kansas City, guards.
"IT'S REALLY like being married to anybody else, except that you have more to be proud of." Mrs. Gale Sayers, wife of KU's All-American halfback candidate, said.
"But I enjoy football very much. Ron even bought me a book called 'How to Understand Football.' But I haven't read it yet."
Mrs. Ron Marsh, whose husband is a starting guard, says: "I don't get to see Ron very much, since he's in swimming and boxing as well as football."
Mrs. Phil Doughty acts as unofficial president of her husband's fan club. A KU graduate, she teaches a junior high class at Eudora.
"My students really get excited about 'Mr. Doughty' and the KU games. Every Monday morning they paste up his pictures and newspaper clippings all over the class room," she said.
"ONE AFTERNOON I drove some of them to Lawrence to watch the football practice and meet Phil. And when he was on a television show, every one of them watched him," Mrs. Doughty added.
Jackie Marsh describ her husband's rather strange schedule. "He comes home from football practice, eats supper, and falls asleep. About 3 a.m. he wakes up and studies into the morning," she said.
The wives have no special diet to prepare for their husbands—"just lots of food," Mrs. Marsh said. The players eat at the training table on Fridays.
The wives especially enjoy going to out-of-town games. "We got to fly back with the team from the Oklahoma game," Mrs. Sayers said. "I am especially excited about going to the Nebraska game, because we are from Omaha," she added.
LINDA SAYERS knows how to handle her husband when he gets "crabby" before a game. "I just try not to pay any attention to him," she said.
But the Phi Kaps were not to be denied, and came back with their own touchdown drive. The scoring play was a five-yard pass from Cahill to Tom Dyerly.
Mrs. Marsh and Mrs. Savers both work at Hallmark Cards. The wives agree that get-togethers with other football couples are fun, especially on Saturday nights after the games.
THE PHI KAPS again missed the extra point, and found themselves with a 12-7 lead with about two minutes left.
After the Phi Delts lost possession on downs, Cahill ran out the clock, letting himself get trapped in the end zone for the Phi Delts' final two points.
The division 1 standings now show the Betas on top with a 3-0 record, followed by the Phi Delts with a 2-1 mark. The Phi Kaps are 2-2, Sigma Nu is 1-2, and the TEKE'S are 0-3.
"If KU wins, everyone is happy and jolly," Mrs. Marsh said. "Of course the boys are in a bad mood if we lose, but it doesn't take long until they are looking forward to next week's game."
In Fraternity B action, Delta Upsilon downed Phi Kappa Tau, 32-6, and Sigma Chi defeated Phi Gamma Delta, 6-0.
In other Fraternity A play yesterday, Phi Gamma Delta remained undefeated in its division, by beating Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 32-6.
Tuesday's Fraternity A play also saw the same two Division 1 winners as in yesterday's games.
Feel nervous, run-down?
Been studying too much?
Lack that peppy, wide-awake look?
The Betas rolled over Sigma Nu, 46-0, with Geiger scoring five touchdowns, and Rodrock and Mike Vineyard each scoring one.
Phi Kappa Theta blanked Tau Kappa Epsilon, 22-0, Tuesday. Ed Williams scored two of the touchdowns, and Cahill scored the other.
I will just provide the text content.
In B league play Tuesday, Navy defeated Concordia, 13-0; Delta Upsilon downed Theta Chi, 26-7; and Alpha Tau Omega won by forfeit over Sigma Phi Epsilon.
For the best possible remedy Relax! and enjoy a leisurely "PIT STOP" this week-end.
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Page 6
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Oct. 31, 1963
Speaker Says Pakistan Becoming Neutral
Pakistan is not a politically neutral country, but Louis Dupree of the American Universities Field Staff (AUFS) said yesterday the country is making definite "neutral noises."
Dupree, speaking at a Faculty Forum luncheon in the Kansas Union, outlined the case for Pakistani neutrality by explaining the country's recent history and governmental position.
Standing before a large map of Central Asia, Dupree pointed out that Pakistan is divided by India into East and West provinces which are 10,000 miles apart.
HE SAID THE provinces were created when the British pulled out of India and the surrounding provinces in 1947 because the people of Pakistan (who are 88 per cent Moslem) feared discrimination by the predominantly Hindu population of India.
"When partition took place, Kashmir, to all intents and purposes, went to India," he said.
"As far as the Pakistani are concerned, their main problem is Kashmir. The people of Pakistan always believed that the over 80 per cent Moslem Kashmir should have been allowed a plebiscite to decide what they should do."
Dupree explained Kashmir was a princely state ruled by a Hindu Faharajah, and that after a great deal of complicated maneuvering, Kashmir acceded to India for aid, and in late 1948 the United Nations sent a truce team to the area to draw a cease fire line.
"OCCASIONALLY the problems between Kashmir and Pakistan flare," but, he added, "the UN truce is still there."
Dupree said about a year ago the president of Pakistan, Mohammed Ayub Khan, proposed a joint defense agreement to India's prime minister, Jawaharlal Nehru. The pact was to include Pakistan, Kashmir, India and provinces in the Himalayas.
President Ayub said the pact was necessary because, he predicted, the Republic of China would be the problem in the 1960's.
Prime Minister Nehru seemed only to see the proposal as a step by the Pakistani to get into Kashmir, Dupree said.
DUPREE SAID Nehru replied something to the effect that "Who shall we defend against? We've nothing but friends to the north."
After the initial attack in the early fall of last year by the Chinese Communists on India, Nehru said it was the end of a decade of dreaming for him, Dupree said.
"He had believed strongly in the
UP Slate Changed For Men's Dormitory
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five principles of coexistence," he said.
"At that time the Pakistani government was informed by the United States and Britain that they planned to send arms to India. The Pakistani were rankled that they were not consulted, but merely informed.
"THE PAKISTANI pointed out that they were the United States' best allies in Asia. They feared the guns might be used by the Indians against them.
"But the main thing they objected to was that the U.S. and Britain only wanted a military base in India and arm their potential enemy.
"The Pakistani point out if arms had not been given to India so rapidly, there was a possibility, some said a definite probability, a military coup would take place in India."
He explained the Pakistani felt it would have been carried out by members of India's military who were disenchanted with the Nehru government. The military objected to the posture that the Chinese Communist attack found India in and to the about face in India's total neutrality, he said.
The Pakistani said that such a coup would have made the relationship between Pakistan and India easier and would have facilitated a joint government over Kashmir.
"PAKISTAN THEN told the U.S. it could see it was no longer a necessary ally. The Pakistan press felt now that the U.S. had its military base in India that there was no reason why Pakistan should not go neutral." Dupree said.
He explained the Pakistani intelligentsia and press expressed the idea that there was no need to remain alligned militarily with the U.S. when it would jump in with military aid, as it did in neutral India, if it were attacked.
Since then, Dupree said, the U.S. has been alarmed by the fact Pakistan is the first nation to gain air rights to fly planes into Red China and has commercial pacts with both the U.S.S.R. and Red China.
Official Bulletin
TODAY
India, he said, is still professing neutrality although it is accepting U.S. arms.
Catholic Mass, 5 p.m. St. Lawrence Catholic Chapel, 1910 Stratford Road. Latter-Day Saint Institute of Religion, 3:30 p.m. Oread Room, Kansas Union. Church of Jesus Christ, Donnerstag, den 31 October, 4:30 in 502 Fraser. Wir werden deutsche Volks und Studentenliefer singen. Alle Studenten sind herzlich eingeladen. Erfrischungen.
Poetry, Hour. 4:30 p.m. Music Room, Kirkland. The poem will read the poetry of Robert Lowell.
Chris Salmons, University Organization. 7:30 p.m.
Danforth Chapel. Everyone welcome.
Episcopal Evening Prayer, 9:30 p.m.
Danforth Chanel.
Student Peace Union, 4:30 p.m., Pine Room, Kansas Union.
"The great land battle may be over, but no one seems to know for sure," he said.
"Pakistan knows that if they're attacked that the U.S. will aid them; all nations know this." Dupree said. "The foreign policy of the U.S. tends to point to creating neutral nations."
Dupree was asked if the Pakistani were in effect receiving all the benefits of an alliance without any of the obligations.
"Yes, you might say that," he replied. "They refuse to get involved in East-West pacts."
He said Pakistan receives 3.5 times the financial aid supplied by the U.S. over the U.S.S.R. When asked who's winning in Pakistan, the U.S. or the U.S.S.R., Dupree answered:
"I always say the Pakistani and they're the ones who should profit from foreign aid."
Casual and Dressy-
Comfortable fashions for fashionable Co-eds
$2.87 to $4.87
Open 9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m.
Mon. Thru Sat.
1302 W. 23rd
23rd and Naismith
Harvey's DISCOUNT SHOES
HOMECOMING WEEKEND SPECIAL
10% OFF ON ALL CARRY-OUT PIZZAS
LARGE OR SMALL
ALL KINDS
CALL THREE-TEN-EIGHTY SIX (VI 3-1086)
HOMECOMING WEEKEND SPECIAL!
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LARGE OR SMALL
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CALL THREE-TEN-EIGHTY SIX (VI 3-1086)
2 DOORS NORTH
OF THE UNION
gaslight tavern
SORRY. NO DELIVERY
CLOSED SUNDAY
gaslight tavern
TRIPLE THREAT PERFORMERS!
new
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watches
10
12
9
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With bracelet . . . $79.50
12 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
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HAMILTON
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as featured on "PRO-FOOTBALL KICKOFF"
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Exciting new designs by Hamilton, as seen on TV. We show only three of our wide, brilliant selection . . . each a star performer. See, choose now for Christmas. Other Hamilton from only $35.00.
LAY-AWAY YOUR GIFT
PAY ONLY $1 A WEEK
YOUR KU ID CARD IS YOUR PASS TO CREDIT AT
BRIMAN'S
learning jewellers
-Classified Ads-
FOR SALE
1963 MG midget, excellent condition.
Radio and heater, good white wall tires.
Bedside lamp. Must sell, tremendous
loss—wife pregnant. Call VI 3-488-116
see at 1942 La.
Motorcycle, record player, wedding gown,
valet, walnut room set. Cail VI 3-9284 11-5
1681 *Corvette Monza 900 series*, big motor,
*spec like wind*, Cal. CA i V-37573
one
1953 Pontiac, "stick." needs no work—runs perfect as it stands. Call Jeff Mitchell, VI 2-1200, Templin Hall evenings. 11-5
One 12-string guitar and one 6-string
guitar, new excellent tone
CIV I 3-4087
11-5
Slide projector; almost new Agfa "Diamater H." 150 watt semi automatic. $40.00 or best offer. Stu Schlemmer. Call VI 2-1200. 10-31
1955 Iss. full power, radio. Real sharp -- $395.00. 1954 Ford. top mechanical clean. clean--$225.00. Benson. Harper. North of 4-H grounds. Call I 3-1626. 11-2
Encyclopedia set for sale. Late edition of New Standard Encyclopedia= $179.95 or signal value but will sell for $60.00 most offer. Phone VI 3-2225 p.m. 10-31
Hair Dryers! Dryers! All famous brands. 25 models to choose from—all at discount prices. New dryer. Hood as low as $5.00. Ray Stoneback's. 929 Mass. 11-2
1960 MGA convertible, red with red leather interior. New W/W, good car paint. Leather trim, molded and found in perfect condition. $1,100. Call Ted 1635 Cambridge. VI 3-8623.
11-2
Austin Healy 3000, 1961; wire wheels, electric over drive radio and heater, soft-top, tonneau. Excellent condition. One owner, leaving for Europe-$1,950.00. Factory Hardtop-$150.00. Extra. Phone York, Kansas City. DE 3-9414 9 to 5
11-1
Cordless automatic toothbrush by Universal! Special offer to Kansan readers only who bring in this ad. $10.00! Complete with 4 brushes at Ray Stoneback's. 929 Mass. (Quality products at discount prices.) 11-1
GUE.'s fineest Multiplier stereo. AM-FM list $179.95—has damaged spot and reduced battery life for another month. radio broken corner $280. Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. St. 11-1
Compact car owners. $5.95 front seat
covers reduced to $3.00 while they last at
Ray Stoneback's, 929 Mass. (Also terry
cloth $6.88.) 11-1
GUNS: .38 Stubnose, Roger 22 single six,
Hi-Standard 22 double nine, 22 rifle with
scope matched miniature Colt dueling
pistols. Roger 44 magnum carbine, BB
gun. Mod. 98 Mauzer rifle. Many more,
824 Ark., VI 3-1110.
tt
You can own your own clean used mobile home for as low as $200.00 down and $34 per month delivered. Large selection of mid-used mobile home MODD KOBLI HOMES, 768 N. 2nd lawrence, MOBIL HOMES, Call VI 3-8846 or VI 2-3111.
Western civilization notes. All new, completely revised, extensively comprehensive, mimeographed and bound for $4.25 per copy. Call VI 2-1901 for free delivery. tf
New shipment of Pink typing paper. 500
paper stream - $85 Lawrence Outdoor.
1005 Mass Tennis
Printed biology notes; 70 pages, complete outlining of lectures; comprehensive outlines of course content and classses. Formerly known as the Theta notes. Call VI 2-3701. Free delivery. $4.50.
ELECTROLUX VACUUM CLEANERS New Electrolux and a limited number of rebuilt, fully guaranteed. All parts available. Equipment picked up for service and delivered. Frank V. Cox, Local Manager - 1904 Barker. Call V 31-3277.
Typewriters, new and used portables,
standards, electrics. Olympia, Olivetti,
Royal and Smith Corona portables. Typew-
writer and adding machine service and
rental. Lawrence Typewriter, 730 Mass.
Call V1 3-3644. tf
General Psychology study notes. Excel-
copy, Call VI-2-9378. $4.00 per copy.
Call VI-2-9378.
MISCELLANEOUS
PARTY TIME: School house available for private parties, dances, meetings, refreshment with piano, chairs, tables, refreshment box and coolers. V13-7453--431 Forrest. **tf**
Clothing of any kind wanted. 1526 Lin-
inwood. 11-6
FOR RENT
Nicely furnished two-room apartment, large sized kitchen, shower bath, weekly maid service, off street parking, only three blocks from campus. Call VI 3-782-6700
3 bedroom house furnished: $ students.
Call Hedrick 2-9579 at 6:00 p.m. 11-6
Town Manor Penthouse apartment available Oct. 28th. Private entrance, beautiful furnished large kitchen, stern heat, air-conditioned, TV, parking, lovely patio and garden. Lense to a room or mature students. No small children or pets. Call VI S-5000. 10-31
Four-room furnished apartment. One block from Union. All utilities paid. See at 1244 La. or call Mrs. McDougal, VI 2-9451.
Vacancies for young men in contempo rary home. Swimming pool, private en tended bath. $45 monthly. Upper school cooked meals If desired VI 3-9635. 11-2
Two bedroom duplex, unfurnished, wall to wall carpeting, fenced yard, large storage and utility room. 2 small children acceptable, no pets. One year lease. $55.0 a month. 1607 W. 22nd Terr. Call VI 2-1028.
HELP WANTED
Part time help wanted: Qualifications
- paid money. Call VI 2-3617 10-31
5:39 p.m.
BUSINESS SERVICES
Franch Tutoring Very reasonable rates.
2-4514 "Paul the tutor who cares"
Will take in ironing 10c a piece. Also baby sitting wanted under 3 years old. Call Mrs. James Eberhard, VI 3-6343 or inquire at 1644 Cass. 11-7
Complete line of soles and heels, laces,
cosmetics and polishes. Have new mer-
catures and polishes such purses
and smoke totes. Burgert's Day Book
Service — 1113 Mass. St. II
Would like to care for child in my home References. Call VI 3-1626. 11-2
Dressmaking-alterations, formals and
dressmaking. Ola Smith, 939% MII
VI 3-5263
TYPING
Experienced typist with electric typewriter available to type themes, term papers, thesis, etc. Accurate work stand-alone phone. VI T1-8379. Mrs. Charles Patti.
Typing for students. Near University,
Hays, 2032 Emeraid Dr. Call VI 3-2083.
Hays, 2032 Emeraid Dr. Call VI 3-2083.
Experienced typist, fast and accurate.
Call Mrs. Hays at VI 2-0057. 11-22
Professional typing by experienced secretary. New electric typewriter, carbon paper, fax machine. VI 3-6048 after 5:00 p.m. Mrs. Charles (Marlene) Higley, 408 West 13th. **tt**
Experienced typist for theses and term
experience. Send resume to:
Mrs. Fulcher, 1031 Miss. VT-3-0588, ff
Experienced typist. 8 years experience in thesis and term papers. Electric typwriter fast accurate service. Reasonable rates. Mrs. Barlow, 2407 Yale, VI 2-1648.
New electric typewriter. Reasonable rates for themes, term papers, dissertations, and theses. Mrs. Barta, 1955 Miller Drive, VI 3-6994. tf
BRAKE ADJUSTMENTS ... $.98
STUDENTS
Efficient and experienced typer would like to do work in home. Prompt and guaranteed work. Call at any time. VI 3-2651. 10-31
MARKUPSUCTION $ . 00
LUBRICATION $1. 00
Motor tune-ups, wheel balancing
FREE— one quart of oil with each oil and filter change
- all major brands -
PAGE-CREIGHTON FINA SERVICE
1819 W 23rd VI 3-9694
all major brands
Secretary will do typing in home. Fast, accurate, reasonable rates. Familiar with legal terms. Marsha Goff. VI 3-2577. tt
A complete line, including,
• Lavaliers • Guards
• Pins • Mugs
• Rings • Crests
FRATERNITY JEWELRY
Ray Christian
JEWELERS
IT'S OK TO OWE RAY
809 Mass.
Prompt, neat and accurate work on wide carriage electric typewriter. Journalism Business and Secretary experience. Charlotte Weber. VI 3-3495. tf
TRAVEL
THE HOLIDAY SEASON
Typing; Desertations, theses, manuscripts, term papers typed. New Smith-Gorona machines; 35 special symbols, carbon ribbon—if desired. Prompt, efficient service. Call Mrs. Suzanne Gilbert VI2-1546 or Mrs. Dorothy MOII 3057.
IT'S TIME TO MAKE YOUR RESERVATIONS FOR THE HILTON SEAION
MILLIKENS SOS—always first quality typing on LB.M. Carbon ribbon machines.
O hours—7 a.m. 12 p.m. john-1031. Mass
Phone VI-5920. Mass. tt
Typing: Dissertations theses, manuscripts, term papers. New Smith-Corona electric machines; 35 special symbols, carbon ribbon if desired. Prompt, effortless. Call. Mrs Suzanne Gilber VI2-1546 or Mrs. Dorothy Moon VI3-13057.
The Thanksgiving and Christmas schedules are now in.
CONTACT
Thesis Typist, Electric typewriter
high degree. Prairie Village, NI 11
8469
TYPING: Experienced typist. Former secretary will type theses, term papers.
Technical resume, work with judges, rakes. Electric Typewriter. Mrs. McEldowney, 2521 Ala. Ph. VI 3-8568, fc
MAUPINTOUR
711 W. 23rd VI 3-1211
at the Malls
ALLAN EASUM LEROY HADL
JOE'S BAKERY
new location at
616 West 9th
25c delivery VI 3-4720
GRANT'S
Drive-In Pet Center
Everything in the Pet Field
1218 Conn. Pet Ph. VI 3-2921
Sure -
THE NAME FOR SERVICE
★ WHEEL BALANCING AND ALIGNMENT
★ STARTER AND GENERATOR WORK
★ BRAKES ADJUSTED AND RELINED
TUNE-UPS
★ MUFFLER SERVICE
OPEN 7 A.M. - 8 P.M.
9th & Mississippi VI 3-9897
ART'S TEXACO
ACE
STEERING AND RADIATOR SPECIALISTS
Thursday, Oct. 31, 1963
Bear Wheel Alignment
Bear Wheel Alignment
Dynamic Wheel Balancing
Brake & Frt. End Parts
Auto Glass Installed
--present
LOST
Man's wristwatch, cardinal make. Silver expansion band with black extensions on the band. White face with silver numerals. Call VI 3-2655. Jay Cook. 11-4
Page 7
6th & Minn. VI 3-1300
Man's black glasses in black leather case.
Summerfield Hall. T. D. Reeves, 1528
Tenn. Call VI 3-5492. 11-1
University Daily Kansan
Billfold lost probably in the Hawks Nest, Marvin or Summerfield Hall, Reward offered. Contact Khaled Khalaf at VI 2-1444. 11-1
Black leather billfold. Return billfold and important papers, keep the money as reward. Roger Houston, 1145 La Call VI 3-4846. 11-1
Blond Cocker Spaniel, 6 months old. Near
shelter and daycare. 8-10am. 7-11pm.
*Call VT 2-0108 evenings.* 10-31
WANTED
Wanted ironing; reasonable rates. 1526
Linwood. 11-6
Want guitar lessons. Have instrument (Mexican classic) and music. Interested in music and flengemusic possible. Will pay reasonable fee. Lee Hirschberg. VI 2-1340. 11-12
The School of Fine Arts
The University of Kansas University Theatre and
1 or 2 male students to share apartment.
2 or 3 female students of room. Water p
Phone VT 3-9287
11- E
Buy, sell or trade rare American and Foreign coins, military equipment, medals, tokens, etc. Open nights. American Coin Mart, 1025 Mass. tf
Patronize Your Kansan Advertisers
Madame Butterfly
但迁牛安起书之
则九阳祝宠
8:15 p.m.
Murphy Hall
November 1,2,8,9 1963
C
Happiness is a Comfy Carpet
And at such a modest cost . . .
One or Two Bedrooms $75 and $85
These units have been newly decorated — with new drapes, carpets disposals, etc. All Units Air-Conditioned Provincial Furniture Available
PARK PLAZA SOUTH
Ph. VI 2-3416
1912 W. 25th
Day or Night
Page 8
University Daily Kansan
Thursday, Oct. 31, 1963
Press Distorts Dispute KU Algerians State
By Marshall Caskey
A group of Algerian students said last night that American newspapers in this area have badly distorted the facts in reporting the Algerian-Morocco border war.
Mohammed Abdelbari, Algiers sophomore; Djamel Benzine,
Bougie sophomore; and Mansour Qubouzar, Tziiouzio sophomore, said the American newspapers are completely wrong in their statements that the war may develop into world-wide proportions.
Oubouzar said that he particularly objected to an article by UPI Foreign News Analyst Phil Newsom. (See Oct. 29. Kansas)
"IN THAT ARTICLE." Oubouzar said, "it states that 'United Arab Republic President Gamel Abdel Nasser and the Communist bloc would intervene to save Algerian President Ahmed Ben Bella from disaster. This is absolutely untrue. Algeria would never accept assistance from the Communists."
Benzine said the Communists don't have anything to do with the disagreement. "It looks almost as though the papers would like to give the impression that Algeria is part of the Communist bloc," Benzine said.
Abdelbari said, "The whole idea of the existence of an East-West conflict in the border war is a huge distortion. They (the newspapers) keep talking about the weapons which Algeria received from the Soviet Union. The weapons had been ordered long before the war. They just happened to arrive at this time.
"The papers give the impression that Algeria is Communist backed. They don't bother to state the fact that there are more Russian MIG's in Morocco than there are in Algeria." Abdelbari said.
"IT'S NOT an international affair." Oubouzar said. "The conflict is simply one between two government systems."
"We became so alarmed when we read the newspaper accounts of the Communists stepping in," Abdelbari said, "we telephoned the United Nations and spoke to our representatives there. We were assured that the stories were not true, but we wanted to be sure so we shone Algeria twice and talked to our friends and relatives about the situation. They, too, assured us that Algeria
would accept no help from the Communists.
"So far as the matter of weapons is concerned," Abdelbari said, "Algeria needed weapons and Russia supplied them—that is where the Russian connection with the war ceased."
"The question of exactly where the Morrocan-Algerian border is," Oubouzar said, "has existed for years. Ben Bella had agreed to a meeting, but the Moroccan troops moved in before the meeting was held. I believe that Hassan had a political problem in his country and used the border question to direct attention away from the internal trouble and rally his people around him. Ben Bella was having trouble of his own at the time and used the trouble to rally the Algerian people."
"ALGERIA is in a position where she cannot back down," Benzine said. "We have just fought a war for our independence and we cannot stand by and see areas of our country taken. What would the United States do if Mexico suddenly demanded California?
THE ALGERIAN students agreed with statements made earlier by Morocean student Ali Mouhine (Oct. 29 Kansas) regarding the strictly political nature of the war. They agreed that there is no particular feeling of hostility among the masses of people in the two countries. Benzine said, "Ali is our best friend here, we have no feelings against him because he is a Morocan. There are no bed feelings between the two peoples."
"Before the war broke out, the border question was regarded as a political game. Since the war began, however, the Algerians no longer consider it a game. They are ready to go to the front and fight for their territory."
Oubouzar predicted that North Africa will one day unite into some sort of close economic alliance.
HOLIDAY INN RESTAURANT PROUDLY PRESENT THEIR MOST UNIQUE ITALIAN BUFFET
Every Friday Evening FEATURING
PIZZA with or without meat
SPAGHETTI AND MEATBALLS
CHICKEN CACCIATORE
FRIED EGG PLANT
FISH CREOLE
—TOSSED GREENS
—COLD CUTS
—DEVILED EGGS
—CHERRY PEPPERS
—SHRIMP TOMATO
ASPIC
—and MANY
OTHERS
(Continued from page 1)
Phipps agreed to tell the 15 girls who knew about the interruption that nothing was to be said.
Cohimia again called Hashinger, and after instructing Miss Lawrence to place the receiver back on the hook, the 'talkathon' was resumed at about 4 a.m.
SERVED WITH EVERY MEAL
Holiday Inn
THE MIDDLE INNESHAM
BUS 145 AT 700
GARLIC TOAST
AUTHENTIC
SPUMONI
ICE CREAM
Talkathon
After a talk with the assistant dean of men, Fred McElhenie, and numerous persons at Templin Hall, Lindquist and Cohlmia were invited to Templin for dinner. Cohlmia was to try to identify the Templinite who "relied" him.
Served in Italian Atmosphere
with Live Entertainment for
Your Dining Pleasure
Only $2.06 Per Person
$3.50 Per Couple
For Reservations Call VI 3-7991
Cohmia was successful and the Templin resident, whose name is being withheld, admitted he had been responsible for the interruption.
Highway 59 & 10
THE TEMPLIN senate held a special meeting last night to consider the matter.
Holiday Diner
THE FASHION INVENEERIES
The senate voted to send an apology to JRP. Wing meetings in the dormitory voted against sending such a letter. The Templin resident who touched off the affair then sent a personal letter of apology to Lindquist.
Amidst the dispute the talkathon plods along. This time the hook in JRP is firmly bound with several strands of bailing wire.
A former World Bank economist, now teaching at KU, will lead a discussion on taxes for students representing North American countries at Texas, A&M University's Student Conference on National Affairs December 11-15.
Texas Tax Talk By KU Economist
professor of economics and East Asian area studies.
He is F. H. H. King, an associate
"This can be quite lively," King said. Students from Mexico to Georgia and Saskatchewan attend the conference at Texas A&M's expense and present opinions rarely encountered in settings where students have similar backgrounds.
Index of Bidden Books
Guaranteed to shock, to excite, to titillate the cerebral functions.
- More than 300 titles available
THE BOOK RACK
St. Lawrence Catholic Student Center
1910 Stratford Road
W
"Next time
I'm going to call Independent Laundry. They take the work out of cleaning clothes."
For the best in cleaning and laundering services,it's
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- Independent Downtown Plant 740 Vt.
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---
Y